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  1. Greetings everyone! I would like to thank everyone for giving PRO a competitive environment for another season. I would also like to congratulate each player and guild who made it to the top of the ladder, on behalf of the whole staff team. We all wish you the best in the next season. Thanks for participating! REWARDS : • Normally, 1st Place will receive 600 PvP coins, 2nd place 595, and so on. • Top ladder guilds shall receive 25% EXP Boost for the entirety of the next season! • Top 25 players from each server are eligible to enter the ladder tournament and win epic Pokemon and other cool rewards! • Top 25 players from each server have access to Tutor Heaven! RANKED LADDER RESULTS : Top 25 Silver Ranked Rating (No Tier Ladder) Top 25 Gold Ranked Rating (No Tier Ladder) RANKED GUILD LADDER RESULTS : Silver Guild Rankings Gold Guild Rankings Disclaimers : Results may have a marginal difference to ones recorded by other players. The results taken were taken seconds before the ladder was reset, whilst the servers were offline. If you used a Discord bot, or gathered your own screenshots earlier than us, your results may be inaccurate. If you are or aren't on the ladder when you think you should/n't be, please contact Senrosia/Qeight via PMs. Please note that users with the exact same rating may switched positions during the reward process, we have no influence over that. If the results are slightly incorrect, the correct users would have still been rewarded. This is due to the server automatically rewarding the top 25. Special thanks again to everyone that participated this season and those who bring a healthy competitive environment!
    5 points
  2. Changelog 01.09.2021: Players will be able to join up to Normal Ranked, Random Ranked and Unranked queues at the same time. You will leave all queues once you found a match in any queue. You can see wins, losses, rating, ratio and all-time highest rating in the client for each queue now. Starts with the PvP season September 2021, previous data weren't saved. Added Normal Ranked, Random Ranked, Unranked and Guild ladders in the PvP window. Unlike Reborn Bot the ladders will update instantly once a battle ended. Guild ladders show up to 20 guilds while the others show up to 50 users. Added rules in the client instead of linking a forum post. Will probably add the list of broken moves and abilities in the same client tab below the rules. Attention: Random Ranked gives rewards starting the PvP season September 2021. Players will get 100 PvP Coins for reaching the ladder at season end. The remaining coins will be distributed based on the wins and losses. The following calculation will be used: Wins - losses = PvP Coins. This won't apply if you have more losses than wins. We still discuss whether Random Ranked rating /2 should be added to the guild ladder. Feel free to give your opinion about that! Planned additions for the PvP window in the future: Match History: Opponent, Winner, RatingChange, Date Most-used Pokemon: Rank, Pokemon, Count, Percentage, Win% Longest win-streak (maybe even in this update, depends on the time left). Server fixes: Pixilated applies the 20% damage boost now. Defog removes Aurora Veil only on the targets side now. Fixed a Stealth Rock stuck bug. Fixed that happiness evo triggered on wrong actions. Fixed that the first encountered Pokemon in random battles give Pokedex entries. Will also remove all not obtainable Pokedex entries next maintenance. Fixed a use after free battle issue. Few small reworks, clean-ups and optimizations.
    3 points
  3. You can use a mysterious ticket to evolve a level 100 pokemon. You can purchase mysterious candies in all four department stores (Celadon, Goldenrod, Lilycove, Veilstone) for 5k pokedollars, for 2 PvE coins at PvE Coin Masters or for 1 PvP coin at PvP Coin Masters.
    2 points
  4. Welcome to my Shop My Data IGN : hen#5092 Accpt payment • cc @350k • rc @6k • IV rr @550k • Nat R @220k Poke with Insta Price 150k 800K 4M 6M 8m
    1 point
  5. BIG NOTE: This guide will be updated with Spawn Suggestions from other users AND I'll revisit this guide multiple times to fix spawns for Johto, Hoenn and Sinnoh. Most of the spawns outside of Kanto are EXTREMELY Lackluster and left me with no options. Welcome to the Leveling Zones Guide! Welcome everyone! I have decided to set my other guides aside to distract myself quite a bit and try to make something newbie friendly again. This guide will try to teach newbies and more advanced players the best Leveling Zones for all regions, divided by Pokemon Types (such as Fire, Bug, and so on), and teach you where the best spots can be found! Linked to this guide there is also a guide on the possible Leveling Methods you can use if your Pokemon are so bad that even with this guide you’re unable to level them up. This should be an exception however. Pokemon such as Metapod, Kakuna, Unown, Magikarp and so on. For this guide, however, we will try to level up each Pokemon by itself without any external help (like Memento Trick Room False Swipe Gallade or Memento Toxic Jumpluff). I will try to also provide a list of common tips regarding strategies, items to use, and extra side areas you can unlock that can be useful. I’ll also try to take into account if you cannot access Surf spawns as sometimes you will be in the early stages of each region, where you cannot surf yet. We will be dividing the game into the 4 regions and I will assign each type a list of places to level up easily. I will tell you what you can/should do and what recommendations I would take to speed up the whole process. There will be common strategies for all types in specific places against specific Pokemon which can be exploited due to them having bad movesets. For example, Arbok in Cerulean Cave only knows Poison type moves, so all Steel type Pokemon can be trained against him. Slowpoke and Slowbro in Cerulean Cave only know Psychic type moves, so Dark types can be trained against them. Psyduck and Golduck in Cerulean Cave only know Water type moves, so you can use abilities such as Water Absorb, Dry Skin or Storm Drain against them. I will first assess the free or easily accessible zones for each region, assuming you’re reading this as a newbie and have no idea how to level up easily. Then, we will go over optional or special areas locked behind sidequests that will also be extremely helpful for you. I suggest you study the Type Chart, even though we’ll go over each type’s weaknesses over and over again. Let’s begin with a few tips before we start! Consider donating to PRO! This amazing game keeps itself going with donations. If you donate, you will have access to items such as the MS Medallion, which boosts your experience gain by 50%, WHICH IS MASSIVE. You will also be supporting the game in the process! Not only that, but the MS Medallion also boosts all money gained from battles by 100%. That is DOUBLE the normal amount. Wanna make stoinks? Poor to invest in r/wallstreetbets? Then fear not, just donate and get a Membership and earn money quick through fighting! Additionally, Membership gives you access to side MS only areas which can be used to level up and do useful sidequests! Don’t evolve your pokemon This is the most essential tip: DON’T EVOLVE YOUR POKEMON UNTIL THEY ARE LEVEL 95 OR ABOVE! Evolved pokemon take MASSIVE amounts of experience to level up compared to an unevolved pokemon. While evolving pokemon may sometimes look necessary (Caterpie, Metapod, and other pokemon that basically do no damage), there are methods such as Toxic + Memento training that don’t require the weak pokemon to battle at all. They’ll gain exp absurdly fast if you don’t evolve them with next to no risks. These methods can be found around the early game (when you have 4 Kanto Badges). Thus, avoid evolving your pokemon if possible, switch your team around and when you can obtain methods to train these “useless” pokemon, you can go back and train them instead! Additionally, most pokemon lose a lot of useful level-up moves if you evolve them early. This is very important on Clefairy, Growlithe and Pikachu, for example. Thus, remember: you can train any pokemon, no matter how useless they are. Just get to learn different possible methods! Join a guild! While this is a minor tip, it is helpful: by being in a guild, you gain extra Experience while you fight wild pokemon or trainers. While the bonus is not much (a max of 10%), if the guild is a Ladder Guild (which means that they reached Top 10 in the PvP Ranked Ladder the last season), you will also gain a 25% extra bonus EXP! That’s a lot! (If you manage to enter it, of course). Take pokemon resistances, weaknesses and immunities into account! (More on this later!) While I do usually recommend further in this guide that you only visit places where you have a clear advantage, I also suggest that you use places where you don’t have a full advantage. Example: If I am a Grass type pokemon, I have a complete advantage against Water types. Grass resists Water and Water is weak to Grass. If I am a Water type, however, I don’t have any advantages against Water types. Water resists Water. Why should I fight Water types with Water types? Well, this is the reason: in PRO, many pokemon learn different attacks from different types. Sometimes, these attacks are from types that cover our weaknesses. Fighting types usually learn Thunderpunch, which helps them cover their Flying type weakness. They also can learn Knock Off, which helps against Psychic, and Poison Jab, which helps against Fairy types. Not only should you visit places where you have full advantages against the wild pokemon in the area, but you should also take your immunities and resistances into account. If you’re a tanky Water type, you can equip Leftovers, teach your pokemon TM Toxic (which is an amazing move I recommend teaching to 90%+ of the pokemon you have for PvE content. This move poisons the opponent and the damage becomes bigger each turn. This helps weak pokemon defeat stronger pokemon) and that you fight other Water types in water filled places. You will resist a lot of hits and you’ll be able to slowly but surely level up easily. Whenever you level up in a certain Route or spot, think carefully: if my opponents are all from the Bug and Grass type, why shouldn’t I train a Steel type here, even if Steel type isn’t very strong against these? If I resist their attacks, this should be easy! And this is how you must also utilise pokemon types. Remember that taking half of the original damage, one quarter or not taking any damage at all can be an incredible advantage for most Pokemon! Use items wisely! Many items will help out during your adventure. Something you might’ve overlooked as a newbie are Held Items. Some of these items provide INSANE bonuses during battle which enable you to fight overleveled pokemon which you would normally lose against. Let’s go over a few of them! Quick note: many of these items can be somewhat hard to find. Try to purchase them for pokedollars in the ingame Trade Chat! Some of them cost 50 PvP coins and they are extremely overpriced when they’re just garbage items (like Scope Lens or Muscle Band). Type enhancing items Items such as the Plates, Miracle Seed, Charcoal or Mystic Water boost a certain type’s moves by 20%. Thus, you get a 20% extra in damage. These items are always helpful at the beginning! They can be found in the overworld and held by wild pokemon (for example, Beedrill holds Poison Barb). They’re a small damage boost you should always consider! You can Dig up the Plates in Dig Spots, so do them frequently. Leftovers This item is MAGICAL. Leftovers can be dug up anywhere in Dig Spots. This item, when held, will restore a small percentage of your max health every turn in battle. This item is extremely useful in the Elite Four, as you also heal a bit whenever you defeat a Trainer’s pokemon if they have more than one pokemon. You can use this item in slow fights where you have to train tanky or slow pokemon to level them up, as they will heal up constantly during battle! Black Sludge Does the same as Leftovers, but only works for Poison Types (lol). It can also be used to faint your False Swipers quickly if you want to use False Swiping tricks when you level up a pokemon. It will only restore a Poison Type’s HP slowly each turn, and it will damage any other pokemon that is not a Poison Type. It’s held by wild Grimer, Muk and Goomy (Goomy? Why?) Eviolite Eviolite is amazing. It will boost your Defense and Special Defense by 1.5x (so 50% boost) in battle if your pokemon has not been fully evolved. Example: Charmander or Charmeleon can hold Eviolite because they both have an available evolution (Charmander can evolve to Charmeleon and Charmeleon can evolve to Charizard). However, this item will not work on Charizard, as it cannot evolve. This 50% extra boost is incredibly on tanky pokemon as it will allow them to fight multiple pokemon in a row without needing to heal up in a pokecenter. However, keep in mind it ONLY works for pokemon that CAN evolve. Orbs There are three different types of Orb items that you can obtain from Bug Catching Contest or bought in the PvP Coin Trader with PvP Coins. The Toxic Orb is an Orb which will poison your pokemon. While this may seem awful at first, this can be exploited with pokemon with abilities such as Guts or Toxic Boost or Poison Heal which give benefits to the user when they are statused. The Flame Orb is an Orb which will burn your pokemon. As mentioned above, this can trigger abilities such as Guts or Flare Boost. The Life Orb works differently (and this is an AMAZING tool for training): the Life Orb will subtract (or damage you, to not use Naeroisms) part of your max HP every time you use a damaging move or attack, but in exchange, you will get a big damage boost. This is really useful to level up quickly as you will defeat enemies much quicker than normal as you will have increased damage. Choice Items These items can be obtained by recycling Gems, Evolution Stones and multiple Held Items in Johto’s Mt Mortar Item Recycler or by trading PvP Coins for them. These items are amazing, they also are extremely useful in PvP, PvE content and can be sold for some easy money. The Choice Items are a bit restrictive but their benefits are incredible: you will get a 50% increase in Attack (Band), Special Attack (Specs) or Speed (Scarf) if you equip this item. However, you will be restricted to only being able to use a single move in battle until you switch out. You can use these items to power up a weak attack and you’ll be able to fight higher leveled pokemon easily. For example, a level 40 Hoppip equipped with a Choice Specs will be able to defeat a level 64 Rhyhorn with a single Giga Drain. Without this item, you would need to be level 50 to 55. Air Balloon This item gets its own mention here: this item will grant you an immunity to all Ground type attacks when you hold it. However, if you are damaged by an attack of any other type, this item will disappear. Using this item intelligently, you can train against Mt Silver’s Quagsires, as they only attack with Ground type based moves. Using TM Toxic, you can level up any low level pokemon against them, as you will be immune to all attacks and they will slowly faint from the poison. Focus Sash + Band. Focus Sashes are very frequently used to ensure a really weak pokemon can get the last hit on a wild pokemon and earn the full experience. A Focus Sash will allow you to survive ANY hit as long as your pokemon is at full HP when it receives the hit. These are consumable items you can purchase with PvE or PvP coins. However, in my personal opinion, Focus Sashes are too expensive to be farmed with PvE coins for a beginner (until you can farm bosses reliably). There are better methods that require no sashes (Gardevoir Future Sight Memento, Gallade False Swipe Trick Room Memento, Jumpluff Toxic Memento, Mismagius Perish Song Memento). Most False Swipers require you to have a bunch of Focus Sashes so that your low level pokemon can finish the opponent off when they are at 1 HP. If you have a priority move, this will not be a necessity. It’s always nice to have a few, but I would only use them if you’re really desperate to train something. Focus Band is just a worse version of it: Focus Band is not consumable, so it will last forever, but it has different perks. It can trigger at ANY time if your HP is lowered to 1, and it can trigger infinitely. However, it will trigger only on a 10% chance. Yes, 10% chance to survive the hit. It’s garbage, but it sometimes works, I guess. Brightpowder Small explanation here: Brightpowder will make the opponent’s moves lose 10% accuracy. While this may seem near useless, it means that you will always have a chance to dodge the enemies’ attacks, even if they are 100% accurate (such as Flamethrower). You can exploit this at mid to high levels by holding this item and trying your luck against pokemon you normally need to hit twice to defeat, by dodging some of their attacks. Brightpowder is infamously used to cheese Lance Boss, but it can also be used while leveling to make you dodge attacks as if you had Ultra Instinct (Insert Drip Goku here). Quick Claw Incredibly useful item: if you know you can defeat your opponent in one hit but YOU’RE TOO SLOW (alright, please don’t bully me for the Sonic Reference), you can equip this item onto your pokemon. This will give it a chance to outspeed the opponent (between a 10 and 20% chance). Rocky Helmet This item is extremely hard to obtain and it’s commonly obtained through PvP coins or through the Nap Island quest. However, if you manage to find one, you can always equip it to a tanky Pokemon and if the enemy makes contact with you, they will be severely damaged. Muscle Band This item is a literal MEME. It only increases your physical attack damage by 10%. That’s it. There’s many items that outclass this. You can obtain it from Bug Catching Contest, so it’s an okay reward lol. Assault Vest Similarly to Rocky Helmet, this item can be obtained by defeating BattleBot or by purchasing it for 50 PvP Coins. This item will boost your Special Defense by 1.5x or 50% and you will be able to tank specially oriented moves easily. However, you will not be able to use any Status Moves such as Spore, Dragon Dance or Confuse Ray. This item is hard to find and you will probably have to buy it from another player. Smoke Ball One of the BEST if not THE best leveling item in the game. This item can be held by wild Grimer and Koffing surfing in Celadon City. You can steal it from them using Thief, Trick, Switcheroo or by capturing some of them until you find one. You can also use a pokemon with the ability Frisk to find if they hold this item. When you hold this item, you will be able to escape from ANY fight, no matter the opponent’s abilities, level or moves (Pursuit will still damage you though). Equip this item onto one of your Pokemon and you will be able to escape constantly until you find the pokemon you want to fight. For example: I want to level up a level 5 Spearow. I am in Mt Silver where there’s a lot of Rock types that will wreck me up as they are level 50. I will equip Smoke Ball onto Spearow and I will be able to escape against level 50 Golbats and Gravelers until I find a wild Quagsire. Since I know Quagsire only knows Earthquake, I can use Toxic and wait for it to faint. This way, I only fight the wild pokemon I want to! Scope Lens This item is just okay. It increases your critical hit ratio. Nothing else. Maybe you get lucky and you get some critical strikes in lol. Wide Lens This item just makes your moves’ accuracy increase. That’s it. I guess it’s nice. Wise Glasses This is Muscle Band, but on the Special Side. Yeah, nice meme I guess. It’s 50 PvP coins in the PvP Coin Shop (an absolute meme, to be honest). Expert Belt This one is actually really good. It is held by wild Primeape in Route 9. It increases the damage of your moves if they are super effective. This rewards you being smart and using your braincells properly when you check the enemies’ weaknesses! Nice! Use the correct moves and you’ll get rewarded with a 20% damage bonus. Metronome This is a semi meme item. If you keep using the same move nonstop, it will be more powerful each time you use it. It’s sometimes used, but it’s mainly a meme. It’s a decent choice if you cannot defeat the wild pokemon with a single attack and you need to keep spamming it. A few extras There’s also Light Ball, Lucky Punch, Stick and Thick Club, but these only work for specific pokemon. Light Ball is an insane item that DOUBLES Pikachu’s Spatk and Atk and it’s EXTREMELY good to make him level up quickly. Lucky Punch is a gimmick Chansey item that should NEVER be used (it just makes it more likely to critically hit an opponent). Stick is the same for Farfetch’d. Thick Club is an insane item that makes Cubone, Marowak and Alolan Marowak pvpable. It makes their Attack DOUBLE. It becomes an astronomical 550+ Attack when EV trained at level 100. It’s really nice to level up Cubone. There are a few other items like Weakness Policy we can use, but they are not worth it. Quick note before we begin: Spawns in Kanto are MUCH better and better organised than in other regions. Spawns in Johto, Hoenn and Sinnoh are very underleveled so you will have to grind harder and use all possible extra trainers in your adventure. I will provide you almost the same spawns in the other regions that are not Kanto. However, I’ll make some small exceptions. Shall we begin? Let’s go over each region! Leveling Zones Normal type Pokemon or Pokemon that use Normal type attacks: Normal type Pokemon are only weak against Fighting Type attacks. This is a huge advantage, as there are no places in Kanto with a lot of Fighting Type Pokemon in the same route or zone. Normal type attacks are also resisted by Rock types and Steel types, and Ghost types are immune to your moves. However, Ghost attacks also do not affect Normal type Pokemon in any way. Thus, we’ll exploit it. Since Rock and Steel types resist your attacks, we’ll avoid going to any caves unless you have no other choice or you can learn a Fighting or Ground attack, which is super effective against them. Normal types have no resistances to exploit though. Normal types normally also learn good coverage moves via TM. I suggest you check on bulbapedia what TM can your Normal type Pokemon learn and you try to purchase some in Celadon’s Department Store. As an example, Meowth learns Dark type moves as a Normal type Pokemon, which enables it to easily defeat Ghost and Psychic types. Rattata is another example. Other half Normal types such as Pidgey also learn other move types easily, such as Flying or Dragon type moves (Twister). Kanto From levels 2 to 10, level up in Viridian Forest. These Pokemon are normally weak and not strong enough to deal with your attacks. From 10 to 20, in Vermillion Graveyard or Route 25, if you have Dark Type moves or other type moves. Otherwise, in Route 6. From 20 to 30, you can level up in Pokemon Tower (same as in Vermillion Graveyard), or in Diglett Cave. Diglett and Dugtrio have really low bulk and sometimes they use Astonish, which does no effect against Normal Type Pokemon. From 30 to 40, I suggest you level up in Route 15. It’s an easy route to grind. After 40, level up in Seafoam Islands. After 50 you can try in Victory Road, but it’s really dangerous for Normal types. Thus, go to Cinnabar Mansion if possible. Johto From 2 to 10, level up in Route 31. This has an area with fully evolved pokemon at low levels and they give massive EXP. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 34. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 36. From 30 to 40, level up surfing in Route 41. From 40 to 50, level up in Dragon’s Den Entrance. After 50, level up in Dragon’s Den. Hoenn From 2 to 10, level up in Petalburg Woods. From 10 to 20, level up in Granite Cave B1F. From 20 to 30, level up in Jagged Pass and then Route 118. From 30 to 40, level up in Shoal Cave. From 40 to 50, level up in Sky Pillar. After 50, continue leveling up in Sky Pillar. Sinnoh From 2 to 10, level up in Oreburgh Gate 1F or Oreburgh Mine. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 205. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 215 and 214. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 218 or Iron Island B1F or Mt Coronet 5F. From 40 to 50, level up in Mt Coronet 5F, 6F and 7F. After 50, level up in Sinnoh Victory Road 1F (or in all floors). Water type Pokemon or Pokemon that use Water type attacks: Water type Pokemon are only weak against Grass and Electric. The only common place for Electric Pokemon in Kanto is Power Plant. There aren’t many Grass type places, mainly Route 13 (which is infested by them), Route 25, and Viridian Forest (This is kind of a false statement, since it’s mainly Bug Types). Water types are strong against Fire, Ground and Rock Pokemon. Water types also have the benefit of normally being able to learn Ice type moves, which allows them to fight Flying, Grass and Dragon Pokemon easily, and Ground type moves, which allows them to defeat Electric type Pokemon. However, this is not very frequent. Water types have resistances against Water (same type), Fire, Ice and Steel. Thus, we will exploit any Water place to level up, since we resist Water type attacks. If you don’t have any non-Water attacks, we’ll search for better places. We will look for places where Fire, Rock and Ground types appear, or where Ice types and Steel types spawn. Water type attacks are resisted by Dragon, Grass and other Water types. Avoid fighting these. Kanto From levels 2 to 10, we’ll level up in Route 2. From 10 to 20, in Mt Moon. Ground and Rock types are very frequent here, they faint in a single hit. From 20 to 30, you can choose between Diglett Cave (extremely easy to level up) or Rock Tunnel. In my opinion, Diglett Cave is better, as there’s only Ground types in the entrance. From 30 to 40, you can level up in Cinnabar Mansion. Most Fire Types inhabit here. After 40, you can stay in Cinnabar Mansion until 50, and then move on to Victory Road Kanto. Johto From 2 to 10, level up in Route 31. This has an area with fully evolved pokemon at low levels and they give massive EXP. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 34. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 36. From 30 to 40, level up surfing in Route 41. From 40 to 50, level up in Dragon’s Den Entrance. After 50, level up in Dragon’s Den. Hoenn From 2 to 10, level up in Petalburg Woods. It will be hard, but you must endure the pain! (Or just level up in Route 104). From 10 to 20, level up in Granite Cave B1F. From 20 to 30, level up in Jagged Pass and then Route 118. From 30 to 40, level up in Shoal Cave. From 40 to 50, level up in Sky Pillar. After 50, continue leveling up in Sky Pillar. Sinnoh From 2 to 10, level up in Oreburgh Gate 1F or Oreburgh Mine. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 205. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 215 and 214. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 218 or Iron Island B1F or Mt Coronet 5F. From 40 to 50, level up in Mt Coronet 5F, 6F and 7F. After 50, level up in Sinnoh Victory Road 1F (or in all floors). Fire type Pokemon or Pokemon that use Fire type attacks: Fire type Pokemon are weak against Ground, Rock and Water type attacks. Thus, you have a clear weakness: you will try to avoid ANY caves and you will try to avoid surfing in water unless you have coverage moves. Fire type attacks are strong against Grass, Bug, Steel and Ice type Pokemon. This leaves us with a clear message: pull a Hank Scorpio and visit grassy places! Now seriously, Bug and Grass Pokemon are everywhere, so we can level up somewhat fine. Ice and Steel types are harder to find though. Fire types also somehow have SIX resistances: Bug, Fairy, Fire (own type), Grass, Ice and Steel. Thus, we can exploit this amazingly. We need to focus on areas filled with Grass, Bug, Ice and Steel types, but we can also search for Fairy and Fire plagued zones. Fire type attacks are resisted by Dragon, Fire, Rock and Water types. Easy chart to learn! Kanto From levels 2 to 10, level up In Route 2 and Viridian Forest. From 10 to 20, in Route 25. There’s a lot of Grass types here. From 20 to 30, in Route 13. A lot of Grass and Bug types live here. From 30 and onwards things get a bit more difficult. Kanto spawns are kinda lackluster for Fire types unless you have access to side areas. At level 30, we’ll try going to Cinnabar Mansion. If you feel you’re too weak, try leveling until 35 to 40 in Routes 14 and 15. From 40+, Cinnabar Mansion and after 50+, try Victory Road Kanto. Avoid any Rock and Ground encounters though. Johto From 2 to 10, level up in Route 31. This has an area with fully evolved pokemon at low levels and they give massive EXP. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 34. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 36. From 30 to 40, level up surfing in Route 41. Warning: there is no better place to train, sadly. If you can’t train there, you’re pretty much screwed. From 40 to 50, level up in Dragon’s Den Entrance. After 50, level up in Dragon’s Den. Hoenn From 2 to 10, level up in Petalburg Woods. From 10 to 20, level up in Granite Cave B1F. From 20 to 30, level up in Jagged Pass and then Route 118. From 30 to 40, level up in Shoal Cave. From 40 to 50, level up in Sky Pillar. After 50, continue leveling up in Sky Pillar. Sinnoh From 2 to 10, level up in Oreburgh Gate 1F or Oreburgh Mine. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 205. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 215 and 214. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 218 or Iron Island B1F or Mt Coronet 5F. From 40 to 50, level up in Mt Coronet 5F, 6F and 7F. After 50, level up in Sinnoh Victory Road 1F (or in all floors). Grass type Pokemon or Pokemon that use Grass type attacks: Grass type Pokemon are weak against so many Pokemon… They’re weak against Flying, Bug, Ice, Poison and Fire. This means we cannot go to any forests, Fire type infested places (Cinnabar Mansion would literally be your nightmare: Poison and Fire types are everywhere there), we cannot visit cold caves and even in the open grassy areas birds will attack you (Ron is still angry that Becky and his girl only wanted Ben ). Grass type attacks are super effective against Rock, Ground and Water Pokemon. This means we can level up easily in any Surf location (as long as you don’t meet a Water/Poison type, as they will wreck you) by spamming Grass type moves against them. Additionally, you can also fight in almost any cave, as most things will get easily beaten up. Grass types don’t have many resistances, however, they do indeed have some useful ones: they resist Water, Grass, Electric and Ground types. Grass type attacks are resisted by SEVEN types, however: Bug, Dragon, Fire, Flying, Grass (self resistance), Poison and Steel types. You heard that right. SEVEN types resist Grass type moves. They’re goddamn awful. Kanto From levels 2 to 10, level up in Route 22. From levels 10 to 20, Mt Moon. From 20 to 30, Diglett Tunnel. From 30 to 40, Surf in Route 19. From 40 to 50, Seafoam Islands. From 50+, you can level up in Victory Road Kanto. Johto From 2 to 10, level up in Route 31. This has an area with fully evolved pokemon at low levels and they give massive EXP. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 34. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 36. From 30 to 40, level up surfing in Route 41. From 40 to 50, level up in Dragon’s Den Entrance. After 50, level up in Dragon’s Den. Hoenn From 2 to 10, level up in Petalburg Woods. From 10 to 20, level up in Granite Cave B1F. From 20 to 30, level up in Jagged Pass and then Route 118. From 30 to 40, level up in Shoal Cave. From 40 to 50, level up in Sky Pillar. After 50, continue leveling up in Sky Pillar. Sinnoh From 2 to 10, level up in Oreburgh Gate 1F or Oreburgh Mine. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 205. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 215 and 214. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 218 or Iron Island B1F or Mt Coronet 5F. From 40 to 50, level up in Mt Coronet 5F, 6F and 7F. After 50, level up in Sinnoh Victory Road 1F (or in all floors). Electric type Pokemon or Pokemon that use Electric type attacks: Electric type Pokemon are blessed with some curious properties: their only weakness is Ground type attacks. That’s it. Like Normal types, they’re the only type to only have a single weakness. Thus, we can train practically everywhere! However, we’ll focus on a specific place: water. Electric type attacks are strong against Water and Flying types. These commonly inhabit in the sea (thanks, Captain Obvious). We will try to level up in any Water location, as we will have an incredibly easy time there. Electric types also resist Electric attacks (self resistance), Flying attacks and Steel type attacks. Only the Flying type resistance will be important to keep in mind. Electric type attacks deal no damage against Ground types (they are immune to Electric). Dragon, Grass and Electric types resist Electric type attacks. Kanto From levels 2 to 10, level up in Route 1. If you have surf, level up in Viridian City. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 6. If you have surf, level up in Route 6. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 12. If you have surf, surf there! From 30 to 40, level up in Route 19, surfing there. From 40+, you can level up in Seafoam Islands or Cinnabar Mansion. After 50+ you will struggle a bit: try to level up in Victory Road, but run away from ALL Ground types. Johto From 2 to 10, level up in Route 31. This has an area with fully evolved pokemon at low levels and they give massive EXP. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 34. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 36. From 30 to 40, level up surfing in Route 41. From 40 to 50, level up in Dragon’s Den Entrance. After 50, level up in Dragon’s Den. Hoenn From 2 to 10, level up in Petalburg Woods. From 10 to 20, level up in Granite Cave B1F. From 20 to 30, level up in Jagged Pass and then Route 118. From 30 to 40, level up in Shoal Cave. From 40 to 50, level up in Sky Pillar. After 50, continue leveling up in Sky Pillar. Sinnoh From 2 to 10, level up in Oreburgh Gate 1F or Oreburgh Mine. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 205. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 215 and 214. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 218 or Iron Island B1F or Mt Coronet 5F. From 40 to 50, level up in Mt Coronet 5F, 6F and 7F. After 50, level up in Sinnoh Victory Road 1F (or in all floors). Ice type Pokemon or Pokemon that use Ice type attacks: Ice type attacks are very effective against Ground, Flying, Grass and Dragon types. We will try to put this to good usage, but there are a few issues with the Ice type and its glaring weaknesses. We can level up in some caves and in some specific routes absolutely plagued with Grass and Flying types, and sometimes dwelve into some Ground caves. Ice types however have many weaknesses: Steel, Rock, Fire and Fighting types, which are very common. Additionally, Ice types are usually extremely frail and paper-thin. Ice types only resist Ice type attacks (self resistance). Yes, that’s it. They only resist themselves. Nothing else. Nada. Res. Rien. Ice type attacks are resisted by Fire, Ice, Steel and Water types. Thus, leveling up in Water is out of the question (unless we have access to the move Freeze-Dry, which I’ll mention later). Kanto From levels 2 to 10, level up in Viridian Forest. From levels 10 to 20, Mt Moon, Route 25 or Route 6. From 20 to 30, Diglett Tunnel. From 30 to 40, Routes 14-15. After 40, it would be a wise decision to head into Victory Road Kanto. Be careful about Rock and Fighting types though! Johto From 2 to 10, level up in Route 31. This has an area with fully evolved pokemon at low levels and they give massive EXP. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 34. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 36. From 30 to 40, level up surfing in Route 41. From 40 to 50, level up in Dragon’s Den Entrance. After 50, level up in Dragon’s Den. Hoenn From 2 to 10, level up in Petalburg Woods. From 10 to 20, level up in Granite Cave B1F. From 20 to 30, level up in Jagged Pass and then Route 118. From 30 to 40, level up in Shoal Cave. From 40 to 50, level up in Sky Pillar. After 50, continue leveling up in Sky Pillar. Sinnoh From 2 to 10, level up in Oreburgh Gate 1F or Oreburgh Mine. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 205. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 215 and 214. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 218 or Iron Island B1F or Mt Coronet 5F. From 40 to 50, level up in Mt Coronet 5F, 6F and 7F. After 50, level up in Sinnoh Victory Road 1F (or in all floors). Fighting type Pokemon or Pokemon that use Fighting type attacks: Fighting type Pokemon are extremely flexible and they’re possibly the best offensive type (aside from Fire, which is just absurd). Fire types learn a LOT of coverage moves and most of their members are incredibly good in PRO. Fighting type attacks are very effective against Dark, Ice, Normal, Rock and Steel. Fighting types only have three weaknesses: Fairy, Flying and Psychic. Out of these, only Flying is a common type everywhere. Fairies and Psychic type Pokemon are way harder to find. Fighting also has three resistances: Bug, Dark and Rock types. Thus, they level up easily in caves. Fighting types are not very effective against Bug, Fairy, Flying, Poison and Psychic. That’s a lot of types… Kanto From levels 2 to 10, level up in Route 1 and 22. From 10 to 20, in Mt Moon. From 20 to 30, you can choose between Rock Tunnel and Diglett Cave. Depending on your Pokemon! From 30 to 40, leveling up in Route 15 should be more or less fine. After 40, you should head to Cinnabar Mansion and fight Fire types. Avoid Poison types unless you have taught your Pokemon the TM Dig (Purchasable in Celadon Department Store) or Earthquake (after you defeat Viridian Gym, you can purchase it there). Johto From 2 to 10, level up in Route 31. This has an area with fully evolved pokemon at low levels and they give massive EXP. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 34. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 36. From 30 to 40, level up surfing in Route 41. From 40 to 50, level up in Dragon’s Den Entrance. After 50, level up in Dragon’s Den. Hoenn From 2 to 10, level up in Petalburg Woods. From 10 to 20, level up in Granite Cave B1F. From 20 to 30, level up in Jagged Pass and then Route 118. From 30 to 40, level up in Shoal Cave. From 40 to 50, level up in Sky Pillar. After 50, continue leveling up in Sky Pillar. Sinnoh From 2 to 10, level up in Oreburgh Gate 1F or Oreburgh Mine. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 205. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 215 and 214. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 218 or Iron Island B1F or Mt Coronet 5F. From 40 to 50, level up in Mt Coronet 5F, 6F and 7F. After 50, level up in Sinnoh Victory Road 1F (or in all floors). Poison type Pokemon or Pokemon that use Poison type attacks: Poison type Pokemon are generally weak and rely on gimmicks. There are a few exceptions though. Poison types are also only very effective against Grass and Fairy types. That’s it. No other types. Poison types also resist Fighting, Poison, Bug, Grass and Fairy attacks. This means they’re amazing at leveling up in Forest areas and also in places where Poison types appear, as they resist each other. Poison types are weak to Ground and Psychic. The Psychic weakness is not much of an issue, but the Ground one is a big one: this means you will have to be careful if you want to level up in caves! Poison types are not very strong against Poison, Ground, Rock and Ghosts. As mentioned above, caves = bad :(. Kanto From levels 2 to 10, level up in Viridian Forest. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 25. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 13. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 15. After 40 it might be a bit hard. Look for Seafoam Islands or Cinnabar Mansion. If you only have Poison type attacks though, go to Seafoam. After 50 you’re practically forced to level up in Victory Road. Avoid any of the bad types mentioned above! Johto From 2 to 10, level up in Route 31. This has an area with fully evolved pokemon at low levels and they give massive EXP. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 34. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 36. From 30 to 40, level up surfing in Route 41. From 40 to 50, level up in Dragon’s Den Entrance. After 50, level up in Dragon’s Den. Hoenn From 2 to 10, level up in Petalburg Woods. From 10 to 20, level up in Granite Cave B1F. From 20 to 30, level up in Jagged Pass and then Route 118. From 30 to 40, level up in Shoal Cave. From 40 to 50, level up in Sky Pillar. After 50, continue leveling up in Sky Pillar. Sinnoh From 2 to 10, level up in Oreburgh Gate 1F or Oreburgh Mine. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 205. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 215 and 214. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 218 or Iron Island B1F or Mt Coronet 5F. From 40 to 50, level up in Mt Coronet 5F, 6F and 7F. After 50, level up in Sinnoh Victory Road 1F (or in all floors). Ground type Pokemon or Pokemon that use Ground type attacks: Ground types are extremely strong in Pokemon overall, and very, very helpful in PRO. They are very strong against Electric, Fire, Poison, Rock and Steel. This means that Cinnabar Mansion, any cave and Power Plant are free EXP farms! Considering also that you’re the only good type against Electric type Pokemon too. Ground types are not very effective against Bug and Grass Pokemon. Additionally, they deal no damage to Flying types. This basically means “do NOT step a foot into a goddamn Forest”. Remember Viridian Forest? Well, JUST DON’T GO IN THERE. Ground types only resist Poison and Rock type attacks. This means that you will almost always win against these types, as you’re very effective against them. They are a bit weird resistances to have though. These types are only common in caves. Ground types are also completely immune to Electric type attacks! This is amazing for you. Power Plant is a free EXP zone. Ground types are extremely weak against Ice, Grass and Water. While there’s a lot of Grass/Poison and Water/Poison Pokemon, DO NOT RISK FIGHTING AGAINST THEM. Most Ground type Pokemon also have Rock as a secondary type, so you will be extremely weak against them. Just stay out of the water. Kanto From levels 2 to 10, level up in Route 2. From 10 to 20, Mt Moon. From 20 to 30, Power Plant (if you don’t have Surf yet, level up in Route 10). From 30 to 40, Route 15. After 40, Cinnabar Mansion is an insane zone to level up. Teach yourself TM Dig and destroy all Poison and Fire types! After 50 you can finally move on to Victory Road Kanto Johto From 2 to 10, level up in Route 31. This has an area with fully evolved pokemon at low levels and they give massive EXP. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 34. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 36. From 30 to 40, level up surfing in Route 41. Warning: there is no better place to train, sadly. If you can’t train there, you’re pretty much screwed. From 40 to 50, level up in Dragon’s Den Entrance. After 50, level up in Dragon’s Den. Hoenn From 2 to 10, level up in Petalburg Woods. From 10 to 20, level up in Granite Cave B1F. From 20 to 30, level up in Jagged Pass and then Route 118. From 30 to 40, level up in Shoal Cave. From 40 to 50, level up in Sky Pillar. After 50, continue leveling up in Sky Pillar. Sinnoh From 2 to 10, level up in Oreburgh Gate 1F or Oreburgh Mine. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 205. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 215 and 214. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 218 or Iron Island B1F or Mt Coronet 5F. From 40 to 50, level up in Mt Coronet 5F, 6F and 7F. After 50, level up in Sinnoh Victory Road 1F (or in all floors). Flying type Pokemon or Pokemon that use Flying type attacks: Flying types are an absolute coinflip in Pokemon. Either they’re terrible or they’re amazing. There’s no inbetween. Flying types are either too good or unusable. They are very strong against Fighting, Grass and Bug types. This leaves us with a clear sign: We’ll level up in Forest areas! Fighting types will not really be relevant for us at all as we won’t be in any areas where they usually spawn. Flying types are not very effective against Rock, Electric and Steel. Thus, no Power Plant and no caves. DON’T GET INTO CAVES. DON’T. You CAN, but it’s going to be painful. Flying types also resist Fighting, Grass and Bug attacks. They’re a weird type in that their strengths are the same, both offensively and defensively. Flying types are weak against Ice, Electric and Rock type attacks. Thus, no Ice Caves, no Caves, JUST NO CAVES. DON’T. Electric types are also a pain as they spam randomly in some routes. Kanto From levels 2 to 10, level up in Viridian Forest (in Route 2 too) From 10 to 20, Route 25. From 20 to 30, Route 13 From 30 to 40, Route 15. From here onwards it’s a bit harder as there is no dedicated Grass or Bug or Fighting area for newbies. After 40, you should head to Cinnabar Mansion and after 50 try fighting some of the Pokemon in Victory Road Kanto. Avoid all Rock types! Johto From 2 to 10, level up in Route 31. This has an area with fully evolved pokemon at low levels and they give massive EXP. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 34. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 36. From 30 to 40, level up surfing in Route 41. From 40 to 50, level up in Dragon’s Den Entrance. After 50, level up in Dragon’s Den. Hoenn From 2 to 10, level up in Petalburg Woods. From 10 to 20, level up in Granite Cave B1F. From 20 to 30, level up in Jagged Pass and then Route 118. From 30 to 40, level up in Shoal Cave. From 40 to 50, level up in Sky Pillar. After 50, continue leveling up in Sky Pillar. Sinnoh From 2 to 10, level up in Oreburgh Gate 1F or Oreburgh Mine. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 205. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 215 and 214. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 218 or Iron Island B1F or Mt Coronet 5F. From 40 to 50, level up in Mt Coronet 5F, 6F and 7F. After 50, level up in Sinnoh Victory Road 1F (or in all floors). Psychic type Pokemon or Pokemon that use Psychic type attacks: Psychic types are one of the most overpowered types in all of existence. Remember Mewtwo? Well, yeah, you get the point. Psychic types are barely resisted by anything, thus, it allows them to train ANYWHERE. Psychic type attacks are very strong against Fighting and Poison types. Thus, places like Cinnabar Mansion are free experience for our Pokemon. Psychic type attacks are only resisted by themselves (Psychic types) and Steel types. These Pokemon are extremely rare to find in the wild. Psychic types are weak to Dark, Ghost and Bug types. Thus, try to avoid Forests and Ghost filled places. However, there’s a note to make here: a lot of Bug types are also part Poison types. Thus, they’ll still be very weak to Psychic type attacks. If you are faster than them, you can safely fight them with your Psychic attacks. Contrary to popular belief, Ghost types ARE NOT WEAK AGAINST PSYCHIC TYPES. A lot of newbies believe that because Gastly is weak to Psychic attacks. That’s because Gastly and his evolutionary line ARE ALSO POISON TYPES. Psychic types only resist Psychic and Fighting type attacks. They have no more resistances than that. So… we can’t really put them to much use, sadly. Kanto From levels 2 to 10, level up in Route 22, Route 2 or Route 3 (even Viridian Forest). This is to the abundance of Poison types there. From 10 to 20, Route 25. From 20 to 30, Route 10. From 30 to 40, Route 15. From 40 and above, you can easily level up in Cinnabar Mansion. After 50, level up in Victory Road Kanto. Johto From 2 to 10, level up in Route 31. This has an area with fully evolved pokemon at low levels and they give massive EXP. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 34. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 36. From 30 to 40, level up surfing in Route 41. From 40 to 50, level up in Dragon’s Den Entrance. After 50, level up in Dragon’s Den. Hoenn From 2 to 10, level up in Petalburg Woods. From 10 to 20, level up in Granite Cave B1F. From 20 to 30, level up in Jagged Pass and then Route 118. From 30 to 40, level up in Shoal Cave. From 40 to 50, level up in Sky Pillar. After 50, continue leveling up in Sky Pillar. Sinnoh From 2 to 10, level up in Oreburgh Gate 1F or Oreburgh Mine. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 205. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 215 and 214. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 218 or Iron Island B1F or Mt Coronet 5F. From 40 to 50, level up in Mt Coronet 5F, 6F and 7F. After 50, level up in Sinnoh Victory Road 1F (or in all floors). Bug type Pokemon or Pokemon that use Bug type attacks: Bug type Pokemon are goddamn awful. They’re a bit of a meme type, as over 70 to 80% Bug type Pokemon are really, really bad. They have a lot of useless Bug types that cannot level up by themselves at all (Metapod asserting dominance with Harden while doing nothing). The only good Bug types are rare ones. Additionally, Bug types almost always have secondary types which are awful for them (Flying as a secondary type, which grants them 3 additional weaknesses and a x4 weakness to Rock, Poison which makes them weak to Psychic types, Grass which makes them weak to 4 more types and two x4 weaknesses to Fire and Flying…). Not only that. Bug type Pokemon are only super effective against Grass, Psychic and Dark types. It doesn’t sound that bad until we get to the next point. The Grass strength is a nice point, as most Bug types are also Poison, which grants us another extra advantage against them. The Psychic advantage WOULD BE NICE IF MOST BUG TYPES WEREN’T ALSO POISON TYPES. The Dark type advantage is almost entirely irrelevant, as there barely are any wild Dark type Pokemon. If you find one, they’re very rare, so you’d rather capture them. Now we’ll get to the worst point. SEVEN TYPES RESIST BUG TYPE ATTACKS. SEVEN. TYPES. And the worst of all: THEY ARE COMMON TYPES. Bug type attacks are resisted by: (read aloud with me) Fairy, Fighting, Fire, Flying, Ghost, Poison and Steel types. SEVEN types. The only good points we can make is that Fairy, Fighting, Ghost and Steel types are not very common in many areas. However, Fire, Flying and Poison types are everywhere. Not only that, since Poison resists Poison, having a secondary Poison type does not benefit you in any way (Ghost resists Poison and Steel is immune to Poison). Bug types are weak to Fire, Flying and Rock attacks. Thus, most places in the wild are dangerous, we can’t level up in caves at all, and Fire places such as Cinnabar Mansion are completely out of the question. Bug types resist Fighting, Grass and Ground types. The Fighting interaction is weird: Fighting types resist Bug type attacks and Bug type attacks resist Fighting type attacks. I guess it’s also nice to have a Ground resistance, but most of them carry Rock type attacks anyway. We’ll begin with the leveling areas: Kanto From level 2 to 10, try fighting in Route 2 and in Viridian Forest. From 10 to 20, in Route 25. From 20 to 30, Route 13. Be careful because most pokemon can carry Flying or Psychic moves! From 30 to 40, Route 15. Here, the grind becomes painful. You cannot level up at ALL in Cinnabar Mansion, because it’s plagues with Fire and Poison types. I recommend Seafoam Islands until 50-60. Then, visit Victory Road and avoid Rock and Flying types there. Good luck lmao. Johto From 2 to 10, level up in Route 31. This has an area with fully evolved pokemon at low levels and they give massive EXP. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 34. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 36. From 30 to 40, level up surfing in Route 41. From 40 to 50, level up in Dragon’s Den Entrance. After 50, level up in Dragon’s Den. Hoenn From 2 to 10, level up in Petalburg Woods. From 10 to 20, level up in Granite Cave B1F. From 20 to 30, level up in Jagged Pass and then Route 118. From 30 to 40, level up in Shoal Cave. From 40 to 50, level up in Sky Pillar. After 50, continue leveling up in Sky Pillar. Sinnoh From 2 to 10, level up in Oreburgh Gate 1F or Oreburgh Mine. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 205. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 215 and 214. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 218 or Iron Island B1F or Mt Coronet 5F. From 40 to 50, level up in Mt Coronet 5F, 6F and 7F. After 50, level up in Sinnoh Victory Road 1F (or in all floors). Rock type Pokemon or Pokemon that use Rock type attacks: Making a comeback from Rock types, Rock types are that type which is so useful to always have on hand, yet they’re almost as terrible as Bug types. Rock types almost always have a secondary type (which is mainly Ground). Rock types are weak against Ground, Water, Grass, Fighting and Steel. Yes, FIVE weaknesses. If your Rock type pokemon is also Ground type, CONGRATULATIONS, YOU JUST HIT THE JACKPOT. If you’re also a Ground type, you’ll be weak to SIX types, while being 4 times weak to Grass and Water. This is due to most Rock types also sharing that trait. Not everything is bad, however. Rock types are very effective against Bug, Fire, Flying and Ice. Thus, we have many useful spots where we can level up easily. Additionally, since Rock types can learn Ground type attacks, we can safely go against Poison types, Electric types, Steel types (this is situational, as Rock types are weak to Steel type attacks, but Ground type attacks are strong against both Steel and Rock types). We will be able to train in safe spots! Rock types are decently strong deffensively. They resist Fire, Flying, Normal and Poison type attacks. The Fire, Normal and Poison screams CINNABAR MANSION. That will be your grinding place in the Kanto lategame. Rock types are not very effective against Fighting, Ground and Steel, so avoid them. (They’re literally super effective against you too, so why would you even fight them in the first place?) Kanto From level 2 to 10, you can level up in Route 2 and Viridian Forest (be careful about Grass types though!) From 10 to 20, level up in Route 6. From 20 to 30, Route 10 can be an okay spot. If you find it too hard, level up in Route 7. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 15. From 40 to 50, the best place is Cinnabar Mansion. Here you have a safe spot to Rock Tomb all over Fire types here. Poison and Normal types here will also spawn. After 50, you can try Victory Road Kanto, but be careful with the Fighting and Ground types. Johto From 2 to 10, level up in Route 31. This has an area with fully evolved pokemon at low levels and they give massive EXP. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 34. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 36. From 30 to 40, level up surfing in Route 41. Warning: there is no better place to train, sadly. If you can’t train there, you’re pretty much screwed. From 40 to 50, level up in Dragon’s Den Entrance. After 50, level up in Dragon’s Den. Hoenn From 2 to 10, level up in Petalburg Woods. From 10 to 20, level up in Granite Cave B1F. From 20 to 30, level up in Jagged Pass and then Route 118. From 30 to 40, level up in Shoal Cave. From 40 to 50, level up in Sky Pillar. After 50, continue leveling up in Sky Pillar. Sinnoh From 2 to 10, level up in Oreburgh Gate 1F or Oreburgh Mine. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 205. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 215 and 214. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 218 or Iron Island B1F or Mt Coronet 5F. From 40 to 50, level up in Mt Coronet 5F, 6F and 7F. After 50, level up in Sinnoh Victory Road 1F (or in all floors). Ghost type Pokemon or Pokemon that use Ghost type attacks: Ghost types are generally good pokemon! They have two immunities (the most in all of Pokemon) to Normal and Fighting types. They also usually learn pretty decent moves. Ghost type attacks are sadly only very effective against Ghost (yes, themselves) and Psychic types (which, remember, are rare and strong). Ghost type pokemon also resist Bug and Poison type attacks. Ghost type pokemon are only weak against Ghost and Dark. These types are very rare to find, but Dark type moves are VERY frequent among wild pokemon, so you’ll have to be careful. Ghost type attacks are only resisted by Dark types, which is amazing, because over 90% of all pokemon will take atleast neutral damage from your attacks. Ghost type moves have no effect on Normal types, however. Kanto From level 2 to 10, level up in Viridian Forest or Route 2, abusing your resistances to Bug and Poison. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 25 or Route 3 and 4. From 20 to 30, you can try Pokemon Tower, but if you don’t feel safe, level up in Route 10. From 30 to 40, in Route 15. After 40, I heavily recommend Cinnabar Mansion. However, be wary that some of the Poison and Normal types carry Dark type attacks! After 50, you can safely level up in Victory Road Kanto. Johto From 2 to 10, level up in Route 31. This has an area with fully evolved pokemon at low levels and they give massive EXP. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 34. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 36. From 30 to 40, level up surfing in Route 41. From 40 to 50, level up in Dragon’s Den Entrance. After 50, level up in Dragon’s Den. Hoenn From 2 to 10, level up in Petalburg Woods. From 10 to 20, level up in Granite Cave B1F. From 20 to 30, level up in Jagged Pass and then Route 118. From 30 to 40, level up in Shoal Cave. From 40 to 50, level up in Sky Pillar. After 50, continue leveling up in Sky Pillar. Sinnoh From 2 to 10, level up in Oreburgh Gate 1F or Oreburgh Mine. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 205. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 215 and 214. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 218 or Iron Island B1F or Mt Coronet 5F. From 40 to 50, level up in Mt Coronet 5F, 6F and 7F. After 50, level up in Sinnoh Victory Road 1F (or in all floors). Dark type Pokemon or Pokemon that use Dark type attacks: Dark type Pokemon are just okay. The main issue is that they have glaring weaknesses and they are only very effective against Ghost and Psychic types, which are really rare. On the opposite side, they are very weak against Bug, Fighting and Fairy types, which are their weaknesses. Bug and Fighting types are very common, but you can ignore the Fairy type weakness. Dark type attacks are only resisted by themselves, Fairy and Fighting types. Dark types are also immune to Psychic types, and they resist Ghost and Psychic type attacks. They were designed for that sole purpose. Kanto From level 2 to 10, level up in Route 22. From 10 to 20, Vermillion Graveyard. From 20 to 30, Pokemon Tower. After 30, you can start in Route 15. Head to Cinnabar Mansion after level 35-40. After level 50, head to Victory Road Kanto. Avoid Fighting types! Johto From 2 to 10, level up in Route 31. This has an area with fully evolved pokemon at low levels and they give massive EXP. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 34. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 36. From 30 to 40, level up surfing in Route 41. From 40 to 50, level up in Dragon’s Den Entrance. After 50, level up in Dragon’s Den. Hoenn From 2 to 10, level up in Petalburg Woods. From 10 to 20, level up in Granite Cave B1F. From 20 to 30, level up in Jagged Pass and then Route 118. From 30 to 40, level up in Shoal Cave. From 40 to 50, level up in Sky Pillar. After 50, continue leveling up in Sky Pillar. Sinnoh From 2 to 10, level up in Oreburgh Gate 1F or Oreburgh Mine. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 205. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 215 and 214. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 218 or Iron Island B1F or Mt Coronet 5F. From 40 to 50, level up in Mt Coronet 5F, 6F and 7F. After 50, level up in Sinnoh Victory Road 1F (or in all floors). Steel type Pokemon or Pokemon that use Steel type attacks: Steel type Pokemon are SO DAMN GOOD in PRO. They have so much potential and are so easy to level up that it feels stupid. Steel types have enormous defensive stats, access to wide movepools, good abilities and they’re cool. Steel types are also known as an infamous type in the past, as they used to resist UP TO ELEVEN TYPES. YES, ELEVEN. Now they “only” RESIST TEN TYPES. TEN. You resist over HALF of all Pokemon types. This is going to be a long list. Steel type attacks are only super effective against Fairy, Ice and Rock types. The strength against Ice and Rock types is REALLY nice, as this allows us to level up in caves safely. Fairy types are mostly irrelevant, as they are very rare to find. Steel type attacks are not very weak against Electric, Fire, Steel and Water (which makes complete sense). While we can level up in Water areas (because Water against Steel is neutral), it doesn’t benefit us much. Steel types weaknesses are only Fighting, Fire and Ground. This leaves us with a hint: be careful if you want to level up in Cinnabar Mansion, be careful in ANY cave (Fighting + Ground types). Resistances. Where do we even begin. Steel resists: Bug, Dragon, Fairy, Flying, Grass, Ice, Normal, Psychic, Rock and Steel type attacks. Additionally, they are Immune to Poison type attacks. We can level up ANYWHERE. Steel types are amazing. From level 2 to 100, level up anywhere. Just kidding lol. Kanto From level 2 to 10, level up in Viridian Forest. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 25. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 10 or Route 13. From 30 to 40, Route 15 is your place. From 40 and above, it might be a bit hard. If you have a Smoke Ball, level up in Cinnabar Mansion ONLY fighting Poison and Normal types. Otherwise, level up in LAND in Seafoam Islands. It’s an okay place. After 50, you can technically level up in Victory Road Kanto, just be careful with Ground and Fighting types. Johto From 2 to 10, level up in Route 31. This has an area with fully evolved pokemon at low levels and they give massive EXP. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 34. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 36. From 30 to 40, level up surfing in Route 41. From 40 to 50, level up in Dragon’s Den Entrance. After 50, level up in Dragon’s Den. Hoenn From 2 to 10, level up in Petalburg Woods. From 10 to 20, level up in Granite Cave B1F. From 20 to 30, level up in Jagged Pass and then Route 118. From 30 to 40, level up in Shoal Cave. From 40 to 50, level up in Sky Pillar. After 50, continue leveling up in Sky Pillar. Sinnoh From 2 to 10, level up in Oreburgh Gate 1F or Oreburgh Mine. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 205. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 215 and 214. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 218 or Iron Island B1F or Mt Coronet 5F. From 40 to 50, level up in Mt Coronet 5F, 6F and 7F. After 50, level up in Sinnoh Victory Road 1F (or in all floors). Fairy type Pokemon or Pokemon that use Fairy type attacks: Fun fact before I begin: I literally forgot this type existed while I was writing this guide. LMAO. Fairy types are the newest and most recent type introduced in Generation 6. They are a type designed to balance Dark and Dragon types, as they were running wild on the metagame. Fairy types are very strong against Dark, Dragon and Fighting type. Do you want to guess what the issue is? Well, that these types are really rare to find! So this typing does not benefit us much. They are also immune to Dragon types! Nice, I guess? This is useful in Johto, but not in Kanto. Dark types resist Bug, Dark and Fighting type attacks. The resistance to Bug types can be used cleverly in many Kanto routes. Fairy types are weak against Poison and Steel. Additionally, Poison, Steel and Fire resist Fairy type attacks. Cinnabar Mansion is a no-no. Nope. Just nope. Don’t enter there. Kanto From level 2 to 10, level up in Viridian Forest. From 10 to 20, Route 6. From 20 to 30, Route 10. From 30 to 50, try Seafoam Islands. The reason for this big gap is that there’s not a really good place for Fairy types to level up. After 50, you’ll be fine in Victory Road. Johto From 2 to 10, level up in Route 31. This has an area with fully evolved pokemon at low levels and they give massive EXP. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 34. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 36. From 30 to 40, level up surfing in Route 41. From 40 to 50, level up in Dragon’s Den Entrance. After 50, level up in Dragon’s Den. Hoenn From 2 to 10, level up in Petalburg Woods. From 10 to 20, level up in Granite Cave B1F. From 20 to 30, level up in Jagged Pass and then Route 118. From 30 to 40, level up in Shoal Cave. From 40 to 50, level up in Sky Pillar. After 50, continue leveling up in Sky Pillar. Sinnoh From 2 to 10, level up in Oreburgh Gate 1F or Oreburgh Mine. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 205. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 215 and 214. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 218 or Iron Island B1F or Mt Coronet 5F. From 40 to 50, level up in Mt Coronet 5F, 6F and 7F. After 50, level up in Sinnoh Victory Road 1F (or in all floors). Dragon type Pokemon or Pokemon that use Dragon type attacks: Dragon types just exist. The advantage is that they learn a lot of useful attacks and that their typing is really good. They are just extremely rare to find and you’ll never struggle when leveling them. Dragon types are only very effective against other Dragon types. This is the only type which has this trait (like Ghost against Ghost, but Ghost is also very effective against Psychic). Dragon resists Water, Grass, Fire and Electric, which is coincidentally (and possibly a reference) to the 4 Kanto starter types. Dragon type attacks are only resisted by Steel types. Fairy types are immune to Dragon type attacks. Thus, you’ll have an easy time leveling up almost everywhere! Dragon types are only weak against Ice, Dragon and Fairy types. If you avoid any icy place, it’s likely that you’ll never find any issues. Kanto From level 2 to 10, level up in Viridian Forest. From level 10 to 20, Route 25. From 20 to 30, Diglett Tunnel. From 30 to 40, Route 15. From 40 onwards, Cinnabar Mansion. From 50 onwards, finally Victory Road Kanto! Johto From 2 to 10, level up in Route 31. This has an area with fully evolved pokemon at low levels and they give massive EXP. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 34. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 36. From 30 to 40, level up surfing in Route 41. From 40 to 50, level up in Dragon’s Den Entrance. After 50, level up in Dragon’s Den. Hoenn From 2 to 10, level up in Petalburg Woods. From 10 to 20, level up in Granite Cave B1F. From 20 to 30, level up in Jagged Pass and then Route 118. From 30 to 40, level up in Shoal Cave. From 40 to 50, level up in Sky Pillar. After 50, continue leveling up in Sky Pillar. Sinnoh From 2 to 10, level up in Oreburgh Gate 1F or Oreburgh Mine. From 10 to 20, level up in Route 205. From 20 to 30, level up in Route 215 and 214. From 30 to 40, level up in Route 218 or Iron Island B1F or Mt Coronet 5F. From 40 to 50, level up in Mt Coronet 5F, 6F and 7F. After 50, level up in Sinnoh Victory Road 1F (or in all floors).
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  6. The Guild was founded in late 2016. It was the first Turkish guild of the server but now we have become an international PVP guild. We are looking for players who are interested in PvP. Our aim is to reach Top 3 in PvP every seasons. - Total of %32.5 Bonus Experience,%7.5 Bonus Experience from being 95+ members and %25 Bonus Experience (Top 10 guild bonus) - PVP and PVE help channels - Guild bank - Events - Giveaways - Follow all PRO, Guild & Discord Rules- - Be friendly, helpful and supportive to all players and members. - Do NOT scam, break rules, insult, spam, harass or stalk other members. - Make sure to use q and g at all times when PvPing. (If you are confused on this ask before you play ANY matches!) 1. Must be active 2. 16+ Age 3. PVP Rating of 100+ each season 4. Discord is a must 5. Obey the rules Want to join us? just reply answering the questions 1. What is your ign? 2. Age? 3. Able to use Discord? 4. What is your current PVP Rating and what is your max PVP Rating overall? 5. Please include a screenshot of your trainer card!
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  7. Danmic's Marketplace Rules: 1. Fake offerings will be reported (so feel free to chat with me beforehand ) 2. Prices are negotiable 3. Once an offer has been sent or mine accepted the payment is due 4. Fastest way to trade is to contact/add me on discord with the picture of the mon 5. My shop currently contains roughly 140 mon, but this number is only increasing, so feel free to come back any time! 6. Once a week on epic SUNDAY (GMT+2) I offer 10% off on every purchase ---------------------------------------------------------------- Contact: Discord: danmic#3985 Ingame: danmic Timezone: Berlin (GMT+1 => currently +2 hence summertime) ---------------------------------------------------------------- Payment Methods: Coin capsule - (400K) Rare Candy (7.5k) Re-roll ticket (700k) Nature-Reroll ticket (350k) ---------------------------------------------------------------- Untrained Pokemon: ---------------------------------------------------------------- Trained Pokemon: ---------------------------------------------------------------- Story Pokemon: ---------------------------------------------------------------- Sold Pokemon: ---------------------------------------------------------------- Bootcamp (coming soon...) ---------------------------------------------------------------- Last but not least i want to thank everyone, who visited my market dearly and wish you a very nice day!!! Kisses danmic
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  8. I know I may be the only fan of furfrou to ever exist in the world but I think it would be a nice addition for us to be able to catch the haircut forms in future events or maybe even outbreaks like how the pika forms were catchable.
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  9. Hello, @Tuyen2210 @Miisterioso I have cancelled your trade as there is no proof of bid that bid is now invalid. @Xanthothrix You are the winner of the auction with your bid of 1 million I will be forcing the trade with you Please verify the beldum is in your box and the money has been removed. I apologize for the inconvenience to both players for the mix up the auctioneer has been handled accordingly. Sincerely, Polteageist.
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  10. Hi there! First of all, thanks for taking the time to report this. The issue is known and has been reported already. There's unfortunately no ETA when it will be fixed. Kind regards, Exotyc
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  11. @LongZu The shiny Pokémon have been removed from your shop, please read the rules and post them in the appropriate section. You can sell them in the shiny and special section of the trade forums. Make sure to read the rules to prevent any issues in the future. Have a nice day, Sincerely Hawluchaa
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  13. @Cyanirl The time for this auction was always 2 days once the starting bid was met, so there are still a few hours left until it ends. Reminder to use the Report button to reach us, tagging won't make yourself noticed, risk being missed and addressed later than it should have been if you just report. Good luck.
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  14. Most used Pokemon - August 2021: #Gold August 2021 Most used pokemon in ranked pvp (source: PRO database) #Rank Pokemon Count Percentage Win rate 1. Rotom-Wash 13476 30% 50% 2. Ferrothorn 9250 20% 49% 3. Clefable 8419 18% 52% 4. Chansey 7658 17% 49% 5. Bisharp 7380 16% 51% 6. Keldeo-Resolute 6742 15% 56% 7. Landorus 6545 14% 56% 8. Scizor 6174 13% 50% 9. Garchomp 5878 13% 51% 10. Heatran 5655 12% 53% 11. Zapdos 5462 12% 55% 12. Metagross 5438 12% 52% 13. Conkeldurr 5264 11% 50% 14. Azumarill 5194 11% 48% 15. Tornadus 4774 10% 56% 16. Volcarona 4768 10% 45% 17. Dragonite 4677 10% 46% 18. Charizard 4662 10% 42% 19. Tyranitar 4486 10% 47% 20. Gengar 4237 9% 44% 21. Gyarados 4156 9% 39% 22. Slowbro 4149 9% 50% 23. Serperior 4120 9% 49% 24. Gliscor 4084 9% 49% 25. Weavile 3946 8% 50% 26. Pelipper 3946 8% 45% 27. Medicham 3625 8% 52% 28. Excadrill 3582 8% 47% 29. Ditto 3554 7% 51% 30. Skarmory 3411 7% 51% 31. Alakazam 3400 7% 47% 32. Venusaur 3388 7% 48% 33. Swampert 3104 6% 45% 34. Breloom 2795 6% 53% 35. Magnezone 2787 6% 46% 36. Tangrowth 2667 5% 48% 37. Mimikyu 2626 5% 50% 38. Kingdra 2581 5% 44% 39. Togekiss 2491 5% 47% 40. Diggersby 2317 5% 55% 41. Cloyster 2217 4% 47% 42. Hydreigon 2078 4% 48% 43. Diancie 2002 4% 51% 44. Lucario 1964 4% 42% 45. Lopunny 1809 4% 50% 46. Darmanitan 1801 4% 48% 47. Beedrill 1649 3% 46% 48. Manaphy 1558 3% 52% 49. Blissey 1556 3% 45% 50. Muk-Alolan 1512 3% 53% Unique Teams: 44468 #Silver August 2021 Most used pokemon in ranked pvp (source: PRO database) #Rank Pokemon Count Percentage Win rate 1. Rotom-Wash 14110 25% 51% 2. Ferrothorn 10515 19% 50% 3. Clefable 9738 17% 51% 4. Garchomp 9023 16% 52% 5. Scizor 9011 16% 52% 6. Chansey 8727 15% 50% 7. Keldeo-Resolute 7857 14% 54% 8. Landorus 7518 13% 56% 9. Bisharp 7441 13% 52% 10. Zapdos 7429 13% 52% 11. Tyranitar 7160 13% 49% 12. Heatran 6202 11% 51% 13. Weavile 6010 11% 52% 14. Azumarill 5962 10% 48% 15. Dragonite 5960 10% 48% 16. Conkeldurr 5946 10% 49% 17. Serperior 5911 10% 51% 18. Charizard 5856 10% 43% 19. Gengar 5656 10% 44% 20. Volcarona 5465 10% 45% 21. Metagross 5282 9% 53% 22. Excadrill 5276 9% 50% 23. Skarmory 5273 9% 51% 24. Tornadus 5080 9% 55% 25. Gliscor 4854 8% 49% 26. Slowbro 4556 8% 49% 27. Medicham 4399 8% 51% 28. Gyarados 4393 8% 43% 29. Mimikyu 4232 7% 50% 30. Pelipper 4217 7% 48% 31. Magnezone 4124 7% 53% 32. Alakazam 3888 7% 50% 33. Togekiss 3497 6% 48% 34. Venusaur 3347 6% 47% 35. Ditto 3187 5% 50% 36. Kingdra 3172 5% 48% 37. Diancie 2827 5% 49% 38. Swampert 2810 5% 48% 39. Diggersby 2663 4% 55% 40. Tangrowth 2612 4% 48% 41. Cloyster 2481 4% 46% 42. Torkoal 2317 4% 44% 43. Muk-Alolan 2262 4% 49% 44. Lopunny 2159 3% 54% 45. Manaphy 2060 3% 52% 46. Manectric 2023 3% 53% 47. Infernape 1970 3% 47% 48. Blissey 1963 3% 49% 49. Latios 1866 3% 59% 50. Ninetales-Alolan 1853 3% 52% Unique Teams: 54588
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  15. Medicham 3m+ if u are Lucky u can get more , i would pay 7m if it was 20+ spdef
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  16. I was catching & farming Sneasel and suddenly this guy was selling witamins & minerals, supplements for pokemons in chat, I saw it and immediately started a conversation What a fun ! good enough reason to laugh for sure hahah
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  17. Uhhh why did my bid is one after another you wrote in trade chat that your c.o is 1m and now I check forum but I didn't see anything
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  19. Thanks for adding text of poke voice in zacian quest.he got his zacian now.
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  20. Tyrunt 10h remaining Amaura 12h remaining Gl bid
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  21. Hello everyone and welcome to my 20th guide: PRO Market Guide! This guide aims to teach newbies, advanced and expert players how to pricecheck pokemon in Trade, All, Help Chat and how to avoid scams, overpaying for stuff you could catch in five minutes, learn the basics on how PRO’s economy works and start understanding how price fluctuation works! PRO Market is always subjective: everyone can set their own prices, no matter if they’re garbage or not, no matter if the price is absurdly stupid: the only limit your prices can have is your imagination (just, for the love of god, don’t be stupid and sell non-nature tier 1 pokemon with garbage IVs for 1 million pokedollars, you'll break the market lol) As a newbie, you should first beforehand know all the factors that can come into pricing a pokemon, item or service. I have listed them below and I will try explaining how to rate each requirement/factor, how much do they affect a pokemon’s price and how important they are for specific pokemon, giving examples for each. As an advanced/expert player, you should be expected to know basic pricing methods, what is viable or not in bosses/pvp, and what you should be seeking to buy / avoid buying, since some stuff can easily be hunted and you can save hundreds of thousands of pokedollars. At the end, I will try providing some of my own examples from my accounts, to show you how cheap or expensive these pokemon are. Let’s begin! Keep in mind: all prices ARE SUBJECTIVE. They can change to everyone's opinions. Remember that some people are willing to pay way more than others, and some are willing to pay way less. Do not sell or buy anything if you're not satisfied with the price, don't force yourself! However, listen to advice from other friends who know about it. Factors Pokemon 1.- Pokemon itself (fan favourite or not?) Inevitably, when you’re trying to sell a pokemon just because it’s a pokemon and literally EVERYONE likes or loves it (I’m looking at you, Charizard), there will always be that 13 year old kid who spent half of his childhood begging their moms for their phone to watch youtube for the pokemon episodes where Charizard was a dumbass with Ash yet he was SO COOL and everyone loved it. That 13 year old in trade chat will inevitably want that Charizard to relive his childhood memories, even if it’s a Docile Charizard with garbage IVS, there will be people that will buy your Walmart Charizard for a LOT of money just because it’s a Charizard (newbies will). It will always be kind of easier to sell popular or famous and loved pokemon that kids always wanted to have in their team. With this, I want to basically mention that if you try to sell a pokemon like Stantler, Wordamam, Unown, Volbeat, Combee or some of the pokemon that literally no one wants (even though Stantler had a Christmas skin), it is very likely that you will never be able to sell it, no matter how good it is or how much you try to sell it. There are simply pokemon like Cherrim or Carnivine or Maractus who nobody would ever use because practically everyone dislikes them (even though I like these weird or less common pokemon). There are pokemon that barely anyone would ever buy. 2.- Availability (tradable or not, event only or not, outbreak only or not, boss reward) Some pokemon are not available all year. Some pokemon are not tradable (Legendary pokemon, but you can’t price them anyway since you can’t sell them lol), some pokemon are only obtainable in events (Darkrai, but also a legendary, Mimikyu, etc), some only spawn in Outbreaks (the Kommo-o line, for example) and some are boss reward only. Some are available only under certain months (Gen 5 and 6 starters whose spawn switches monthly). Some pokemons’ prices will skyrocket or severely increase after days, weeks or months after their last available spawn. Pokemon like Mimikyu or Kommo-o are more expensive as time goes on since Outbreaks only happen every one or two months, events are normally seasonal and hard to come by. These pokemon will always be sold expensively as you’d have to otherwise wait months to be able to hunt them. They will always be limited! 3.- Is it locked in time only cooldowns? Excavations/Dig Spots/Headbutts It is extremely rare that some of these pokemon are only huntable in Dig Spots, Headbutts or Excavations. These pokemon usually have another spawn place but it is extremely hard to find (for example, Honedge or Beldum) and tedious or it consumes several resources. Thus, the other option is to hunt in cooldown related areas such as Dig Spots. With membership active, you can hunt for specific pokemon (if you’re extremely lucky) every three days, when the cooldown is down. You can also hunt pokemon in excavations, which require a lot of money to invest in it to get anything profitable. If you try to buy pokemon that are locked behind cooldowns, you will 100% see an increase in prices (Honedges go for absurd amounts indeed). Additionally, pokemon that are often hunted in Excavations are also often seriously overpriced, as Excavations are extremely time-consuming and money-investing until you reach a lot of discoveries, where you can hunt for extremely rare pokemon. Headbutt pokemon are just fine, they’re normally rare pokemon in the earlier areas. Some Headbutt trees are really nice and they provide with rare pokemon with kinda low tier spawns. Try them out! They don’t sell for too expensive prices. 4.- Available spawns (conflicts with other pokemon in the same hunting area) The next possible conflict can be found in the pokemon’s available spawn. Imagine if the spawn is a place with 9 tier 1 pokemon, and this pokemon is a tier 9, without repel. I think you can guess where this is going: this is going to be PAIN. Additionally, there are routes where you may try to hunt for different pokemon at the same time with the same Sync. This is the case with the routes where Swablu, Machop, Bagon and Scyther spawn, and the other one where Happiny, Ralts and Kirlia spawn. These are high tier spawns for which you can try to carry a Synchronise pokemon and spend some hours there. However, there are other routes where different tier 8 or 9 spawn, and they’re all interestingly farmable, but the nature they need is completely incompatible from each other (like Bold against Adamant, Timid against Brave, Modest against Sassy). There we will have to sadly choose a single nature and discard all other pokemon from the route. 5.- Where can it be hunted (regions, is it locked behind sidequest? Is it locked behind MS area?) Does it require HM Slaves to access it? Or payments? This can also be painful: imagine having to hunt for a pokemon locked behind a Membership Only area. That is already saddening enough, not being able to hunt it because you can’t afford it Not only that. Imagine the pokemon you want to hunt for is a Kanto Pokemon (Clefairy), but its Kanto spawns are bad, so you have to wait until Sinnoh’s MT Coronet to farm it properly (I actually never understood why lol). Additionally, it can also be a pain if it’s locked behind a sidequest (like Vulcan Island or some parts of Valley of Steel) and you need a Boss Team to get through the whole thing to be able to reach the preferable hunting spot you want. It can also be a bit annoying to pay pokedollars to enter the area every single time (Valley of Steel ). HM Slave management can be nerve wracking, since you have to plan your party distribution ahead. Imagine walking 10 minutes to the preferred spot when you realise you didn’t have your Waterfall pokemon on you. That’s PAIN. 6.- MS Required or not? (if in a non-MS area) Is this pokemon MS required to hunt it? Congratulations! You now need to add in the costs of purchasing a MS Medallion from another player (or donating for it), or you may also need to build an entire Boss Team (just think of the costs to hunt it, EV train it, EXP train it, the items required to run it properly…) and get through some bosses who have a 14 day cooldown and pray to the RNG gods that they drop a Mini MS so you can then use it to hunt something specific for three days. The other possible annoying situation is that the pokemon you want to hunt is not catchable until Hoenn/Sinnoh and you need Membership to hunt it in earlier areas. This is kinda minor, but if you want to establish an early empire, you may need a Membership to start out. 7.- Tier (Rarity, how hard is it to find?) This is mainly the biggest factor when it comes to pricing a pokemon: the rarity (or tier) of the pokemon. If this pokemon is a low tier (1 to 3), you have no excuse to go and hunt a better one to sell it or to use it. If this pokemon is a mid tier (4 to 6), you could maybe excuse one slightly low IV, or one of the conditions being a bit bad. When a pokemon is a high tier (7 to 9), they become extremely valuable, as even semi pvpable ones are already expensive. Pvpable and bossable pokemon are really expensive, and can even reach absurd millionaire amounts. If they’re a high tier, expect to boost the price insanely. 8.- How can we find it: Land? Surfing? Fishing only? Let me just say: if the only way to find this pokemon is to fish it (Relicanth, mainly) you will lose all your will to live. If you have to fish to hunt for a pokemon, let me just tell you this: No. Just don’t. No. Please. For the love of god, don’t. Fishing is so painfully bad in PRO, it’s slow, bad, slow, bad, SLOW, BAD. If you want to sell or buy something that can only be caught via fishing, OVERPRICE IT INTO INFINITY. It’s a pain. On the other hand, if you can find it running around the Grass or Water, then it’s completely fine. It’s the standard method, no need to increase prices here. 9.- Can it be repel’d? Is it more or less time consuming? This is one of the biggest factors too: if this pokemon absolutely needs to be hunted via repel trick (you can check the guide for the method here), you will have to severely increase the price, as it needs to cover its financial costs. The best and most cost effective repel is Super Repel, which costs 500 pokedollars and will allow you to use it for 200 steps. Thus, in the pricing of a pokemon, you can add the money that it cost to find it using repels. 10.- What time frame does it spawn? All day? Only part of the day? This is not really an issue, but you have to consider that sometimes, some pokemon are restricted by time frames. If you don’t have many free hours to play, you will sometimes be unable to hunt for the specific pokemon you want to, as their needed poketime (Night, Morning, Day) is far from your reach, and when it would be the necessary poketime, you’d have to go to bed. Restricted pokemon can be a bit more expensive indeed. 11.- What level does it spawn? Is it hard to hunt because it can defeat our pokemon? Is it high level and easy to level up? Or is it low level and hard to level up? (Magikarp) Does this pokemon have a good moveset to level up by itself? Do we need to waste money on items to level it up quickly? Do we need to waste money on Tutors? This factor is a bit weird but: sometimes we will use a synch of a specific level so as to repel trick with our synch, and not with another pokemon. Thus, we’ll be restricted to using a low level synch, which are hard and rare to obtain. Additionally, if we need to head to a high level spot, we will need high level pokemon, which we can factor in if we needed to buy them. If the moveset of the pokemon is terrible, we will also need to replace it, and tutors and TM will drain our money away (seriously, 15k per usage in some tutors really is painful). If the pokemon itself does not come with good level-up moves, it should be added slightly into the final price. 12.- Does it require any extra HM Slaves? (Soak for Ghost types, Ghost type false swiper for Take Down users, Damp user for Explosion users, etc) Another small factor to take in is if we need to specifically train a Golduck (Soak), Shedinja (Ghost False Swiper), Poliwag (Damp) for the task, if we spent any money on it, or if we also had to hunt and train HM Slaves such as Parasect, Nidoking, Tentacruel, and if we also had to spend extra Tms on them. Additionally, You can also take into account if you bought any Tools from the Coin Shop to be able to hunt pokemon, as it is a big investment and you must make it up. 13.- Does this pokemon require a specific gender? Specific pokemon need a specific gender to evolve in the correct way. For example, a Female Ralts cannot evolve into Gallade, but a Male one can. Got a Male Ralts with the right nature and every single good factor? Congratulations! You made yourself a ton of money? But if you get a Female one with all the other good factors, too bad! You cannot sell it anymore, as it can’t evolve into Gallade. Do you want a Vespiquen but your Combee is male? Too bad, you can’t have it! 14.- Should this pokemon be from a specific region? (Optional, but good in Kanto Route 28 Natu Synchs) Another minor factor to take into account is that certain buyers/sellers only have access to specific regions. If someone asks you for a Johto pokemon at level 100 to rush the region and you try to sell them a Hoenn pokemon, it will obviously not work, as they will be unable to use it until they reach Hoenn. Too bad! Additionally, it can be good to sell pokemon from specific regions such as Kanto and Johto so as to have the biggest possible market. 15.- Does this pokemon require a specific ability? Does this pokemon have one ability, two abilities, one ability and a hidden ability, two abilities and a hidden ability? Can this pokemon's ability change into hidden ability? (Pupitar – Ferroseed) Does this pokemon require ONLY HA to function and thus you NEED to buy a BMS and pay its costs? Certain pokemon require a specific ability in order to function. This is the example with Haxorus, who seriously needs Mold Breaker to function properly. Sadly, he has two other borderline useless natures: Rivalry and Unnerve. If you try to sell a Haxorus with another ability than Mold Breaker, it will just be impossible for you to sell it. Darmanitan needs Sheer Force, Machamp needs No Guard or Guts, but can’t use Steadfast, Klefki needs Prankster, and so on. Certain pokemon will also require their Hidden Ability (such as Nidoking with Sheer Force) to function properly. The chance to obtain their Hidden Ability when caught in the wild is just 5%. However, if you purchase a Black Medallion from the Coin Shop, this chance will be boosted to 33%. Thus, you might also need to take into account buying a Black Medallion in the market and increasing prices in selling or buying if the pokemon absolutely requires to have their Hidden Ability. 16.- Does this pokemon require a specific form? (Meowstic, Wordamam, Rotom). Can this form be changed once evolved? This situation is very specific, but specific pokemon have specific natures which will only work with a specific form. I think you get the point of me repeating the word specific: IT’S SPECIFIC. Wordamam is a great trolly and utility pokemon you can use for your Sinnoh adventure but it requires specific natures to function. It’s a very unknown pokemon with actual decent stats and it’s really fun to use (and extremely annoying too). If you didn’t get the right nature for it, you’re screwed! Additionally, you need a Female Burmy for this, and you must evolve Burmy in the right place for her to evolve into the right form! Thus, if you evolve your pokemon into the wrong form, it might become worthless in the market 17.- Does this pokemon need to be fully evolved with that nature, or does it need to NOT evolve to properly function? (Eviolite Chansey, Eviolite Golbat, Eviolite Dusclops). Some pokemon function better with specific sets in PVP or Bosses if they’re not fully evolved. This is thanks to a few factors: their preevolution has very similar defensive stats to their fully evolved form, and their movesets might change once evolved. Eviolite will boost a non-fully evolved pokemon’s Defense and Special Defense stat in battle by 50%. For example, this will boost Happiny’s and Chansey’s defensive stats, but not Blissey’s. Thus, if you grab an online pokemon stat calculator, and multiply Blissey’s preevo stats once fully trained and compare them, you will realise the Eviolite boost is massive. For example too, Dusclops barely gains any defensive stats once evolved. If you grab a calculator and equip Eviolite onto it, you’ll realise how its bulk is way superior to Dusknoir, but Dusknoir’s offensive stats overshadow Dusclops. Thus, if you use Relaxed or Sassy natures, you should use Dusclops over Dusknoir. If you use Brave, you should use Dusknoir over Dusclops. However, both evolutions are amazing! (Remember the evo line for him is: Duskull – Dusclops – Dusknoir. Duskull and Dusclops get an Eviolite boost). Thus, if you evolve the pokemon by accident, it might become worthless in the market. 18.- Does this pokemon only work with one nature? Or with more than one nature? Can it work with sub-par natures or sub-par sets? Does the nature hinder it and make it only bossable or story playable? Unfortunately, for PVP, pokemon will be severely restricted towards their preferred nature: if you get even a sub-par nature, it will be extremely difficult to use them. If you capture a Naughty Bisharp instead of an Adamant Bisharp, it will still be usable, since its defenses are pretty terrible anyway. However, if you captured an Impish Tangrowth or Venusaur, you would basically not be able to run the best sets since they both use Giga Drain to heal up and other specially oriented moves. They would still be able to use other sets (Tangrowth physical Assault Vest, or Venusaur physical sets), but they’d be subpar and way worse than the normal and intended ones. However, this does not affect Bosses as much: subpar natures can still be used against bosses, using Baton Pass teams or specific strategies against specific Bosses. Since they’re not people with a functioning brain, just an exploitable artificial intelligence, you can build your pokemon around specific bosses. Thus, if your pokemon is only usable in PvP and not Bosses and you get the wrong nature, the price will severely decrease, to the point where some people might not want to purchase it anymore. 19.- How are the pokemon’s Ivs? Are they really high? Are they low? Are they accidentally high? (For example, trick room pokemon with -speed natures but with high speed ivs, pokemon that use Destiny Bond in bosses and need low defenses so as to faint 100% of the time). This is one of the most important factor (if not the most important one). If the pokemon’s IV are garbage, literally nobody will want to buy it, and it might become worthless. The pokemon’s IV stats are extremely important to improve its level up stat growth. A badly IV stated pokemon has no point in being trained. A single lower IV than what your pokemon needed can make it from perfectly PvPable to just unusable outside of bosses.. The best example for this is Gengar. Gengar, for PvP, needs to be Timid/Naive/Hasty natures AND its Speed IV must be 31. If you get even 1 IV lower, 30, it will always be outsped in PvP. This will make its value decrease exponentially, to the point where nobody would want to have it, even if they gave it to you for free. There are other pokemon that can work with lower IV stats like slow tanks or slow sweepers, and pokemon with low bulk who don’t really care about it, as long as their offensive stats are extremely solid. IV are extremely important, in Boss and PvP pokemon specially, where their important stats should be as high as possible, 20+ and above. There are pokemon that are flexible with their IV, such as having a Weavile with low defenses, as long as it has maximum speed (31) and the correct nature and a high IV in attack (20+). However, you should generally aim to get the highest possible IV spread in a pokemon so as to make them more expensive in the market. Additionally, specific pokemon like Tangrowth and Venusaur require HP Fire to counter threats such as Scizor. Hidden Power is a move that completely depends on your pokemon's IVs. These are extremely rare, completely luck based and hard to obtain. If the pokemon has the right Hidden Power, its price will also skyrocket. 20.- Is it EV Trained? Are its Evs wrong? Is it fully EV trained? Do we need to change anything? This is a smaller factor but this will 100% make a pokemon be more expensive in the market. If the pokemon is wrongly EV trained, you will need to purchase a ton of EV Reducing berries and fix its wrong EV spread. Afterwards, you’ll also have to take into consideration that you have to spend money on EV training it too. If the pokemon is properly EV trained, it will save us some time, but it will also increase its price in the market, as the job is already done for you. 21.- Is its moveset correct? Is it cheap to change/fix if it is incorrect? Another extremely annoying factor: if the moveset is incorrect, it will be a pain to fix it. Some tutors cost 15 thousand pokedollars (an entire Nugget) to teach a move, add into that the possibility that they are locked behind the Daycare (which requires unlocking Cerulean Cave and beating a boss) or that they are in side areas like Valley of Steel (5k fee), or Trainer’s Valley (15k trip). Add into that the possibility of having to buy a TM from another NPC or another region. THAT hurts your wallet. Keep it in mind when you try to purchase or sell a pokemon. Add it ontop of the price. 22.- Is this pokemon a rare form? (Event form, shiny) This will astronomically increase the price of a pokemon. If the pokemon you caught is an event form or a shiny, the pokemon’s price will increase several times. This will also depend on its Tier: if it is a low tier rare form, it will only increase a bit, but the rarer it becomes, the more expensive it will be. For example, a Tier 1 to 3 Shiny can go from 30 to 100k only, even if it’s complete garbage, but a Tier 8 to 9 Shiny can easily go for over 10 million pokedollars, even if garbage. If it weren’t shiny, they’d both cost around the same, 5 to 10k pokedollars. That alone shows you how far some people are willing to pay for rare Shiny or Event pokemon!. 23.- Is this pokemon story viable? Does its set (combination of characteristics above) make it only usable in story? Is it worth to train? If the pokemon has real issues and does not meet ANY of the good criteria above, you’re screwed. This means it’s automatically classified as a Story pokemon. These pokemon are discardable after you complete the story because they’re way too terrible to even use in Boss fights. Unfortunately, these pokemon will never range out of 30k pokedollars, because they’re just borderline useless. These pokemon are considered unsellable, as they’re just completely useless anywhere. You can sell them for 5k pokedollars for Pokedex Data (so it increases your Caught Data in Pokedex for sidequests) and for Evolved Data (so that you evolve them to obtain more Evolved Data in Pokedex for sidequests). Outside of that, high level story pokemon (above level 70 to 80) can be sold from 30 to 50k pokedollars so as to allow a new player to rush the region using that pokemon and beating everything in a single hit. 24.- Is this pokemon bossable (considering its characteristics above)? Or does it have issues that prevent it from functioning properly? If the pokemon meets MOST or SOME of the criteria mentioned above, good! Good job! These pokemon are very easy to sell. Bossable pokemon can be easily sold from a range between 30-40k (Tier 1, easy to hunt) to 200-300k (Tier 8+, hard to hunt) untrained. These are easy money! You should always aim for Bossable pokemon that are easy to hunt, low tiers, and that do not require specific abilities to function properly. Just the sheer pokemon itself can get you a lot of money if its IV, Nature, Gender, and other factors work properly. Congrats, you’re making bank! 25.- Is this pokemon viable in ranked PVP (considering its characteristics above)? Or does it have issues that prevent it from functioning properly? If the pokemon meets ALMOST ALL the criteria above, it’s extremely good, and everything aligns properly: Congratulations! You just made yourself some EASY MONEEEEEY (as Bizzarro Flame would say, if you get the reference you get a cookie). These pokemon can go for millions easily. You should always aim for these to sell, as they’re what will bring you millions and millions of pokedollars and cash. The only issue is that they have strict requirements, but well, we can’t have everything good in life! Items 1.- Is the item you’re looking for purchasable? What resource? (Pokedollars, PvP Coins, PvE Coins) If the item you’re looking for is purchasable in a Shop, it will always be the same price as in the shop. It just makes no sense to buy it more expensively from a player if you can purchase it from an NPC. PvP Coins and PvE Coins can be converted to Pokedollars in the market. People argue 1-2 PvP Coins is worth 3-4k Pokedollars. PvE Coins range on a similar value. Items are valued differently depending on their value and purchasability for the mentioned resources above. 2.- Is the item you’re looking for obtainable in a map area or any place? Does it respawn after a specific time? How long? Do you only obtain one or multiple ones? If this item is only obtainable once, you can be sure that it will be really expensive to purchase. If you happen to come across one, be sure to keep it in your bag and consider selling it to a really expensive price. Rare stones like Shiny or Ice Stone and rare evolutionary items go for a lot. There are also PvP items obtainable through quests, like Rocky Helmet. These items are extremely expensive! It also depends on where you can get this item too, and if it will be reobtainable after a while or not. It may also come in 2-3, or more units at a time. 3.- Does this item get consumed after its usage? If the item is consumed after usage, its price will normally be extremely low (unless it’s very rare and special like an evolving stone or a Master Ball). Sadly, these items are really annoying to farm, because you keep having to buy them over and over again. This is an issue in PvP: Focus Sashes and other consumables need to be farmed nonstop to always have them available. You can try to increase prices if you think they are too rare and hard to farm for you. 4.- How important is this item in PvP/Bosses/Story? If this item is extremely important (PvP Items, mainly), be ready to pay a TON for it (and sell it for a TON of money). These items will always be on your bag, ready to use, ready to level up a pokemon, help you EV train, help you hunt, help you fight Bosses, PvP, etc. Items such as the Choice items are extremely flexible (curious, knowing they only allow you to use one move) in many different situations. These are extremely expensive. On the other hand, Macho Brace, Smoke Ball and other PvE items which are also incredibly useful are also actually pretty cheap. For some reason, people don’t buy them expensively. These items are good items to actively purchase and sell in the PRO Market. These are easy money! Services 1.- Does the EXP Service for your pokemon take long? Is it a tank, a fully evolved pokemon, or a non-evolved pokemon? Does it have good characteristics as mentioned above? Can it level up easily using strategies or does it consume sashes and other items? (Example: Using steel types against Arboks in Cerulean Cave). The EXP Service prices are usually extremely weird. Some people will make you pay for leveling from a specific level to another level (Example: you have to pay 1000 pokedollars per level from 5 to 40, 2000 from 40 to 60, 3000 for 70 to 90), some others will have a fixed price if the pokemon is easy to level (Gastly, for example), medium (2nd stage evolutions like Machoke), hard (3rd stage evolutions like Blastoise) and extreme (tanks like Wynaut, Chansey, and other tanks that are extremely slow to level up). You can expect to pay from 40k to 100k+ to have a single pokemon leveled up to your desired level depending on all the mentioned factors above. Additionally, add in the costs if you need to use Focus Sashes or other consumable items! Remember to take screenshots of your trade in case anything wrong happens! 2.- Does the EV Service for your pokemon take long? Does it have the capabilities to defeat pokemon in the Safari EV Wald in a single hit? Does it take longer? Is it so weak that you need to train it outside? EV Services will normally always cost from 30 to 50k since everyone uses the Safari EV Wald. You will often be asked to have a pokemon that can take out a level 10 fully evolved pokemon in a single attack so that they can do it quickly. Safari EV Wald lets you train for 20 minutes, and you will approximately be able to train 400 to 450 EV from a single pokemon if you have Battle Animations off and Text Dialogue set at the fastest speed in your options menu. This means that you need to finish the remaining EV in a random route, an EV Route or to go in the Wald again. The Wald costs 10k per trip (unless you have the 50k Safari 24 hour pass, which makes it only 2k to go inside again). If the pokemon are so weak that they take more than a single hit, or they need to be trained outside first, expect the price to go up. Remember to take screenshots of your trade in case anything wrong happens! 3.- Does the Story Service you require encompass one region? Two? Three? All four? How much do you consider each region is? Do you provide the mounts and level 100 pokemon to rush it, or does another person do it for you? Some people purchase Story Services. These are extremely expensive and risky: you will be giving someone else access to your account to rush your Story Progress. I heavily recommend NOT to purchase this service, because it mostly ends in accidents and unwanted bans due to giving your account’s access to an unknown person. You will have to pay a person to complete entire regions for you: quests, gym leaders, HM and items you may need to find along the way. You may also need to provide level 100 pokemon, a Membership (for Kanto) or Mounts to make the process faster, or purchase them previously. The service will take hours to days to complete, and you should be in contact with the service provider constantly. These go for hundreds of thousands of pokedollars per region, so be ready to pay! Take screenshots for everything! 4.- How many pokemon do you need for your Dex Service? Are these pokemon high tier? How long can it take to farm one yourself? Do they require MS? Boss? Are they easy or hard to find? This is a painfully slow service: You will be trading dozens to hundreds of pokemon, five by five, during multiple hours. Some of these pokemon take weeks to farm (Porygon), and most of them are really rare and hard to obtain pokemon. This will fill your pokedex Caught data quickly at the same speed your bank account gets drained. Some of these require to defeat a Boss three times in succession to be able to obtain them, so you may not be able to obtain them until 45 days have passed (three 14 day cooldowns). Imagine if you also need to obtain that pokemon’s evolutions, so multiply it. Add to it that some pokemon are only obtained through Membership. Add the factors mentioned at the top of this guide. You get what I mean, it’s just a pain. It’s super expensive. 5.- How much do the move tutorships cost for your pokemon? Is it expensive and does it require traveling? Finally, the move tutorship service! You will pay another person so that they go to a specific place, they teach the move to your pokemon and add a small fee into it. Imagine you want to buy a 15k move, after a 5k trip. You will pay 20k in total + the fee they add into it. This is quickly going to rack up, so before you decide on what moves to ask for, think carefully! I hope this explanation for how to price things in PRO Market has helped you a lot! I will now proceed to price a few pokemon as examples. The Guide is done at this point, I only wanted to explain to you newbies how many factors we can find in PRO’s Market and how do we value things in PRO. Here at the bottom I will add some pokemon and items and their possible value, how they are used, and what purpose do they serve. I will provide many examples so that you guys learn how do I personally rate pokemon! This guide will be posted now, as a draft, but will be edited and it can already be considered complete. Examples This Banette has terrible IVS (literally none above 10, which is pathetic). The EVs are completely wrong (it's supposed to be a tanky attacker, or a tanky utility pokemon). The moveset is also wrong, and it has no PP UP on it. Even with the correct Nature, it is still terrible. This is a DEX Pokemon, or Story Pokemon, this would be sold for 5 to 10k max. Same as above: this Combee is male (gender is wrong, so it cannot evolve), IVs are generally bad, the nature is wrong, it's untrained at a low level and it has no good moves learned. It's 5k for DEX. This pokemon is a bossable pokemon. It has an amazing nature, IVs, Nature, and Ability. It has some decent moves to level up and it's partially EV trained. This would be from 40 to 80k, as it is a high tier pokemon. It is underrated, but Nosepass is an amazing Boss Hazard setter and Crippler! If this were trained, it could go from 300 to 500k. This pokemon is a level 100 trained pokemon. There are some issues with it: The Nature is right, it has a PvP Moveset ready, it has the right EV Training. However, the ability is not the required one for PvP. Thus, this pokemon is an excellent Story Rusher and it can also be used to do some sidequests. However, this is not usable for PvP. This would range from 100 to 250k max. This pokemon is a high level HM Slave. It is EV trained at level 100. It has insanely high IVs, but wrong nature for its ability. It also misses the right moves. This would be a 50 to 150k pokemon, as it still needs to be taught the correct HM moves (Rock Smash, Dig, Headbutt and False Swipe). This pokemon is a monstruous and godly Screener for Bosses. It has the right moveset (Screens + Hazards + Iron Defense to fight Steven Boss). It has one of the best natures, but not the best one (the best one would be Relaxed/Sassy with very low Speed IV), it has insane IVs, correct EV spread, and it's PvP/Boss ready. Since this is a low tier pokemon, this would be from 600k to 1.5 million pokedollars. This pokemon is incredible: it has the right ability, nature, moveset, it even has the correct Hidden Power (which is extremely hard to find), right EV spread, PVP Ready with its proper moveset. Additionally, this is a time only pokemon, as it can only be hunted in specific months. This pokemon is incredible. It can cost 5+ millions in PRO's Market.
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  22. Apologies for the inconvenience, @Sammy910. The issue is known and being investigated by our Developers. You will be updated as soon as the bug is fixed! Kind regards, Kvar
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  23. If u online, contact discord with me
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  24. Its a very rare issue that can happen though. Its a simple fix though. Faint your Swadloon, close your client and restart it after around 20 seconds. Heal it in a pokecenter and get it to full happiness again. That should solve it.
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  26. @SCaydi Glad to know your issue was resolved I will now lock this thread. If you find anything missing or happen to find any issues when logging back into the game, you are free to create a new thread. Welcome back to the game! Kind regards, Kvar
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  27. hello , i would like if someone could send me a discord inv link. thx 1. What's your Player name (IGN)? Chaos23 2. Number of hours played? 56 hours 3. What's your favorite Pokemon? Charizard 4. Do you use discord? Chaos23#4044
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