Terapagos (Pokémon)
For Pokémon GO information on this species, see the game's section. | |||||||||
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This article is about the species. For a specific instance of this species, see Terapagos (disambiguation). |
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Breeding
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Weight
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Footprint
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Pokédex color
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Base friendship
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Terapagos (Japanese: テラパゴス Terapagos) is a Normal-type Legendary Pokémon introduced during Generation IX, in The Indigo Disk.
While it is not known to evolve into or from any other Pokémon, Terapagos has three forms: its Normal Form, its Terastal Form, and a unique Stellar-type Terastallized state referred to as its Stellar Form. When it enters a battle, it changes from its Normal Form into its Terastal Form through its Tera Shift Ability, and transforms from its Terastal Form into its Stellar Form upon Terastallizing.
Terastal Form Terapagos is the game mascot of The Indigo Disk, appearing in The Hidden Treasure of Area Zero.
Terapagos plays an important role in Pokémon Horizons: The Series.
Biology
In its Normal Form, Terapagos is a small reptilian Pokémon that resembles an indigo tortoise. Its head, legs, and tail stem from a cyan, hexagonal shell with the Terastal symbol on its back: a white hexagon with triangular extensions on each corner that connects it to the edges of its back. Its neck and legs each have a cyan four-pointed star and ring rub on them. Its feet each have three toes, and its tail has a cyan four-pointed star at its tip. It has two light blue eyes with rouge rimming and four-pointed star-shaped pupils. It has a diamond-like pattern on its forehead and two diamonds hanging like earrings on both sides of its head. lastly, it has a "ponytail" made up of three segments of diamond-like shapes. The segments reduce in size as they get farther from the head and gain a purplish tint to them.
Normal Form Terapagos is said to have a splendid aura. It is a small and particularly weak Pokémon, but it is capable of assuming a dormant state when it needs to slumber or when its life is in danger, pulling its head, limbs, and tail into its shell and shrinking in size, which makes itself look like an ordinary jewel.[1] It also has the ability to crystallize the energy in its body to form a protective shield around itself when necessary, even in its dormant state. As depicted in Pokémon Horizons: The Series, in its Normal Form, Terapagos is shown to be unable to move if it's turned upside down, needing outside help to stand back up. it has shown to have an incredibly long lifespan, with one known to have lived for millions of years while slumbering within its shell. Terapagos inhabited the Paldea region in a bygone era. It was thought that this species went extinct, with it said to have been caught up in seismic shifts that occurred about 2,000,000 years ago. However, one of them managed to survive by crystallizing its own body and going into hibernation in Area Zero Underdepths, where it laid low until the present day.[2] According to Briar, Terapagos is made of Terastal energy. Terapagos stays in its Normal Form while not battling, implying it to be its true form.
Heath is the one who discovered Terapagos and coined its name.[3] Professor SadaS/Professor TuroV did research on this Pokémon while in Area Zero. Terapagos appears to naturally cause glowing crystals to form around it as it slumbers thanks to its ability to transform its own energy into hard crystals, which gave Area Zero the distinctive appearance it possesses. For a long time, many thought Terapagos was fake and that Heath had made it up, but Briar proved its existence by writing her own book: "The Hidden Treasure of Area Zero", which details the expedition she, Carmine, Kieran, and the player had in Area Zero Underdepths.
The Area Zero journals and the Scarlet BookS/Violet BookV imply that Terapagos is responsible for the Terastal phenomenon, which is confirmed to be the case in the Pokédex. With the power of its crystals, Terapagos can bombard its foes with countless star-shaped projectiles. Terapagos also has the ability to alter timelines in some capacity, as seen in both games and anime, it is capable of bringing humans, Pokémon, and objects either from other points in the Pokémon world's timeline[4] or from other timelines altogether[5] to the point in time and space it currently is. When using its timeline-altering powers, a mist appears around the affected area; once it disappears, whatever was brought is sent back. The true limits of this power are currently unknown, but it affects humans and objects differently, as the player was able to keep the copy of the Scarlet BookS/Violet BookV given by the professor after the encounter at Kitakami's Crystal Pool. As revealed in The Plan to Capture Rayquaza, Terapagos has the ability to call out to other Pokémon with a specific energy signal. Due to the Terastal energy its body produces, Terapagos was responsible for allowing advanced technologies, such as Tera Orbs, the professor's AI copy, and the "time machine", to exist in spite of human limitations. It is also implied to be responsible for the growth of Herba Mystica, special herbs with amazing healing properties and even the ability to make Pokémon grow into Titan Pokémon.
Tera Orbs directly exposed to the energy from Terapagos will gain the ability Terastallize Pokémon with no charging drawbacks.[6] Terapagos is also the source and creator of the Stellar type, a unique type that's exclusive to the Terastal phenomenon. It works differently from others, containing the powers of each and every type[7]. The Stellar Tera Type used to occur only in the Area Zero Underdepths as a result of the Terapagos that slumbered there. However, due to the crystals found there, it can now be found in Blueberry Academy's Terarium as well. Unlike other Pokémon, Terapagos will always receive the full benefits of the Stellar Tera Type, even outside of Tera Raid Battles. Through the Stellar type, Terapagos can also change its defensive typing during the battle.
Terapagos is the only known Pokémon capable of learning the move Tera Starstorm. Its Normal Form is also the only known Pokémon that can have Tera Shift as an Ability. Its Tera Type is fixed as Stellar and cannot be changed at the Treasure Eatery.
Forms
Terapagos has three forms: Normal Form, Terastal Form, and Stellar Form.
- Terastal Form Terapagos
Terapagos can absorb the energy around itself in order to crystallize it and clad its body in a larger, sturdier shell. It also causes the rings on its legs to transform into fur, which forms a mane and three tails, thus transforming into its Terastal Form.
Terastal Form Terapagos is a reptilian Pokémon that resembles an indigo sea turtle. It now has two patches of voluminous, shiny fur: one near its head, vaguely forming a mane, and the other where its star-tipped tail used to be, vaguely forming three separate tails. The color of its fur varies between a greenish yellow and sky blue. In dark places like caves, this fur glows bright blueish-white. Its hind legs have been fully covered by the fur, while only the toes of its front legs are visible, barely poking out of the mane. The eyes remain unchanged from the Normal Form's ones, but they are seen gleaming with the same hue as the fur. The diamond-shaped earrings and ponytail seem to have merged with Terapagos's head.
Terapagos's shell is composed of eighteen irregular pentagons on its surface, each decorated with symbols of varying shapes and colors in a way to resemble the eighteen types icons. The symbols morph back and forth to abstract shapes. On the center of its shell is a cyan, hexagonal gem adorned with the Terastal symbol, much like the small crystal shell of Normal Form Terapagos. The sides of its shell also have three obtuse pentagons each on the rim of the shell that are a solid light blue color. Due to its lack of legs, Terapagos needs to float to move around in this form.
Normal Form Terapagos enters its Terastal Form when it is either in danger or about to battle. Its shell is composed of crystallized Terastal energy and holds the power of every type, allowing it to distort type matchups and render all damage-dealing moves as ineffective[8]. The shell then absorbs the move's energy and transfers it back to Terapagos. When using specific beam-like attacks, Terapagos withdraws its hands and head into its shell, shapes its mane in a way it resembles its three tails, and flies up, shooting the attack from the cyan, hexagonal gem in the center of its shell. In HZ064, Terapagos was shown destroying Rakurium, undoing its effects as a result. Kieran assumes Terapagos's Terastal Form is its true form; this, however, is currently unproven. In this form, it is known as "the indigo disk", due to its indigo coloration and disk-shaped shell.
Terastal Form Terapagos is the only known Pokémon that can have Tera Shell as an Ability.
- Stellar Form Terapagos
When exposed to a Tera Orb, Terapagos will be Terastallized and turn Stellar-type, thus transforming into its Stellar Form.[9]
Stellar Form Terapagos glows with power and is fully coated by a rainbow-colored aura. All the icons on its shell became cyan, but the rest of its true body is identical to Terastal Form Terapagos and is seen floating above a large, crystal, indigo dome covered in layers of overlapping hexagons. Under the dome, there're four crystals positioned like the legs of a turtle. The gem on the center of Terastal Form's shell has expanded outward into the shape of a crown bejeweled with rhombuses of varying colors. Atop of the crown-like structure lays a miniature version of Normal Form Terapagos and, above it, the Terastal symbol. Eighteen hexagonal gems orbit around Stellar Form Terapagos's dome, each bearing the icons and colors of one of the eighteen types. Terapagos needs to float to move around in this form as well.
Terapagos has taken this form at least three times throughout history: in ancient times, during the Area Zero expedition 200 years ago, and in the present time. This form is said to resemble the world as the ancients saw it, supposedly due to the dome beneath it. Meanwhile, in the Scarlet BookS/Violet BookV, Heath describes it as an entity, unsure if it is a Pokémon, or even alive to begin with, however, he claims that viewed as a whole, it resembles a mysterious, brilliant disk, and even looks like a planet floating in space. Its Terastal energy becomes so abnormally amplified that it actually appears to lose control and lash out due to its energy output. Due to having so much power, Stellar Form Terapagos may cause cracks around it during its transformation and even risks wreaking havoc to Paldea's ecosystem. While in this form, it was shown to resist going back into even the most powerful of Poké Balls, the Master Ball, destroying it in the process.
Stellar Form Terapagos is capable of absorbing Terastal energy from other Terastallized Pokémon, causing their Terastallized state to be undone earlier than intended. With it, it can create multiple Tera Shields and even change its type amidst battle, though this seems to be limited to only three times per battle. The hidden powers within Stellar Form Terapagos are capable of reducing to zero all effects of weather and terrain. It has shown to be capable of shooting huge beams of pure Terastal energy at its foes. When using specific beam-like attacks, Stellar Form Terapagos will use all of its hexagonal gems in a certain formation to shoot the beam from it. In this form, it is also known as "the hidden treasure of Area Zero" due to its status as the secret treasure that was sought by the Paldean empire.
Stellar Form Terapagos is the only known Pokémon that can have Teraform Zero as an Ability.
Game data
NPC appearances
- Main article: Terapagos (game)
- Pokémon Scarlet and Violet: The Indigo Disk: Terapagos is a major character and boss in the DLC.
Pokédex entries
This Pokémon was unavailable prior to Generation IX. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Terapagos in the Blueberry Pokédex |
Game locations
This Pokémon was unavailable prior to Generation IX. | ||||||||||||
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In side games
Held items
Stats
Base stats
Normal Form
Stat | Range | ||
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At Lv. 50 | At Lv. 100 | ||
HP: 90
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150 - 197 | 290 - 384 | |
65
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63 - 128 | 121 - 251 | |
85
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81 - 150 | 157 - 295 | |
65
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63 - 128 | 121 - 251 | |
85
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81 - 150 | 157 - 295 | |
60
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58 - 123 | 112 - 240 | |
Total: 450
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Other Pokémon with this total | ||
Terastal Form
Stat | Range | ||
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At Lv. 50 | At Lv. 100 | ||
HP: 95
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155 - 202 | 300 - 394 | |
95
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90 - 161 | 175 - 317 | |
110
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103 - 178 | 202 - 350 | |
105
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99 - 172 | 193 - 339 | |
110
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103 - 178 | 202 - 350 | |
85
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81 - 150 | 157 - 295 | |
Total: 600
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Other Pokémon with this total | ||
Stellar Form
Stat | Range | ||
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At Lv. 50 | At Lv. 100 | ||
HP: 160
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220 - 267 | 430 - 524 | |
105
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99 - 172 | 193 - 339 | |
110
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103 - 178 | 202 - 350 | |
130
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121 - 200 | 238 - 394 | |
110
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103 - 178 | 202 - 350 | |
85
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81 - 150 | 157 - 295 | |
Total: 700
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Other Pokémon with this total | ||
Type effectiveness
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Learnset
Terapagos is available in Pokémon Scarlet and Violet Version 3.0.0+.
By leveling up
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By TM
By breeding
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Side game data
Normal Form
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Terastal Form
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Stellar Form
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Form data
Outside of battle, Terapagos is always in its Normal Form. When it enters a battle for the first time, it changes from its Normal Form into its Terastal Form through its signature Ability Tera Shift and will never change back to Normal Form until the battle ends, even if it faints. As a result, its Normal Form cannot legitimately be used in a battle. Terastal Form Terapagos also has Tera Shift replaced by its other signature Ability Tera Shell. If Terapagos Terastallizes during a battle, it transforms into its Stellar Form, where Tera Shell is replaced by its third signature Ability, Teraform Zero. Its signature move Tera Starstorm also changes from Normal- to Stellar-type and targets both opponents in a Double Battle.
Terapagos cannot have its Tera Type changed from Stellar at the Treasure Eatery.
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Evolution data
Sprites
This Pokémon was unavailable prior to Generation IX. | ||||||||||||
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In the anime
Main series
Major appearances
Terapagos (anime)
Terapagos in its dormant state debuted in The Pendant That Starts It All (Part One), being used by Liko as a pendant before being properly revealed in its Normal Form in The Pendant That Starts It All (Part Two) right before returning to its dormant state. In Fiery Galarian Moltres, it awakened permanently and is currently traveling with the Rising Volt Tacklers. It was revealed to be over 100 years old and that it once travelled alongside the ancient adventurer, Lucius and his Six Heroes. Terapagos in its Terastal Form briefly appeared in Reunion at the Ancient Castle! as a sketch in Lucius's diary before properly appearing in Roar of the Black Rayquaza so it could face Lucius's Black Rayquaza and save its friends.
Minor appearances
Pokédex entries
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In the manga
Pocket Monsters
- Main article: Terapagos (anime)
Terapagos debuted in HZM02, playing the same role it does in the anime.
Pocket Monster: Liko's treasure
- Main article: Terapagos (anime)
Normal Form Terapagos appeared in PMLT02, playing the same role as it does in the anime.
Pocket Monsters ~Pucchigumi SP~
- Main article: Terapagos (anime)
Terapagos appeared in both chapters of Pocket Monsters ~Pucchigumi SP~, playing the same role as it does in the anime.
Pocket Monsters ~The Detouring Volt Tacklers!!~
- Main article: Terapagos (anime)
Terapagos appeared in DVT05, alongside Liko.
In the TCG
- Main article: Terapagos (TCG)
Music
This is a list of music associated with Terapagos in the Pokémon games.
Games | Location | Song name | Composition | Arrangement |
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S V | When Terapagos awakens from its gem | Terapagos Comes Back to Life | Toby Fox, Rei Murayama, and Go Ichinose | Hiromitsu Maeba |
When battling Kieran's Terapagos in the Underdepths |
Battle! (Terapagos) | Rei Murayama and Go Ichinose | Go Ichinose | |
When Briar prompts Kieran to Terastallize Terapagos |
Conditions of the Hidden Treasure | Toby Fox | Hiromitsu Maeba | |
When Kieran attempts to recall Terapagos to its Poké Ball |
Terapagos Goes Rampage | Toby Fox, Rei Murayama, and Go Ichinose | Hiromitsu Maeba | |
When battling Stellar Form Terapagos | Battle! (Terapagos - The Hidden Treasure of Area Zero) | Rei Murayama, Toby Fox, and Go Ichinose | Go Ichinose | |
When capturing the Terapagos | Caught the Terapagos! | Toby Fox | Hiromitsu Maeba |
Trivia
- Before the official reveal of Terapagos, a sketch of its Stellar Form appeared in the Scarlet BookS/Violet BookV, drawn by Heath in Pokémon Scarlet and Violet.
- Terapagos has several similarities to Eternatus. Both are Legendary Pokémon that are responsible for the special type of transformation (Dynamax/Gigantamax and Terastallization) found within their respective regions of origin (Galar and Paldea) after entering a state of dormancy sometime in the distant past. They also both have transformations exclusive to them related to these phenomena increasing their stats (Eternatus's Eternamax form and Terapagos's Stellar Form, though the former is unobtainable) and can absorb the energy needed to use these transformations from other Pokémon, thereby rendering them unavailable. They also each have a form that cannot be used by the player in battle with programmed stats (Eternatus's Eternamax form and Terapagos's Normal form, the latter of which can be brought into battle but not used due to its unsurpressable ability). Both of them were also introduced in a game which would receive DLC and whose game mascots comprise a Legendary duo.
- In the closed captions of the initial TV Tokyo broadcast of HZ023, Terapagos was mistakenly referred to as コダイカメ Kodaikame (from 古代亀 kodaikame, literally "ancient turtle").[10][11]
- This mirrors its internal name from Pokémon Scarlet and Violet, where Terapagos is also referred to as "kodaikame".
- Terapagos is the only Pokémon with an EV yield total of more than three, with its Terastal Form having a total of four.
- Terapagos is also the only Pokémon with a different EV yield total between each of its forms, with Normal having one, Terastal having four, and Stellar having three.
- While Terapagos as a species has a 50-50 gender ratio, the only Terapagos encounter is set to always be male. Because of this, a female Terapagos cannot currently be legitimately obtained.
- Terapagos cannot have its Tera Type be changed under normal circumstances in Pokémon Scarlet and Violet. If the game is modified to force Terapagos to have a different Tera Type, the game will lag significantly while Terastallizing; however, unlike with Ogerpon, the game will not softlock. Illusion will also not work if either Terapagos or the Pokémon with said Ability Terastallize.
- Terapagos is the only Pokémon in Pokémon Scarlet and Violet that is able to learn moves through TMs, but cannot learn Tera Blast (despite the move using Terastal energy, which Terapagos is responsible for creating).
- Terapagos's cry is almost identical to the sound that is made when a Pokémon Terastallizes.
- The cry also incorporates the leitmotif commonly associated in-game with Area Zero, Terapagos's habitat. It is more easily distinguished when the cry is played at slower speed.
- Normal Form Terapagos is tied with Azurill and Shroodle for being the shortest Normal-type Pokémon.
- Terapagos is the only Pokémon to have three signature Abilities, the most out of any Pokémon.
- One of Stellar Form Terapagos's attack animations has it use the 18 hexagonal gems orbiting its dome to form a symbol and shoot the attack from it. This symbol is the very same one featured in The Hidden Treasure of Area Zero expansion's logo.
- While in game, Terapagos is categorized as the Tera Pokémon, in Pokémon Scarlet and Violet's official website, it is categorized as the Terastal Pokémon.
- If Terapagos uses auto-battle to defeat a Pokémon, it'll transform into its Terastal Form before defeating the wild Pokémon, and then switch back to its Normal Form.
- Despite being the source of the Terastal phenomenon, which contains the power of every type, Terapagos cannot learn any Ghost- or Flying-type moves.
Origin
Terapagos may be based on a sea turtle, specifically the Galápagos green turtle, a population of green sea turtles found around the Galápagos Islands. It, especially in its Normal Form, may also be based on the Galápagos tortoise; in particular, it may be inspired by Lonesome George, the last Pinta Island Tortoise (a subspecies of Galápagos tortoise), as Terapagos is said to be extinct aside from a lone male survivor.
Terapagos may be inspired by the rainbow-shelled turtle from the Japanese folktale about a fisherman named Urashima Tarō. In the story, this turtle carries Tarō to the Dragon Palace beneath the sea, a detail that may be reflected by the concept of the mostly underwater Blueberry Academy (the main setting of The Indigo Disk, in which Terapagos was introduced). Additionally, the story ends with the fisherman aging rapidly into an old man with long white hair, similar to how Terapagos changes form when it enters battle.
The Terastal Form's hairy appearance may be a reference to Japanese legends of the minogame, a turtle which lived for 10,000 years and grew a tail made of seaweed. Terapagos, especially in its Stellar Form, may also reference the World Turtle, a mythical turtle found in various mythologies that was said to carry the world upon its back. This connection is furthered by the Stellar Form's Pokédex entries, which state that it resembles "the world as the ancients saw it" and "a planet floating in space". By extension, Terapagos's Stellar Form may be a reference to the expression "turtles all the way down", as it has a crystal in the shape of its Normal Form above its shell, and it floats on top of a larger dome shaped like a tortoise shell. The expression "turtles all the way down" refers to the idea that the World Turtle rests on the back of a larger turtle, and that turtle rests on the back of an even larger turtle, and so on.
The tessellation on Terapagos's shell contains type icons and could be based on the unique pattern on the back of the diamondback terrapin. Terapagos's crystalline composition may also take inspiration from chitons, marine mollusks with flat disk-shaped bodies and eye-like peripherals composed of rock.
Name origin
Terapagos may be a combination of Terastal, terrapin, and galápagos (a Spanish word for turtles, most recognizable because of the Galápagos Islands).
In other languages
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Normal Form
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Terastal Form
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Stellar Form
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Related articles
References
- ↑ "Introducing a Newly Discovered Pokémon!" Pokémon Scarlet and Pokémon Violet | Official Website.
- ↑ "Scarlet and Violet | Normal Form Terapagos" Pokémon Scarlet and Pokémon Violet | Official Website.
- ↑ Heath: "While separated from the research team in the crater's depths, I found a strange...entity. [...] I have tentatively named this creature Terapagos. [...]" (Pokémon Scarlet and Violet, in the chapter "A Disk Pokémon?" of the Scarlet BookS/Violet BookV)
- ↑ AI SadaS/AI TuroV: "[...] It sends Poké Balls to a different point on the timeline to catch Pokémon there, and it can then draw them back here to the present." (Pokémon Scarlet and Violet)
- ↑ Professor SadaS/Professor TuroV: "I am researching methods to catch Pokémon that live in different timelines, so I might transport them to the present day in my own timeline." (Pokémon Scarlet and Violet: The Indigo Disk)
- ↑ Briar: "[...] I think it might be because your orbs were directly exposed to the energy from Terapagos. Kieran and Carmine say that ever since the underdepths, they've been able to Terastallize their Pokémon without charging their Tera Orbs." (Pokémon Scarlet and Violet: The Indigo Disk)
- ↑ "Master the Stellar Tera Type—the 19th Tera Type!" Pokémon Scarlet and Pokémon Violet | Official Website.
- ↑ "Terastal Form Terapagos" Pokémon Scarlet and Pokémon Violet | Official Website.
- ↑ "Scarlet and Violet Site | Stellar Form Terapagos" Pokémon Scarlet and Pokémon Violet | Official Website.
- ↑ The closed captions for tonight’s #anipoke episode confirm that the Pokémon inside Liko’s pendant is named Kodaikame (コダイカメ). - @DogasusBackpack on Twitter
- ↑ 本日のアニメ『ポケットモンスター』字幕放送にて、ポケモン・テラパゴスの名称を、正式ではない表記をしておりました。正式な表記は「テラパゴス」です。 - @anipoke_PR on Twitter
External links
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This Pokémon article is part of Project Pokédex, a Bulbapedia project that aims to write comprehensive articles on each Pokémon species, as well as Pokémon groups and forms. |
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