Hullo! We're Lancelot and Kostya, champions of the Galar and Mierva regions! Last PokeCon, we started up an account here to help people raise their pokemon right, and just to share some fun facts. We're going to add more people eventually, but for now, it's just the two of us!
remember that time that all the unova gym leaders gathered to take down team plasma with their pokemon and brycen opted for hand to hand combat instead
See hi-res version here: patreon.com/posts/70277572
@drunkenmantis is big brain for seeing the potential of these two and also loving bug types! I was re-reading ‘The Way of the Househusband’ and I got inspired to do a redraw of the two pages with Guzma and Emmet gushing over each other’s cute bugs >w<
I’ve developed a pointless headcanon that Gholdengo will casually collapse back into a pile of coins when pouting. like they’ll just get upset over something and
cue some trainer walking into the Pokemon Center, dumping 1,000 pennies on the counter, and being like “yeah they didn’t want to come in today”
Right, this is the mundane behind the personas. I should probably explain my absence from the blog.
Opening this blog up makes me feel sad and I have no idea why. It's not so much lost motivation so much as "opening this up makes me unhappy" and I have no idea what to do with that. Going forward, I don't know what to do about this. I don't know if I should jump ship on pokeposting, reboot and/or redo the blog, or what.
I'm probably going to be inactive a little longer. Sorry for not explaining myself for so long, I didn't really know how to.
Some fossil Pokémon are a bit easier to taxonomize than others.
This post is about Anorith, Lileep, and their evolved forms, by the way.
Anorith and Armaldo are not a shrimp-like Pokémon, which does sound like a strange thing now that I put this down, but I've gotten into a few spats over this. No, it's not a shrimp, [CENSORED.]
Lileep and Cradily, meanwhile, are not plants. They're very, very hard anemone-like Pokémon. They were rock-type pre-fossilization, so them being this tough isn't a new thing. They were originally classified as coral-like Pokémon, but they're not. They're anemones.
Maushold's baby mice come from energy expended during evolution.
Most Pokémon use this energy to add onto themselves and make themselves more powerful. Tandemaus, on the other hand, completely discards the energy, which spirals off to make new Tandemaus. They live with their "parents" until they're of age to depart on their own as their own Tandemaus, and contribute to Maushold's battle power until that age.
Maushold is also in both the Fairy and Field egg groups; therefore it is capable of both sexual and asexual reproduction. Because it does not create eggs without another Pokémon present, instead waiting for evolution for their children, it can be assumed that Maushold prefers asexual reproduction.
Heads up: Houndooms and Mabosstiff will not automatically be enemies, nor will they automatically be friends. This seems like it would be common sense, as both of them are Dark-typed pack canines of the fierce protecter variety. It ultimately comes down to the personality of the individual Pokemon involved. They can look at a fellow protecter and decide to merge packs, for there's safety in numbers. They can look at a fellow predator and decide it's too risky to allow another pack in the area. Or they can just ignore each other. They can just do that.
Wild Avalugg sometimes let humans and small Pokémon hang out on them. Apparently, if you aren't an active threat to it or its Bergmites, you're fine to chill on its back.