|
|
Line 78: |
Line 78: |
| A Drowzee appeared in ''[[EP169|Beauty and the Breeder]]'', under the ownership of a {{tc|Pokémon Breeder}} participating in [[Pokémon Beauty Contest|a Pokémon breeding competition]]. | | A Drowzee appeared in ''[[EP169|Beauty and the Breeder]]'', under the ownership of a {{tc|Pokémon Breeder}} participating in [[Pokémon Beauty Contest|a Pokémon breeding competition]]. |
|
| |
|
| A {{OBP|Drowzee|Explorers of Time, Darkness, and Sky}} made a brief cameo as a thief in ''[[SS020|Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Time & Darkness]]'' and ''[[SS021|Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Sky - Beyond Time & Darkness]]''. | | A {{OBP|Drowzee|Explorers of Time, Darkness, and Sky}} made a brief cameo as a thief in ''[[Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Time & Darkness]]'' and ''[[Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Sky - Beyond Time & Darkness]]''. |
|
| |
|
| A Drowzee briefly appeared in a flashback in ''[[DP071|Pokémon Ranger and the Kidnapped Riolu! (Part 1)]]'', under the ownership of a {{tc|Scientist}}. It was used in an unsuccessful attempt to capture the [[Aura Sphere Riolu]]. | | A Drowzee briefly appeared in a flashback in ''[[DP071|Pokémon Ranger and the Kidnapped Riolu! (Part 1)]]'', under the ownership of a {{tc|Scientist}}. It was used in an unsuccessful attempt to capture the [[Aura Sphere Riolu]]. |
Drowzee (Japanese: スリープ Sleepe) is a Psychic-type Pokémon introduced in Generation I.
It evolves into Hypno starting at level 26.
Biology
Drowzee is a bipedal Pokémon that resembles a tapir. It has tired-looking eyes, a short trunk above its mouth, and triangular ears with brown interiors. The upper half of Drowzee's body is yellow and the lower half is brown. A wavy line separates the two halves. It has a round belly and short legs. Its feet are brown, except for its two toes, which are yellow. The bottom of each foot has a small, round, pink pad in the middle of it. There are three fingers on each of its hands. Drowzee is believed to have a common ancestor with Munna and Musharna.
Drowzee is able to put people to sleep and can then sense the person's dreams. This is so it knows what kind of dream it would be eating. It has certain preferences for the dreams it eats, and it is known to love fun dreams and become ill from bad dreams. It will rarely eat the dreams of adults, as the dreams of children are seemingly tastier. Drowzee remembers every dream it has eaten and may show past meals to a person it trusts. It eats dreams through the victim's nose, so it is said that Drowzee is standing over a person's pillow if their nose itches while they are asleep. Drowzee lives in grasslands and savannas.
In the anime
Major appearances
Drowzee debuted alongside its evolved form in Hypno's Naptime. Both of the Hypnosis Pokémon were used to help the members of the Pokémon Lover's Club get some sleep. However, Hypno was causing children to act like Pokémon and draining the energy from the Pokémon resting in the local Pokémon Center. Drowzee was eventually used to fix the problem Hypno created.
A Drowzee appeared in Pikachu Re-Volts. Butch and Cassidy used a Drowzee stolen from their fake Pokémon Breeding Center at Mandarin Island North to brainwash Pokémon into turning against their Trainers and obeying Butch and Cassidy instead.
A Drowzee appeared in Fear Factor Phony as a resident of an abandoned mining colony. The Psychic Pokémon had parties in order to help them forget their sadness due to the fact that the miners had left the town long ago. However, the constant partying was disturbing the Ghost Pokémon that lived in the abandoned mine.
A Drowzee appeared in Beating the Bustle and Hustle!, under the ownership of Azure. Particularly powerful, it was able to send Team Rocket blasting off and hold its own against Officer Jenny's Growlithe for a while.
A Drowzee appeared in Turning Heads and Training Hard!, under the ownership of a Team Skull Grunt. It was quickly defeated by Ilima and his Eevee. Drowzee reappeared in League Offenders and Defenders!, where it was defeated by Team Rocket; and Battle Royal 151, where it competed in the Manalo Conference, only to be defeated by Ilima's Eevee again.
Minor appearances
A Trainer's Drowzee appeared in Mewtwo Strikes Back as one of the Pokémon Mewtwo defeated while serving for Giovanni.
A Drowzee appeared in Pikachu's Vacation as one of the Pokémon seen at the Pokémon Theme Park.
A Drowzee made a brief appearance in A Friend In Deed.
A Drowzee appeared in The Power of One.
A Drowzee appeared in Tricks of the Trade as one of the Pokémon seen at the Pokémon Swap Meet in Palmpona.
A Drowzee appeared in The Psychic Sidekicks! as one of the Pokémon living in Len Town.
A Drowzee appeared in Beauty and the Breeder, under the ownership of a Pokémon Breeder participating in a Pokémon breeding competition.
A Drowzee made a brief cameo as a thief in Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Time & Darkness and Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Sky - Beyond Time & Darkness.
A Drowzee briefly appeared in a flashback in Pokémon Ranger and the Kidnapped Riolu! (Part 1), under the ownership of a Scientist. It was used in an unsuccessful attempt to capture the Aura Sphere Riolu.
A Drowzee appeared in Camping It Up!.
A Drowzee appeared in Old Rivals, New Tricks, under the ownership of a Coordinator participating in the Sandalstraw Contest.
A Drowzee appeared in A Marathon Rivalry!, under the ownership of a competitor in the Pokéathlon held in Camellia Town.
A Drowzee appeared in the beginning of Mewtwo Strikes Back—Evolution, under the ownership of Raymond. Alongside his Venomoth and Pinsir, it fought Ash's Pikachu, only for all of them to be defeated with Thunderbolt.
Pokédex entries
Episode
|
Pokémon
|
Source
|
Entry
|
EP086
|
Drowzee
|
Ash's Pokédex
|
Drowzee, the Hypnotic Pokémon. It is said to feed on the dreams of its opponents. It is also known for its powerful Psychic attack.
|
|
In the manga
In the Pokémon Adventures manga
Sabrina has a Drowzee, which was used to sneak up on Erika prior to the showdown in Saffron City. However, it was noticed by the Grass-type Gym Leader and easily defeated by Erika's Vileplume's Petal Dance in Blame It On Eevee!.
A Drowzee appeared in Murkrow Row as one of the residents of Gold's house.
Multiple Drowzee appeared in Piloswine Whine, under the control of Team Rocket Grunts. They were used to attack Gold and Silver, but were easily defeated.
A Drowzee appeared in The Last Battle XIII as one of the Pokémon sent to participate in the fight in Ilex Forest.
A Drowzee caught by Crystal and lent to Emerald for his Battle Pike challenge appeared in a fantasy in Moving Past Milotic.
The Battle Tower rented a Drowzee, which was stolen by Guile Hideout in The Final Battle VII. It reappeared in The Final Battle IX.
Multiple Drowzee were used by Team Galactic Grunts in Halting Honchkrow.
A Drowzee appeared in Out-Odding Oddish, under the ownership of a Pokéathlon participant.
Team Skull Grunts own multiple Drowzee, which first appeared in Homecoming and the Brilliant Professional Golfer.
In the TCG
- Main article: Drowzee (TCG)
Game data
NPC appearances
- Pokémon Ranger: After the credits, a man calling himself the Drowsy Guy stands on the Fiore Temple with two Drowzee. His Drowzee allow the player to reexperience the events of the end of the game.
- Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Time and Explorers of Darkness: Drowzee is a resident of Treasure Town who takes Azurill hostage and makes him get treasure for him. The player's team saves Azurill and gets Drowzee arrested. Later, when Azurill cannot wake up from a nightmare, the player's team looks for Drowzee's help. He sends the player's team into Azurill's dream to find out the problem.
Pokédex entries
Generation I
|
|
|
Kanto #096
|
Red(ENG)
|
Puts enemies to sleep then eats their dreams. Occasionally gets sick from eating bad dreams.
|
Blue
|
Yellow
|
If you sleep by it all the time, it will sometimes show you dreams it has eaten in the past.
|
Stadium
|
It puts its enemy to sleep and eats the victim's dreams. Said to have descended from the legendary beast, Baku.
|
|
|
Generation II
|
|
|
Johto #087
|
Gold
|
If you think that you had a good dream, but you can't remember it, a Drowzee has probably eaten it.
|
Silver
|
It remembers every dream it eats. It rarely eats the dreams of adults because children's are much tastier.
|
Crystal
|
When it twitches its nose, it can tell where someone is sleeping and what that person is dreaming about.
|
Stadium 2
|
If you think that you had a good dream, but you can't remember it a Drowzee has probably eaten it.
|
|
|
Generation III
|
|
Hoenn #—
|
|
Kanto #096
|
Ruby
|
If your nose becomes itchy while you are sleeping, it's a sure sign that one of these Pokémon is standing above your pillow and trying to eat your dream through your nostrils.
|
Sapphire
|
Emerald
|
If your nose becomes itchy while you are sleeping, it's a sure sign that a Drowzee is standing above your pillow and trying to eat your dream through your nostrils.
|
FireRed
|
A descendant of the legendary animal baku, which is said to eat dreams. It is skilled at hypnotism.
|
LeafGreen
|
Puts enemies to sleep, then eats their dreams. Occasionally gets sick from eating bad dreams.
|
|
|
Generation IV
|
|
Sinnoh #—
|
|
Johto #087
|
Diamond
|
It can tell what people are dreaming by sniffing with its big nose. It loves fun dreams.
|
Pearl
|
Platinum
|
HeartGold
|
If you think that you had a good dream, but you can't remember it, a Drowzee has probably eaten it.
|
SoulSilver
|
It remembers every dream it eats. It rarely eats the dreams of adults because children's are much tastier.
|
|
|
Generation V
|
|
|
Unova #—
|
Black
|
It can tell what people are dreaming by sniffing with its big nose. It loves fun dreams.
|
White
|
Black 2
|
It can tell what people are dreaming by sniffing with its big nose. It loves fun dreams.
|
White 2
|
|
|
Generation VI
|
|
Kalos #—
|
|
Hoenn #—
|
X
|
Puts enemies to sleep, then eats their dreams. Occasionally gets sick from eating only bad dreams.
|
Y
|
If you think that you had a good dream but you can't remember it, a Drowzee has probably eaten it.
|
Omega Ruby
|
If your nose becomes itchy while you are sleeping, it's a sure sign that one of these Pokémon is standing above your pillow and trying to eat you dream through your nostrils.
|
Alpha Sapphire
|
|
|
Generation VII
|
|
Alola SM: #054
|
|
Alola USUM: #066
|
|
Kanto #096
|
Sun
|
A Pokémon that nourishes itself by eating dreams, it is thought to share common ancestry with Munna and Musharna.
|
Moon
|
It finds really fun dreams tasty. When it makes friends with people, it may show them the most delicious dreams it's ever eaten.
|
Ultra Sun
|
It can be spotted near recreational facilities, intending to eat the pleasant dreams of children who enjoyed themselves there that day.
|
Ultra Moon
|
It puts its prey to sleep and devours their dreams. It seems that bad dreams taste sour, so Drowzee doesn't particularly like eating them.
|
Let's Go Pikachu
|
If you sleep by it all the time, it will sometimes show you dreams it had eaten in the past.
|
Let's Go Eevee
|
|
|
Game locations
In side games
|
Generation II
|
|
This Pokémon is unavailable in Generation II side games.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In events
Held items
Stats
Base stats
Stat
|
Range
|
At Lv. 50
|
At Lv. 100
|
60
|
|
120 - 167
|
230 - 324
|
48
|
|
47 - 110
|
90 - 214
|
45
|
|
45 - 106
|
85 - 207
|
43
|
|
43 - 104
|
81 - 203
|
90
|
|
85 - 156
|
166 - 306
|
42
|
|
42 - 103
|
80 - 201
|
Total: 328
|
Other Pokémon with this total
|
- Minimum stats are calculated with 0 EVs, IVs of 0, and (if applicable) a hindering nature.
- Maximum stats are calculated with 252 EVs, IVs of 31, and (if applicable) a helpful nature.
- This Pokémon's Special base stat in Generation I was 90.
|
Pokéathlon stats
Type effectiveness
Under normal battle conditions in Generation IX, this Pokémon is:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Learnset
|
|
- Bold indicates a move that gets STAB when used by Drowzee
- Italic indicates a move that gets STAB only when used by an Evolution of Drowzee
- Click on the generation numbers at the top to see level-up moves from other generations
|
|
|
- Bold indicates a move that gets STAB when used by Drowzee
- Italic indicates a move that gets STAB only when used by an Evolution of Drowzee
- Click on the generation numbers at the top to see TM moves from other generations
|
|
|
- Bold indicates a move that gets STAB when used by Drowzee
- Italic indicates a move that gets STAB only when used by an Evolution of Drowzee
- Click on the generation numbers at the top to see level-up moves from other generations
|
|
|
- Bold indicates a move that gets STAB when used by Drowzee
- Italic indicates a move that gets STAB only when used by an Evolution of Drowzee
- Click on the generation numbers at the top to see TM moves from other generations
|
|
|
- Moves marked with an asterisk (*) must be chain bred onto Drowzee in Generation VII
- Moves marked with a double dagger (‡) can only be bred from a Pokémon who learned the move in an earlier generation.
- Moves marked with a superscript game abbreviation can only be bred onto Drowzee in that game.
- Bold indicates a move that gets STAB when used by Drowzee
- Italic indicates a move that gets STAB only when used by an Evolution of Drowzee
- Click on the generation numbers at the top to see Egg moves from other generations
|
|
|
- A black or white abbreviation in a colored box indicates that Drowzee can be tutored the move in that game
- A colored abbreviation in a white box indicates that Drowzee cannot be tutored the move in that game
- Bold indicates a move that gets STAB when used by Drowzee
- Italic indicates a move that gets STAB only when used by an Evolution of Drowzee
- Click on the generation numbers at the top to see Move Tutor moves from other generations
|
TCG-only moves
Side game data
|
|
|
|
Pokémon Ranger
Group:
|
|
Poké Assist:
|
|
Field move:
|
None
|
Loops: 6
|
Min. exp.: 26
|
Max. exp.: 39
|
Browser entry R-090
|
Drowzee looses psychic power from its hands to disrupt your capture attempts.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Evolution
Sprites
Trivia
Origin
Drowzee is based on the Japanese myth of the baku, creatures who eat bad dreams of sleeping people. Originally, they were composite animals, but later became tapirs — pig-like animals with small trunks from South America and South Asia. It also shares some traits with elephants. Drowzee's dual coloring makes it especially similar to the Malayan tapir.
Name origin
Drowzee is a corruption of drowsy (dull with sleepiness). The zee could also be a reference to zzz (which are used to represent sleeping).
Sleepe is a corruption of sleep, but could also be named after Hypnos (Greek: Ὕπνος Sleep), the personification of sleep in Greek mythology.
In other languages
Language
|
Title
|
Meaning
|
Japanese
|
スリープ Sleepe
|
From sleep
|
French
|
Soporifik
|
Corruption of soporifique
|
Spanish
|
Drowzee
|
Same as English name
|
German
|
Traumato
|
From Traum and traumatisch
|
Italian
|
Drowzee
|
Same as English name
|
Korean
|
슬리프 Sllip
|
Similar to Japanese name; from sleep
|
Mandarin Chinese
|
素利普 Sùlìpǔ
|
Transliteration of Japanese name
|
Cantonese Chinese
|
食夢獸 Sihkmuhngsau
|
Literally "Dream-eating beast"
|
|
|
More languages
|
Hindi
|
द्रॉवज़ी Drowzee
|
Transcription of English name
|
Russian
|
Драузи Drauzi
|
Transcription of English name
|
|
|
Related articles
External links
|
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.
|