Legendary birds: Difference between revisions

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* If [[Sinnoh]]-{{Pkmn2|roaming}} isn't counted, Moltres is the only one of the trio to change location, and it does so twice.
* If [[Sinnoh]]-{{Pkmn2|roaming}} isn't counted, Moltres is the only one of the trio to change location, and it does so twice.
* The legendary birds can be caught in more games than any other legendary Pokémon, as they can be caught in ten [[main series]] games in Japan. However, they can only be caught in nine games [[Pokémon Green|worldwide]], tying them with {{p|Lugia}} and {{p|Ho-Oh}}.
* The legendary birds can be caught in more games than any other legendary Pokémon, as they can be caught in ten [[main series]] games in Japan. However, they can only be caught in nine games [[Pokémon Green|worldwide]], tying them with {{p|Lugia}} and {{p|Ho-Oh}}.
* Zapdos is the only one of the trio not to have a quadruple weakness to rock.  
* Zapdos is the only one of the trio not to have a double weakness to rock (or, for that matter, a double weakness to ''anything'').  
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{{Legendary trios}}
{{Legendary trios}}

Revision as of 03:51, 5 February 2011

Zapdos, Articuno, and Moltres

Legendary birds is the collective term used to refer to the trio of Articuno, Zapdos, and Moltres. In the games, they are also known as the winged mirages.

Being the first legendary trio, they set the standards for future trios; that is, they all share similar attributes and—in the case of most of the future trios—are considered equal among themselves. Like the other trios later would, the legendary birds share a master in Lugia (in the anime and some games, at least), as well as two common traits: their Template:Type2 and their ability, Pressure.

Their coloration is reminiscent of the first three Pokémon games the global audience got, Red, Blue, and Yellow, and their primary types influenced those of the next known trio, the legendary beasts.

The birds are not present in the Generation II games but can be transferred over from the Generation I games using the Time Capsule.

In Pokémon Emerald, if one challenges Pyramid King Brandon for the Gold Brave Symbol, he has the legendary birds in his possession.

In Pokémon Mystery Dungeon each of them guard a mountain, Zapdos has Mt. Thunder, Moltres has Mt. Blaze, Articuno has Frosty Grotto. Once the player recruits all three, talk to Alakazam and go to their friend area, Legendary Island, and they will give the player access to their trio master Lugia's domain, Silver Trench.

In Pokémon Platinum, these birds begin to fly around Sinnoh once the player has talked to Professor Oak in Eterna City. He will appear in the house just to the west of Eterna Gym after the player gets the National Pokédex and then talks to him at the Pal Park.

The legendary birds are present in Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver. Articuno and Zapdos can be found in Kanto in the same locations as the Generation I games and FireRed and LeafGreen, while Moltres can be found in Mt. Silver.

Similar movesets

Lv. 144.png
Articuno
 Ice  Flying 
145.png
Zapdos
 Electric  Flying 
146.png
Moltres
 Fire  Flying 
Start Gust Peck Wing Attack
Powder Snow ThunderShock Ember
8 Mist Thunder Wave Fire Spin
15 Ice Shard Detect Agility
22 Mind Reader Pluck Endure
29 AncientPower
36 Agility Charge Flamethrower
43 Ice Beam Agility Safeguard
50 Reflect Discharge Air Slash
57 Roost
64 Tailwind Light Screen Heat Wave
71 Blizzard Drill Peck SolarBeam
78 Sheer Cold Thunder Sky Attack
85 Hail Rain Dance Sunny Day
Moves in bold are STAB. Moves in italics do no damage.


Base stat comparison

Pokémon 144Articuno.png
Articuno
145Zapdos.png
Zapdos
146Moltres.png
Moltres
HP
90
90
90
Attack
85
90
100
Defense
100
85
90
Sp. Atk
95
125
125
Sp. Def
125
90
85
Speed
85
100
90
Total 580 580 580


In the games

Pokémon Red, Blue and Yellow

In Generation I, the legendary birds are scattered around the Kanto region in different locations according to their type. Articuno is deep within the Seafoam Islands, Zapdos is in the abandoned Power Plant on Route 10, and Moltres is in Victory Road.

Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen

In Generation III, the legendary birds retain their placement from Generation I, with the exception of Moltres, which has been moved to Mt. Ember in the Sevii Islands from Victory Road.

Pokémon XD: Gale of Darkness

Greevil's team includes Shadow versions of all three birds.

Pokémon Platinum

While it is impossible to capture the legendary birds in Diamond and Pearl (having previously only been obtainable through Pal Park), in Platinum, they have been spotted in the Sinnoh region, which Professor Oak will reveal to the player if they visit him in Eterna City after stopping by Pal Park.

Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver

In a surprising turn of events, considering their availability in Platinum, the legendary birds appear once more in HeartGold and SoulSilver, and much as before, are in the same locations as before except for Moltres, who has moved once again, to Mt. Silver. Also due to the Power Plant no longer being abandoned, Zapdos is found outside the Power Plant and will only appear once all 16 badges are acquired.

In the anime

File:Pic2.png
Ash riding on Lugia's back, flying with the legendary birds in The Power of One

The legendary birds appear in the second Pokémon movie, The Power of One, and are central to the movie's plot. In it, they are described as the titans of fire, ice, and lightning, guardians over Fire, Ice, and Lightning Islands, and are sought after by a collector, Lawrence III, who intends to use them to draw out the legendary beast of the sea, Lugia.

Lawrence III succeeds in capturing Moltres first, using strange, electrified rings to contain it, rather than a Poké Ball. He then subsequently kept it on his ship as he hunted out Zapdos, who used Moltres' absence from Fire Island as a signal that it would be able to expand its territory. Shortly after Ash and friends discover this to be the case, however, Lawrence III captures Zapdos as well, drawing the group in as well, due to their boat's similar size to the birds. The group escapes, and, using their Pokémon, manage to free Zapdos and Moltres. The legendary birds are angry, however, and begin fighting, destroying Lawrence III's airship just as he attempts to capture Articuno. The three continue their fight outside, and finally, Lugia reveals itself.

The three birds team up to take down the beast of the sea, however, Lugia recovers and returns to the surface. As Articuno, Zapdos, and Moltres continue to fight, Ash must bring the treasures from their respective islands to Shamouti Island's shrine in order to help Lugia to quell the fighting and prevent the destruction of the world. Though he almost doesn't make it, Ash manages to do so, and the birds make peace, returning to their islands.

In the manga

The first of the legendary birds to appear in the manga Pokémon Adventures is Articuno, seen when a group of Team Rocket Grunts invade its abode in the middle of the Seafoam Islands, where it first showed its reluctance to fight by encasing itself in a sheath of ice, which the grunts try to exploit by using a Muk to envelop and carry it whole. In the ensuing battle where Red sends out Gyara, it is terribly troubled by its past experiences of being experimented on by the same villainous team, and is unable to fight back when the Muk rams itself hard against Gyara's body, accidentally breaking Articuno's ice in the process. With its power, Articuno then freezes the disgusting Muk and ignored Red's disturbing its peaceful tenure. In the process, though, it ended up spending much of its strength and was revealed to have been captured.

The next time a legendary bird was seen, it was Moltres, also a new capture of Team Rocket's from the Victory Road. Using it to track down and capture the "traitor" Blaine, who had recently given up his position as lead scientist on Team Rocket's experiments (which he conducted on Red's Eevee and Gyara before). With its markedly higher speed and power, it made a joke of Blaine's Rapidash's Fire Spin, and even Gyara's Hydro Pump was dodged with ease, leaving things looking pretty hopeless for the duo. With all bets off, Blaine ordered his Rapidash to take the boy to his laboratory as he held off the fiery bird, borrowing Gyara, where his revival equipment allowed Red's Ancient Amber to revive as an Aerodactyl, which then was able to chip off part of Moltres' right wing. Seeing this, the dastardly Rocket Grunts took a run for it, and no more legendary birds would be seen until the three Pallet Town trainers attacked the organization's secret hideout at Saffron City.

There, Red found himself fighting an old foe when Lt. Surge revealed himself as part of the Rocket Triad and attacked him at full power with all of his Electrodes and Voltorbs, as well as his Electabuzz and Raichu, dealing grave damage to the boy and Pika, while, due to his insulating underwear, he felt none of the voltage. Gloating about how seemingly limitless his power was with the Rocket equipment, he revealed the source of the ridiculous energy as Zapdos, a Pokémon that they captured in the abandoned Power Plant as the legends foretold. When even Red's Ivysaur, a Grass-type, was badly hurt by a simple ThunderShock, Red exploited how Surge's electric power device was supplying energy through a set of cords and cut them with Razor Leaf, a move Surge thought was futile with his insulating underwear, though little did he know, Red cut the pompous man's clothes as well as the cords, defeating him with his own power (and taking the rubber gloves that would come in handy later).

Right upstairs, Koga was about to finish Blue off with his Golbat when Red arrived and tried to stop him using Poli, only to have the tadpole defeated in an instant. Taking Red as hostage in his schemes instead, Koga then tried to deliver the final blow before Blue revealed his Reflector pendant saved him from Koga's Razor Wind before, and had his Pidgeot take him by surprise. Taking Articuno out at last, Koga slowly froze bits of the two young trainers before freezing the entire room with a full-power Blizzard which seemingly won him the battle, that is, before Blue and Red thawed themselves out by using Charizard's flames to douse the entire building in fire, and defeated him soon after.

Afterwards, when Red and Green were caught by Sabrina, who had the last remaining bird, Green was tricked into stealing the Badge Amplifier from Red and used his stolen badges to complete the seven-badge circle, which resulted in the three birds, two of them called upon by her Kadabra, being merged into a single, three-headed bird, a sight upon which Green (due to her fear of birds) faints upon seeing. When Blue arrives after rescuing Professor Oak and the rest of the Pallet Town residents they kidnapped, the three were seemingly killed when Sabrina sent them plummeting towards the ground before Saur used its vines to form a web, holding them in place. Once it evolved, and after attacking the bird with the other two starters, the three birds were freed and flew away to Red's notice.

After three years of not being heard from, Green revealed she had caught the three birds both to overcome her ornithophobia and use them in the upcoming battle against the Masked Man, where the other two besides Moltres, Articuno and Zapdos, were lent to Red and Blue, respectively, and together they managed to hold their own against Ho-Oh and Lugia, and shortly thereafter the two titanic birds were freed from the evil mastermind's control, so Red and Blue returned the borrowed birds as Red also gave Blasty and Charizard back to his fellow trainers. They have not been heard from since, so many speculate they may have been released or simply deposited in the box.

Trivia

  • In Generation I, the legendary birds all had different base stat totals - Articuno's was 485, Zapdos' was 490, and Moltres' was 495. Since Generation II, when the Special split occurred, all three legendary birds have had an equal base stat total of 580.
  • Although legendaries are said to be incapable of breeding, Pokémon Snap shows all three birds being born from eggs, which means they were bred in some way.
  • The last part of each of the trio's names is a number in the Spanish language, one (Articuno), two (Zapdos), and three (Moltres), and reflects their National Pokédex order.
  • Starting with Platinum, they are the only legendary trio to be both fully stationary and roaming as wild Pokémon in the various games they appear in. In comparison, the lake guardians have one of their trio who roams, while Suicune of the legendary beasts roams in Pokémon Gold and Silver, but is stationary in Pokémon Crystal, as well in Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver.
  • Since there were only four tracks of battle music in the Generation I games (wild, Trainer, Gym Leader/Elite Four, and Champion), normal wild battle music is played when the legendary birds and Mewtwo are encountered. In FireRed and LeafGreen, a special remix of the normal wild battle theme is used for the legendary birds, Mewtwo, and the legendary beasts when encountered. However, the legendary birds have never had a battle theme composed specifically for them, unlike the other legendary trios before Generation V.
  • Although legendary birds are capable of learning Agility naturally; however, they able to learn this move at different levels.
  • If Sinnoh-roaming isn't counted, Moltres is the only one of the trio to change location, and it does so twice.
  • The legendary birds can be caught in more games than any other legendary Pokémon, as they can be caught in ten main series games in Japan. However, they can only be caught in nine games worldwide, tying them with Lugia and Ho-Oh.
  • Zapdos is the only one of the trio not to have a double weakness to rock (or, for that matter, a double weakness to anything).


Legendary trios
BirdsBeastsSuper-ancientLakeMythTaoAuraLightLoyal