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The subject of this article is a Pokémon which has recently been announced.
This article's contents will change as more information becomes available, perhaps abruptly. Please be cautious when adding information to this article, as rumors and speculation can often be confused with facts. Avoid any information on this subject which is not confirmed by reliable sources.
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Gimmighoul (Japanese: コレクレー Korekurē) is a Ghost-type Pokémon introduced in Generation IX.
While it is not known to evolve into or from any other Pokémon, it has two forms: Chest Form and Roaming Form.
Biology
Gimmighoul's Chest Form while closed.
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Gimmighoul is a metallic blue-gray bipedal Pokémon, with bands of two thin black stripes present around its torso and between its gold, circular eyes. It has thin black antennae and a tail, which are bent near the base and tipped with small gold circles. In its Chest Form, Gimmighoul hides inside a red chest with golden accents, which is full of coins. In its Roaming Form, it carries one of these coins on its back. Both forms of Gimmighoul have different personalities.
In its Chest Form, Gimmighoul's treasure chest provides defense, but makes it hard for it to move due to the weight. Its disguise and low movement speed causes it to be commonly mistaken for an antique and taken away. When Chest Form Gimmighoul senses an approaching person or Pokémon, it will use ghost energy to possess its target and force them to collect coins. It tends to hide in places such as warehouses and shop corners to ambush people and Pokémon, and its control has notable persistence.[2] One old tale tells of a Gimmighoul who manipulated a young girl to gather 999 coins to fill its chest.[3]
In its Roaming Form, Gimmighoul is extremely timid, running away and dropping its coin as soon as anyone approaches.[2] It does not manipulate people and Pokémon to give it coins like its Chest Form counterpart; instead, it is able to gather coins by itself.[3] Despite being found everywhere in Paldea, no one has apparently been able to capture Roaming Form Gimmighoul. This Gimmighoul has also been seen appearing in the world of Pokémon GO, where it tags along near Trainers who pick up certain mysterious coins.[2]
Artwork
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Various stages of Gimmighoul's Chest Form shown during the initial website teaser.[4]
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Trivia
- Chest Form Gimmighoul was teased through a special website[1] that went live on November 5, 2022 at 13:00 UTC, and showcased Gimmighoul's chest and a counter, which periodically ticked upwards every few hours as it was slowly filled with coins. The counter eventually capped out at 999 on November 6, 2022 at 14:00 UTC, and became a redirect to a new page on the Pokémon Scarlet and Violet website.[5]
- Roaming Form Gimmighoul was also teased on November 5, 2022, appearing in Pokémon GO after the Dratini Community Day Classic event ended. It showed up and followed the player after a newly implemented golden PokéStop was spun, although it could not be properly encountered or caught.
- Prior to the release of its teasers, an obscured Roaming Form Gimmighoul appeared very briefly in the English version of the "Jump into a Paldean Journey" trailer for Pokémon Scarlet and Violet, posted on October 6, 2022.[6] It does not appear in the Japanese version of this trailer.
- Gimmighoul's Chest Form was named by Jacq, while its Roaming Form was named by Professor Willow.[3]
Origin
Gimmighoul's antennae and tail resemble dowsing rods used in the pseudoscience of dowsing (also known as doodlebugging), which is believed to be able to help people locate various buried treasures.
Gimmighoul's Chest Form may be based on the mimic, a monster archetype commonly found in RPGs, known for disguising itself as treasure chests.
Name origin
Gimmighoul may be a combination of gimme (informal spelling of "give me"), gimmick, and ghoul. Altogether, it sounds like the phrase, "Give me gold."
Korekurē may be a combination of collect, 霊 rei (spirit), and これくれ kore kure ("give me this").
In other languages
Language
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Title
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Meaning
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Japanese
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コレクレー Korekurē
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From collect, 霊 rei, and これくれ kore kure
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French
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Mordudor
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From mort and mordu d'or
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Spanish
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Gimmighoul
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Same as English name
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German
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Gierspenst
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From Gier and Gespenst
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Italian
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Gimmighoul
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Same as English name
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Korean
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모으령 Moeuryeong
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From 모으다 moeuda and 령 (靈) ryeong
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Mandarin Chinese
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索財靈 / 索财灵 Suǒcáilíng
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From 索 suǒ, 財 / 财 cái, and 靈 / 灵 líng
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Cantonese Chinese
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索財靈 Sokchòihlìhng
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From 索 sok, 財 chòih, and 靈 lìhng
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More languages
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Thai
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คอลเลคเรย์
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Transcription of Japanese name
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Related articles
References
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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