Water 3 (Egg Group): Difference between revisions
From Bulbapedia, the community-driven Pokémon encyclopedia.
Jump to navigationJump to search
m (Reverted edits by Bulbapediasworstnightmare (talk) to last revision by SnorlaxMonster) |
ArcToraphim (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 36: | Line 36: | ||
{{Moveentry|451|Skorupi|2|Poison|Bug|{{egg|Bug}}}} | {{Moveentry|451|Skorupi|2|Poison|Bug|{{egg|Bug}}}} | ||
{{Moveentry|452|Drapion|2|Poison|Dark|{{egg|Bug}}}} | {{Moveentry|452|Drapion|2|Poison|Dark|{{egg|Bug}}}} | ||
{{Moveentry|564| | {{Moveentry|564|Tirtouga|2|Water|Rock|{{egg|Water 1}}}} | ||
{{Moveentry|565| | {{Moveentry|565|Carracosta|2|Water|Rock|{{egg|Water 1}}}} | ||
{{Moveentry|566| | {{Moveentry|566|Archen|2|Rock|Flying|{{egg|Flying}}}} | ||
{{Moveentry|567| | {{Moveentry|567|Archeops|2|Rock|Flying|{{egg|Flying}}}} | ||
|} | |} | ||
|} | |} |
Revision as of 14:28, 4 March 2011
Egg Groups | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Monster | Human-Like | |||||
Water 1 | Water 3 | |||||
Bug | Mineral | |||||
Flying | Amorphous | |||||
Field | Water 2 | |||||
Fairy | Ditto | |||||
Grass | Dragon | |||||
No Eggs Discovered | ||||||
Gender unknown |
The Water 3 egg group (Japanese: すいちゅう3 Underwater 3) is one of the fifteen egg groups. Like its counterparts Water 1 and Water 2, it is mostly made up of Template:Type2 Pokémon.
Characteristics
The Water 3 egg group is mostly characterized by its members' resemblance to aquatic invertebrates. Most are Template:Type2s. This group also contains most fossil Pokémon, containing most of the Generation I fossils, the Generation III fossils, and oddly enough, the Generation V fossils, despite not being based on invertebrates. The Generation IV fossil Pokémon and Aerodactyl instead belong to other egg groups.
It is a relatively small egg group. Most Pokémon that are capable of breeding into other egg groups breed into the Water 1 Group.
Pokémon
Only in this egg group
|
In this and another egg group
|
Trivia
- Skorupi and Drapion are in this egg group, despite being based on an animal that is normally associated with deserts, the scorpion. This may be a reference to the ancient group of arthropods known as sea scorpions that used to inhabit the oceans and may have been the ancestors of modern scorpions.
In other languages
|