Me Stuff Week 3
A pair of Pseudo Legendaries! To be clear, the Faux region is roughly the size of Africa and Asia, but more horizontal. It BIG
Snogaol, the Walking Prison Fakemon(?), Ice/Ghost. A rare sight, Snogaol are found only in the Cold Ruins, an archeological site on the edge of the Northern Wastes. The Cold Ruins was once the capital of an ancient society, one that suddenly broke down with no known cause. Snogaol guard the deeper sections of the once great city, and can be heard at a distance; the faces on their torsos are constantly whispering. A few claim that they are understandable…
Celeglim, the Mystery Signal Fakemon(?), Electric/Ghost. Found in the Abandoned Observatory of the Studium College, Celeglim is the exact reason the Observatory is locked up tight. Professor Carpenter is the only one who holds the key, and he refuses to allow any but the Reigning Champion to enter. Celeglim appeared on the night his hair went white, his partner Fakemon went missing, and the day of his most wonderful terrible discovery. (What he doesn’t know is that Celeglim is what’s left of his old friend, combined with something more…)
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Here's the updated art of the design I showed off in my latest video
A closed space in 2D is called a polygon, polyhedron in 3D, and polychoron in 4D. In math, calculations of multiple dimensions can be done with longer matrices; however, visualizing multiple dimensions can yield to very interesting observations. The tesseract is the 4D version of a cube, and even though it looks like a cube inside a larger cube, the tesseract is made up of 8 cubes with one of them wrapping itself over the entire shape.
Dracogon (Neuro/Spectral): Dracogons can shimmy themselves into tight spaces to avoid any predators, but they are slow at turning around. Dracogons often swim together, creating a wall of color that they themselves do not see at all.
Drachedron (Neuro/Spectral): Drachedrons hide inside a tough boxy exterior to scout their surroundings before changing their path of travel. Drachedrons can float directly up, down, left, right, forwards, or backwards, once they know where they want to go.
Drachoron (Neuro/Spectral): Drachorons use psychic energy to cover themselves with an additional layer then they are under attack. The webbing around Drachorons keep rising and falling as Dracorons can encase their whole bodies in the webbing.
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Worldbuilding Headcanons #6
how likely or unlikely you are to see a pseudo legendary on a trainers' team!
from most to least likely:
dragonite and goodra
if a trainer has a pseudo on their team, it's almost certainly one of these two. between their species favoring common, easy to get to habitats and their general good nature, anyone wanting a pseudo, or a dragon in general, will try to catch one of these.
goomy are overall less common in the wild compared to dratini, but their friendly nature makes them even easier to find than the shy dratini.
salamence and baxcalibur
these two are rarer than the above, but still on the more common side. bagon are one of the more common pseudo legendary species out there, and they're generally easy to find (look for high cliffs). however, they are known for being pretty temperamental which many trainers can't handle.
baxcalibur is the opposite. due to their preferred habitat being rarer and harder to reach (snowy mountaintops), you'd think they'd be lower on this list. but they're well-known for being very easy going for dragon types which makes them sought after.
garchomp and tyranitar
possibly the two most desired pseudo legendaries whose reputations for battle prowess exceed even the others on this list. habitat wise, neither is the worst to find, with both preferring caves and mountains. they're also found in many regions giving you several options to look for one.
what holds them back from being as used as often as they're desired is the fact that both species are very temperamental. a gible or larvitar might follow their trainers orders, but gabite and pupitar have been known to leave trainers who they deem unworthy. still, many trainers look for them for the fame that comes from owning one.
kommo-o
a rare find on a team. like many pseudo legendaries, they prefer hard to get to mountains. they're on the easier side to raise, but are even more critical of a trainer than a gabite or pupitar. most trainers are wary of catching one because of those high standards of honor. the 4x weakness to fairy types doesn't help.
dragapult and metagross
both species are regarded almost as highly as garchomp and tyranitar, but are hindered by their rarity and difficulty in reaching their final evolutions. dreepy live in odd places that correlate to the hunting grounds of their last lives, while beldum gravitate towards only a handful of mountains across the world.
however, it's raising them that's the problem. dragons are known for taking a while to evolve, and dreepy are the worst offenders. evolving a dreepy to a drakloak within a year is considered lightning fast, with the average being 3 to 5 years even for professional trainers who know what they're doing. beldum are even worse. there's never been a case of a beldum learning a move besides take down or tackle. it takes a very patient trainer to raise one of them, but the reward is worth it.
hydreigon
the least used pseudo legendary. it has a fearsome reputation that intimidates most trainers from ever looking for one. it's also one of the rarer ones to find in the wild, which doesn't help their usability. having a hydreigon on your team is a good way to terrify your opponent.
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Something I've been wondering about for a while:
Why are most of the Pseudo-Legendary Pokémon part Dragon-type?
Literally, only 2 of the Pseudo-Legendaries aren't part Dragon
Metagross: Steel/Psychic
Tyranitar: Rock/Dark
I understand that Dragon is a very powerful Pokémon Type in the franchise, but I wish we had more Pseudo-Legendaries that weren't part Dragon. I know there aren't many, but that doesn't mean we can't have more diversity.
If Legendary Pokémon can have diverse, then so can Pseudo-Legendary Pokémon.
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