Cerulean Gym: Difference between revisions
Force Fire (talk | contribs) (→Pokémon that reside in Gym: No need for a laundry list.) |
|||
(30 intermediate revisions by 10 users not shown) | |||
Line 46: | Line 46: | ||
{{sign|DPcity|footer}} | {{sign|DPcity|footer}} | ||
In Generations {{gen|I}}, {{gen|II}}, and {{gen| | In Generations {{gen|I}}, {{gen|II}}, {{gen|III}}, and {{gen|VII}}, the Cerulean Gym is designed like an indoor swimming pool, with platforms above the water for the {{player}} to walk on. In [[Generation IV]], the Gym consists of a large pool roped off into lanes with certain parts of the area circling the pool blocked. There are no puzzles to solve in this Gym. | ||
In Generations II and IV, Misty isn't initially at the Gym. After the problem at the {{FB|Kanto|Power Plant}} has been fixed, she can be found at [[Kanto Route 25|Cerulean Cape]], having a date with her boyfriend. After her boyfriend is scared away by the player's arrival, Misty will at first be angry at the player for ruining her date, but will then return to the Gym, allowing it to be challenged. | In Generations II and IV, Misty isn't initially at the Gym. After the problem at the {{FB|Kanto|Power Plant}} has been fixed, she can be found at [[Kanto Route 25|Cerulean Cape]], having a date with her boyfriend. After her boyfriend is scared away by the player's arrival, Misty will at first be angry at the player for ruining her date, but will then return to the Gym, allowing it to be challenged. | ||
In [[Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee!]], the player must have a Pokémon that is at [[level]] 15 or higher in their [[party]] in order to be allowed to challenge the Gym. | |||
A field based on the Gym also appears in {{eng|Pokémon Stadium}}'s [[Gym Leader Castle]] and {{pkmn|Stadium 2}}'s Kanto Gym Leader Castle. | A field based on the Gym also appears in {{eng|Pokémon Stadium}}'s [[Gym Leader Castle]] and {{pkmn|Stadium 2}}'s Kanto Gym Leader Castle. | ||
Line 351: | Line 353: | ||
|move3=Ice Beam|move3type=Ice|move3cat=Special | |move3=Ice Beam|move3type=Ice|move3cat=Special | ||
|move4=Recover|move4type=Normal|move4cat=Status}} | |move4=Recover|move4type=Normal|move4cat=Status}} | ||
{{Party/Footer}} | |||
=====[[Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee!]]===== | |||
{{Trainerheader|Water}} | |||
{{Trainerentry|VSBeauty 2 PE.png{{!}}90px|Beauty|{{ka|Lily}}|320|1|118|Goldeen|♀|16|None|36=ボタン|37=Botan}} | |||
{{Trainerdiv|Water}} | |||
{{Trainerentry|VSBeauty 2 PE.png{{!}}90px|Beauty|[[Violet]]|320|1|090|Shellder|♀|16|None|36=アヤメ|37=Ayame}} | |||
{{Trainerdiv|Water}} | |||
{{Trainerentry|VSBeauty 2 PE.png{{!}}90px|Beauty|{{an|Daisy}}|320|1|086|Seel|♀|16|36=サクラ|37=Sakura}} | |||
{{Trainerfooter|Water|PE}} | |||
{{Party/Single | |||
|color={{water color}} | |||
|headcolor={{water color light}} | |||
|bordercolor={{water color dark}} | |||
|sprite=VSMisty PE.png | |||
|size=80x80px | |||
|prize={{PDollar}}3,040 | |||
|class=Gym Leader | |||
|classlink=Gym Leader | |||
|name={{color2|000|Misty}} | |||
|game=PE | |||
|location=Cerulean Gym | |||
|pokemon=2}} | |||
|{{Pokémon/7 | |||
|game=PE | |||
|ndex=054 | |||
|pokemon=Psyduck | |||
|level=18 | |||
|gender=male | |||
|type1=Water | |||
|move1=Confusion|move1type=Psychic|move1cat=Special | |||
|move2=Water Gun|move2type=Water|move2cat=Special}} | |||
|{{Pokémon/7 | |||
|game=PE | |||
|ndex=121 | |||
|pokemon=Starmie | |||
|level=19 | |||
|type1=Water|type2=Psychic | |||
|move1=Scald|move1type=Water|move1cat=Special | |||
|move2=Swift|move2type=Normal|move2cat=Special | |||
|move3=Psywave|move3type=Psychic|move3cat=Special}} | |||
{{Party/Footer}} | |||
======[[Rematch]]====== | |||
{{Party/Single | |||
|color={{water color}} | |||
|headcolor={{water color light}} | |||
|bordercolor={{water color dark}} | |||
|sprite=VSMisty PE.png | |||
|size=80x80px | |||
|prize={{PDollar}}13,680 | |||
|class=Gym Leader | |||
|classlink=Gym Leader | |||
|name={{color2|000|Misty}} | |||
|game=PE | |||
|location=Cerulean Gym | |||
|pokemon=5}} | |||
|style="margin:auto"}}|{{Pokémon/6 | |||
|game=PE | |||
|ndex=055 | |||
|pokemon=Golduck | |||
|level=56 | |||
|type1=Water | |||
|gender=male | |||
|move1=Scald|move1type=Water|move1cat=Special | |||
|move2=Psychic|move2type=Psychic|move2cat=Special | |||
|move3=Ice Beam|move3type=Ice|move3cat=Special | |||
|move4=Light Screen|move4type=Psychic|move4cat=Status}} | |||
|{{Pokémon/7 | |||
|game=PE | |||
|ndex=087 | |||
|pokemon=Dewgong | |||
|level=56 | |||
|type1=Water|type2=Ice | |||
|gender=female | |||
|move1=Aqua Jet|move1type=Water|move1cat=Physical | |||
|move2=Ice Shard|move2type=Ice|move2cat=Physical | |||
|move3=Waterfall|move3type=Water|move3cat=Physical | |||
|move4=Iron Tail|move4type=Steel|move4cat=Physical}} | |||
|{{Pokémon/7 | |||
|game=PE | |||
|ndex=134 | |||
|pokemon=Vaporeon | |||
|level=56 | |||
|type1=Water | |||
|gender=female | |||
|move1=Hydro Pump|move1type=Water|move1cat=Special | |||
|move2=Blizzard|move2type=Ice|move2cat=Special | |||
|move3=Quick Attack|move3type=Normal|move3cat=Physical | |||
|move4=Shadow Ball|move4type=Ghost|move4cat=Special}} | |||
{{Party/Div|color={{water color}}}} | |||
| style="margin:auto" |{{Pokémon/6 | |||
|game=PE | |||
|ndex=121 | |||
|pokemon=Starmie | |||
|level=56 | |||
|type1=Water|type2=Psychic | |||
|move1=Hydro Pump|move1type=Water|move1cat=Special | |||
|move2=Dazzling Gleam|move2type=Fairy|move2cat=Special | |||
|move3=Psychic|move3type=Psychic|move3cat=Special | |||
|move4=Thunderbolt|move4type=Electric|move4cat=Special}} | |||
| style="margin:auto" |{{Pokémon/6 | |||
|game=PE | |||
|ndex=130 | |||
|pokemon=Gyarados | |||
|level=57 | |||
|type1=Water|type2=Flying | |||
|gender=male | |||
|move1=Waterfall|move1type=Water|move1cat=Physical | |||
|move2=Crunch|move2type=Dark|move2cat=Physical | |||
|move3=Outrage|move3type=Dragon|move3cat=Physical | |||
|move4=Iron Tail|move4type=Steel|move4cat=Physical}} | |||
{{Party/Footer}} | {{Party/Footer}} | ||
Line 372: | Line 487: | ||
<!--GEN I HAD NO CLASSES--> | <!--GEN I HAD NO CLASSES--> | ||
|name={{color2|000|Misty}} | |name={{color2|000|Misty}} | ||
|game= | |game=Stadium | ||
|location=Gym Leader Castle | |location=Gym Leader Castle | ||
|pokemon=6}} | |pokemon=6}} | ||
Line 450: | Line 565: | ||
<!--GEN I HAD NO CLASSES--> | <!--GEN I HAD NO CLASSES--> | ||
|name={{color2|000|Misty}} | |name={{color2|000|Misty}} | ||
|game= | |game=Stadium | ||
|location=Gym Leader Castle | |location=Gym Leader Castle | ||
|pokemon=6}} | |pokemon=6}} | ||
Line 521: | Line 636: | ||
|classlink=Gym Leader | |classlink=Gym Leader | ||
|name={{color2|000|Misty}} | |name={{color2|000|Misty}} | ||
|game= | |game=Stadium2 | ||
|location=Gym Leader Castle | |location=Gym Leader Castle | ||
|locationname=Kanto Gym Leader Castle | |locationname=Kanto Gym Leader Castle | ||
Line 604: | Line 719: | ||
|classlink=Gym Leader | |classlink=Gym Leader | ||
|name={{color2|000|Misty}} | |name={{color2|000|Misty}} | ||
|game= | |game=Stadium2 | ||
|location=Gym Leader Castle | |location=Gym Leader Castle | ||
|locationname=Kanto Gym Leader Castle | |locationname=Kanto Gym Leader Castle | ||
Line 680: | Line 795: | ||
{{Itemlist|TM Water|Reward for defeating Misty|R=yes|B=yes|Y=yes|display={{TM|11|BubbleBeam}}}} | {{Itemlist|TM Water|Reward for defeating Misty|R=yes|B=yes|Y=yes|display={{TM|11|BubbleBeam}}}} | ||
{{Itemlist|TM Water|Reward for defeating Misty|FR=yes|LG=yes|HG=yes|SS=yes|display={{TM|03|Water Pulse}}}} | {{Itemlist|TM Water|Reward for defeating Misty|FR=yes|LG=yes|HG=yes|SS=yes|display={{TM|03|Water Pulse}}}} | ||
{{Itemlist|Machine Part|In water in the middle of the Gym, after visiting the {{FB|Kanto|Power Plant}} ''(hidden)''|G=yes|S=yes|C=yes | {{Itemlist|TM Water VI|Reward for defeating Misty|LP=yes|LE=yes|display={{TM|29|Scald}}}} | ||
{{Itemlist|Machine Part|Behind a pile of lifebuoys, after defeating the {{tc|Team Rocket Grunt}} on {{rt|24|Kanto}} ''({{tt|hidden|Doesn't show up on | {{Itemlist|Machine Part|In water in the middle of the Gym, after visiting the {{FB|Kanto|Power Plant}} ''(hidden)''|G=yes|S=yes|C=yes}} | ||
{{Itemlist|Machine Part|Behind a pile of lifebuoys, after defeating the {{tc|Team Rocket Grunt}} on {{rt|24|Kanto}} ''({{tt|hidden|Doesn't show up on Dowsing MCHN}})''|HG=yes|SS=yes}} | |||
{{Itlistfoot|water}} | {{Itlistfoot|water}} | ||
==In the anime== | ==In the anime== | ||
===In the main series=== | ===In the main series=== | ||
Line 688: | Line 805: | ||
[[File:Cerulean Gym Aquarium.png|220px|left|thumb|Cerulean Gym's aquarium]] | [[File:Cerulean Gym Aquarium.png|220px|left|thumb|Cerulean Gym's aquarium]] | ||
[[File:Cerulean Gym Field.png|250px|left|thumb|The Gym's original battlefield]] | [[File:Cerulean Gym Field.png|250px|left|thumb|The Gym's original battlefield]] | ||
Cerulean Gym has appeared in multiple episodes of the {{pkmn|anime}}. In its original design, the building was a dome-shaped, brightly colored Gym with a gigantic painting of a {{p|Dewgong}} on top of it. On the inside, the Gym was seen being equipped with a large aquarium and a swimming pool. In the {{series|Sun & Moon}}, the Gym seemed to have gone through a massive | Cerulean Gym has appeared in multiple episodes of the {{pkmn|anime}}. In its original design, the building was a dome-shaped, brightly colored Gym with a gigantic painting of a {{p|Dewgong}} on top of it. On the inside, the Gym was seen being equipped with a large aquarium and a swimming pool. In the {{series|Sun & Moon}}, the Gym seemed to have gone through a massive redesign in-between appearances, both on the exterior and the interior. For example, the battlefield is now a stone field, which can be retracted into the floor and filled with water to form a water field, suitable for the Gym's {{type|Water}} Pokémon. | ||
It first appeared in ''[[EP007|The Water Flowers of Cerulean City]]''. {{Ash}} was heading there so he could earn his {{badge|Cascade}}. Misty kept telling him not to go to Cerulean, and he soon discovered why she had tried to stop him; her three sisters, [[Violet]], {{ka|Lily}}, and {{an|Daisy}}, were the Gym Leaders, who didn't care much about battling and had instead turned the battlefield into a performance hall for their water acrobatics shows. Incapable of giving Ash a proper Gym battle, due their defeat against {{Gary}} and two other [[Pallet Town]] {{pkmn|Trainer}}s, they were about to simply give Ash a free Cascade Badge, when Misty intervened. She challenged Ash to a battle in her capacity as an official Gym Leader, but the battle was interrupted by {{TRT}} trying to steal the Gym's Pokémon with a giant vscuum cleaner, only to be defeated by Ash and be sent flying by their own machine. In the end, Daisy gave Ash a Cascade Badge for protecting the Gym, also saying that if [[Ash's Pikachu]] hadn't refused to battle, Misty's Water Pokémon wouldn't have stood a chance of winning. | |||
The Gym's next appearance was in ''[[EP061|The Misty Mermaid]]''. While {{ashfr|the group}} was the way to the [[Viridian Gym]], [[Misty's Horsea]] became sick. Realizing the Gym was nearby, Misty decided to go and see if they could make Horsea feel better there. At the Gym, Misty's sisters told her that they had set up an underwater balette and given Misty the main role without asking her first. With the first performance due to be held the following day, Misty was left with no choice but to accept the role. During the performance, Team Rocket attacked and tried to steal the Gym's Pokémon again. This time, they were defeated by the Gym's {{p|Seel}}, which evolved into a {{OBP|Dewgong|Cerulean Gym}} to protect the Gym. Afterwards, Misty's sisters asked Misty to leave her Horsea and {{TP|Misty|Starmie}} at the Gym for their future performances, which she reluctantly accepted. She also tried to force her {{TP|Misty|Psyduck}} on them, but they refused. | |||
In ''[[EP256|Just Add Water]]'', while traveling through [[Johto]], Ash and his friends met a Water-type Trainer named [[Dorian]], who had visited the Cerulean Gym and met Misty's sisters multiple times, wishing to make his own unofficial Gym, the Coastline Gym, as widely known as the Cerulean Gym. | |||
In ''[[EP273|Gotta Catch Ya Later!]]'', Misty received a call from her sisters, informing her that they had won an around-the-world trip and were giving their Cerulean Gym Leader status to her so that she could take care of the Gym in their absence. | |||
The Gym | The Gym also played key roles in several [[Pokémon Chronicles]] episodes. In ''[[SS002|Cerulean Blues]]'', the Gym was in danger of being shut down, but Misty, who had just returned to the Gym after her sisters' departure, was successfully able to fix it up and stop it from getting shut down. In the process, she earned a Gym {{TP|Misty|Gyarados}}'s trust. In ''[[SS005|The Blue Badge of Courage]]'', [[Sakura]] challenged Misty to a Gym battle and won her own Cascade Badge. {{an|Casey}} visited the Gym in ''[[SS011|A Date with Delcatty]]'', and in ''[[SS016|Luvdisc is a Many Splendored Thing!]]'', Misty and Daisy's two {{p|Luvdisc}}, [[Caserin and Luverin]], were stolen by [[Butch]] and [[Cassidy]]. | ||
The Gym | The Gym made a brief flashback appearance in ''[[AG092|Judgment Day!]]''. Ash and his friends met a former Trainer named {{OBP|Jimmy|AG092}}, who told them how he had once passed by the Cerulean Gym, when Daisy had come up to him and asked him to help clean up the Gym's pool. Jimmy had accepted the request, and once he and his Pokémon had done their work, Daisy had given him a free Cascade Badge. Jimmy also mentioned that Misty hadn't been at the Gym at the time to battle him. | ||
The Gym reappeared in ''[[SM043|When Regions Collide!]]'', where Ash and {{ashcl}} from [[Alola]] visited it during an extracurricular lesson, guided by {{an|Brock}} and Misty. After giving a brief summary to Ash's classmates about how Gyms, Badges, and the [[Pokémon League]] work in Kanto, the group was offered to experience a Gym battle. First {{an|Mallow}} and {{an|Lana}} took on Misty, after which {{an|Sophocles}} and {{an|Lillie}} battled against Brock. After both of these battles had | The Gym reappeared hundreds of episodes later in ''[[SM043|When Regions Collide!]]'', where Ash and {{ashcl}} from [[Alola]] visited it during an extracurricular lesson, guided by {{an|Brock}} and Misty. After giving a brief summary to Ash's classmates about how Gyms, Badges, and the [[Pokémon League]] work in Kanto, the group was offered to experience a Gym battle. First {{an|Mallow}} and {{an|Lana}} took on Misty, after which {{an|Sophocles}} and {{an|Lillie}} battled against Brock. After both of these battles had been called off with no clear winner, {{an|Kiawe}} requested to have a serious battle against Brock, while Ash issued a similar challenge to Misty. During the battle between [[Kiawe's Turtonator]] and [[Brock's Steelix]], the former [[Pewter Gym]] {{FB|Gym|Leader}} [[Mega Evolution|Mega Evolved]] his Pokémon as a response to Kiawe's decision to use his [[Z-Move]]. Although Turtonator's {{m|Inferno Overdrive}} dealt heavy damage on Mega {{p|Steelix}}, it was unable to deal the finishing blow, allowing Brock to win the battle with his next attack. In the following battle between Ash's Pikachu and Misty's Gyarados, the Cerulean Gym Leader also demonstrated her ability to use Mega Evolution. However, unlike Kiawe, Ash was able to use his own Z-Move, {{m|Gigavolt Havoc}}, to defeat his Mega Evolved opponent. Before Ash and his classmates headed back to Alola, Brock and Misty gave each of them a replica Badge to remember the battles they had had with them. | ||
====Pokémon used in Gym==== | ====Pokémon used in Gym==== | ||
Line 789: | Line 912: | ||
|desc=Lily has her own {{p|Goldeen}} as her only known Pokémon. She sent it out briefly to show {{Ash}} that it was the only Pokémon that she had left after she and her two other sisters were beaten by the three other Trainers from Pallet Town. | |desc=Lily has her own {{p|Goldeen}} as her only known Pokémon. She sent it out briefly to show {{Ash}} that it was the only Pokémon that she had left after she and her two other sisters were beaten by the three other Trainers from Pallet Town. | ||
Goldeen's only known move is {{m|Horn Attack}}{{tt|*|Mentioned only}}.}} | |||
====Pokémon that reside in Gym==== | ====Pokémon that reside in Gym==== | ||
Line 795: | Line 918: | ||
===In Pokémon Origins=== | ===In Pokémon Origins=== | ||
[[File:Misty Starmie PO.png|250px|thumb|Cerulean Gym in Pokémon Origins]] | [[File:Misty Starmie PO.png|250px|thumb|Cerulean Gym in [[Pokémon Origins]]]] | ||
Cerulean Gym was briefly seen in ''[[PO02|File 2: Cubone]]'', when {{OBP|Red|Origins}} recalled of having a tough battle with Misty, but eventually emerging victorious, thus earning the {{badge|Cascade}}. | Cerulean Gym was briefly seen in ''[[PO02|File 2: Cubone]]'', when {{OBP|Red|Origins}} recalled of having a tough battle with Misty, but eventually emerging victorious, thus earning the {{badge|Cascade}}. | ||
====Pokémon used in Gym==== | ====Pokémon used in Gym==== | ||
{{TrainerPoké | {{TrainerPoké | ||
|width= | |width=68 | ||
|main=yes | |main=yes | ||
|trainer=Misty | |trainer=Misty | ||
Line 842: | Line 965: | ||
* Cerulean Gym is the only place in any Pokémon game where it is possible to battle swimming {{tc|Swimmer}}s without {{m|Surf}}ing. | * Cerulean Gym is the only place in any Pokémon game where it is possible to battle swimming {{tc|Swimmer}}s without {{m|Surf}}ing. | ||
* In {{game|HeartGold and SoulSilver|s}}, if the player brings a {{p|Togepi}} inside the Gym, it may begin to cry softly when the player talks to it. This is a [[List of cross-canon references|reference]] to [[Misty's Togepi]] in the anime. | * In {{game|HeartGold and SoulSilver|s}}, if the player brings a {{p|Togepi}} inside the Gym, it may begin to cry softly when the player talks to it. This is a [[List of cross-canon references|reference]] to [[Misty's Togepi]] in the anime. | ||
* In Generation II, it is possible for the player to pick up the | * In Generation II, it is possible for the player to pick up the [[Machine Part]] from the Gym before learning of its location from the {{tc|Team Rocket Grunt}} on {{rt|24|Kanto}}. This is no longer the case in [[Generation IV]], where the player must defeat the Grunt in a battle in order to make the Machine Part obtainable. | ||
* In [[Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee!]], the {{tc|Beauty|Beauties}} in the Gym are named after the [[The Sensational Sisters]] (Misty's three older sisters in the anime): {{ka|Lily}}, [[Violet]], and {{an|Daisy}}. | |||
{{-}} | {{-}} | ||
Line 852: | Line 976: | ||
[[de:Pokémon-Arena von Azuria City]] | [[de:Pokémon-Arena von Azuria City]] | ||
[[es:Gimnasio Pokémon de Ciudad Celeste]] | |||
[[fr:Arène d'Azuria]] | [[fr:Arène d'Azuria]] | ||
[[it:Palestra di Celestopoli]] | [[it:Palestra di Celestopoli]] | ||
[[ja:ハナダジム]] | [[ja:ハナダジム]] | ||
[[zh:華藍道館]] | [[zh:華藍道館]] |
Revision as of 15:01, 12 September 2019
Cerulean Gym ハナダジム Hanada Gym | |
Location | Cerulean City |
Gym Leader | Misty Daisy, Lily, and Violet (anime only) |
Badge | Cascade Badge |
Dominant Type | Water |
Region | Kanto |
Battlefield |
The Cerulean Gym (Japanese: ハナダジム Hanada Gym) is the official Gym of Cerulean City. It is based on Water-type Pokémon. The Gym Leader is Misty. Trainers who defeat her receive the Cascade Badge.
Other known members include Swimmers Briana, Parker, Diana, and Luis, Picnicker Diana, and Misty's sisters Daisy, Lily, and Violet, who were the Gym Leaders together in the anime until the Advanced Generation series.
In the games
Cerulean City
Pokémon Gym
Leader: Misty
The Tomboyish
Mermaid!
Cerulean City
Pokémon Gym
Leader: Misty
The Tomboyish
Mermaid
In Generations I, II, III, and VII, the Cerulean Gym is designed like an indoor swimming pool, with platforms above the water for the player to walk on. In Generation IV, the Gym consists of a large pool roped off into lanes with certain parts of the area circling the pool blocked. There are no puzzles to solve in this Gym.
In Generations II and IV, Misty isn't initially at the Gym. After the problem at the Power Plant has been fixed, she can be found at Cerulean Cape, having a date with her boyfriend. After her boyfriend is scared away by the player's arrival, Misty will at first be angry at the player for ruining her date, but will then return to the Gym, allowing it to be challenged.
In Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee!, the player must have a Pokémon that is at level 15 or higher in their party in order to be allowed to challenge the Gym.
A field based on the Gym also appears in Pokémon Stadium's Gym Leader Castle and Stadium 2's Kanto Gym Leader Castle.
Appearance
|
Pokémon
Generation I
Pokémon | Games | Location | Levels | Rate | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fishing | |||||||||||||||
|
R | B | Y |
|
5 | 100% | |||||||||
|
R | B | Y |
|
10 | 50% | |||||||||
|
R | B | Y |
|
10 | 50% | |||||||||
|
R | B | Y |
|
15 | 34% | |||||||||
|
R | B | Y |
|
15 | 33% | |||||||||
|
R | B | Y |
|
15 | 33% | |||||||||
A colored background means that the Pokémon can be found in this location in the specified game. A white background with a colored letter means that the Pokémon cannot be found here. |
Generation II
Pokémon | Games | Location | Levels | Rate | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fishing | |||||||||||||||
|
G | S | C |
|
10 | 85% | |||||||||
|
G | S | C |
|
10 | 15% | |||||||||
|
G | S | C |
|
20 | 60% | |||||||||
|
G | S | C |
|
10 | 30% | |||||||||
|
G | S | C |
|
20 | 10% | 10% | 0% | |||||||
|
G | S | C |
|
20 | 0% | 0% | 10% | |||||||
|
G | S | C |
|
40 | 60% | |||||||||
|
G | S | C |
|
40 | 30% | 30% | 0% | |||||||
|
G | S | C |
|
40 | 0% | 0% | 30% | |||||||
|
G | S | C |
|
40 | 10% | |||||||||
A colored background means that the Pokémon can be found in this location in the specified game. A white background with a colored letter means that the Pokémon cannot be found here. |
Trainers
Core series
Pokémon Red, Blue, and Yellow
Trainer | Pokémon | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||
Pokémon Red and Blue
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Pokémon Yellow
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Pokémon Gold, Silver, and Crystal
Trainer | Pokémon | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||
Trainers with a telephone symbol by their names will give their Pokégear number to the player, and may call or be called for a rematch with higher-level Pokémon. |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen
Trainer | Pokémon | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||
Trainers with a Vs. Seeker by their names, when alerted for a rematch using the item, may use higher-level Pokémon. |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver
Trainer | Pokémon | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||
Requires Surf | ||||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
Trainers with a telephone symbol by their names will give their Pokégear number to the player, and may call or be called for a rematch with higher-level Pokémon. |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee!
Trainer | Pokémon | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Rematch
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Side series
Pokémon Stadium
Round 1
Trainer | Pokémon | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Round 2
Trainer | Pokémon | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
|
| |||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Pokémon Stadium 2
Round 1
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Round 2
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Items
Item | Location | Games | |
---|---|---|---|
TM11 (BubbleBeam) | Reward for defeating Misty | R B Y | |
TM03 (Water Pulse) | Reward for defeating Misty | FR LG HG SS | |
TM29 (Scald) | Reward for defeating Misty | P E | |
Machine Part | In water in the middle of the Gym, after visiting the Power Plant (hidden) | G S C | |
Machine Part | Behind a pile of lifebuoys, after defeating the Team Rocket Grunt on Route 24 (hidden) | HG SS | |
In the anime
In the main series
Cerulean Gym has appeared in multiple episodes of the anime. In its original design, the building was a dome-shaped, brightly colored Gym with a gigantic painting of a Dewgong on top of it. On the inside, the Gym was seen being equipped with a large aquarium and a swimming pool. In the Sun & Moon series, the Gym seemed to have gone through a massive redesign in-between appearances, both on the exterior and the interior. For example, the battlefield is now a stone field, which can be retracted into the floor and filled with water to form a water field, suitable for the Gym's Water-type Pokémon.
It first appeared in The Water Flowers of Cerulean City. Ash was heading there so he could earn his Cascade Badge. Misty kept telling him not to go to Cerulean, and he soon discovered why she had tried to stop him; her three sisters, Violet, Lily, and Daisy, were the Gym Leaders, who didn't care much about battling and had instead turned the battlefield into a performance hall for their water acrobatics shows. Incapable of giving Ash a proper Gym battle, due their defeat against Gary and two other Pallet Town Trainers, they were about to simply give Ash a free Cascade Badge, when Misty intervened. She challenged Ash to a battle in her capacity as an official Gym Leader, but the battle was interrupted by Team Rocket trying to steal the Gym's Pokémon with a giant vscuum cleaner, only to be defeated by Ash and be sent flying by their own machine. In the end, Daisy gave Ash a Cascade Badge for protecting the Gym, also saying that if Ash's Pikachu hadn't refused to battle, Misty's Water Pokémon wouldn't have stood a chance of winning.
The Gym's next appearance was in The Misty Mermaid. While the group was the way to the Viridian Gym, Misty's Horsea became sick. Realizing the Gym was nearby, Misty decided to go and see if they could make Horsea feel better there. At the Gym, Misty's sisters told her that they had set up an underwater balette and given Misty the main role without asking her first. With the first performance due to be held the following day, Misty was left with no choice but to accept the role. During the performance, Team Rocket attacked and tried to steal the Gym's Pokémon again. This time, they were defeated by the Gym's Seel, which evolved into a Dewgong to protect the Gym. Afterwards, Misty's sisters asked Misty to leave her Horsea and Starmie at the Gym for their future performances, which she reluctantly accepted. She also tried to force her Psyduck on them, but they refused.
In Just Add Water, while traveling through Johto, Ash and his friends met a Water-type Trainer named Dorian, who had visited the Cerulean Gym and met Misty's sisters multiple times, wishing to make his own unofficial Gym, the Coastline Gym, as widely known as the Cerulean Gym.
In Gotta Catch Ya Later!, Misty received a call from her sisters, informing her that they had won an around-the-world trip and were giving their Cerulean Gym Leader status to her so that she could take care of the Gym in their absence.
The Gym also played key roles in several Pokémon Chronicles episodes. In Cerulean Blues, the Gym was in danger of being shut down, but Misty, who had just returned to the Gym after her sisters' departure, was successfully able to fix it up and stop it from getting shut down. In the process, she earned a Gym Gyarados's trust. In The Blue Badge of Courage, Sakura challenged Misty to a Gym battle and won her own Cascade Badge. Casey visited the Gym in A Date with Delcatty, and in Luvdisc is a Many Splendored Thing!, Misty and Daisy's two Luvdisc, Caserin and Luverin, were stolen by Butch and Cassidy.
The Gym made a brief flashback appearance in Judgment Day!. Ash and his friends met a former Trainer named Jimmy, who told them how he had once passed by the Cerulean Gym, when Daisy had come up to him and asked him to help clean up the Gym's pool. Jimmy had accepted the request, and once he and his Pokémon had done their work, Daisy had given him a free Cascade Badge. Jimmy also mentioned that Misty hadn't been at the Gym at the time to battle him.
The Gym reappeared hundreds of episodes later in When Regions Collide!, where Ash and his classmates from Alola visited it during an extracurricular lesson, guided by Brock and Misty. After giving a brief summary to Ash's classmates about how Gyms, Badges, and the Pokémon League work in Kanto, the group was offered to experience a Gym battle. First Mallow and Lana took on Misty, after which Sophocles and Lillie battled against Brock. After both of these battles had been called off with no clear winner, Kiawe requested to have a serious battle against Brock, while Ash issued a similar challenge to Misty. During the battle between Kiawe's Turtonator and Brock's Steelix, the former Pewter Gym Leader Mega Evolved his Pokémon as a response to Kiawe's decision to use his Z-Move. Although Turtonator's Inferno Overdrive dealt heavy damage on Mega Steelix, it was unable to deal the finishing blow, allowing Brock to win the battle with his next attack. In the following battle between Ash's Pikachu and Misty's Gyarados, the Cerulean Gym Leader also demonstrated her ability to use Mega Evolution. However, unlike Kiawe, Ash was able to use his own Z-Move, Gigavolt Havoc, to defeat his Mega Evolved opponent. Before Ash and his classmates headed back to Alola, Brock and Misty gave each of them a replica Badge to remember the battles they had had with them.
Pokémon used in Gym
Used by Misty
Misty started using Staryu for Gym battles after becoming Gym Leader. | ||
Debut | Clefairy and the Moon Stone | |
---|---|---|
Voice actors | ||
Japanese | Shin'ichirō Miki | |
English | Shin'ichirō Miki |
Misty left Starmie at the Gym in The Misty Mermaid. She started using Starmie for Gym battles after becoming Gym Leader. | ||
Debut | The Water Flowers of Cerulean City | |
---|---|---|
Voice actors | ||
Japanese | Ikue Ohtani | |
English | Ikue Ohtani |
Misty started using Corsola for Gym battles after becoming Gym Leader. | ||
Debut | A Corsola Caper! | |
---|---|---|
Voice actors | ||
Japanese | Ikue Ohtani | |
English | Kayzie Rogers |
Misty started using Psyduck for Gym battles after becoming Gym Leader. | ||
Debut | Hypno's Naptime | |
---|---|---|
Voice actors | ||
Japanese | Rikako Aikawa | |
English | Michael Haigney |
Misty started using Gyarados for Gym battles after becoming Gym Leader. Thanks to Misty's Key Stone and its Gyaradosite, it can Mega Evolve into Mega Gyarados. | ||
Debut | Cerulean Blues | |
---|---|---|
Voice actors | ||
Japanese | Unshō Ishizuka | |
English | Unshō Ishizuka |
Used by Daisy, Violet, and Lily
Dewgong first appeared as a Seel, holding out the Cascade Badge, when Ash was about to challenge the Sensational Sisters. Later, Seel was one of the Pokémon performing in a play hosted by the sisters. It evolved into a Dewgong while battling Jessie's Arbok. | ||
Debut | The Water Flowers of Cerulean City | |
---|---|---|
Voice actors | ||
Japanese | Yūji Ueda | |
English | Michael Haigney |
Lily has her own Goldeen as her only known Pokémon. She sent it out briefly to show Ash that it was the only Pokémon that she had left after she and her two other sisters were beaten by the three other Trainers from Pallet Town.
Goldeen's only known move is Horn Attack*. | ||
Debut | The Water Flowers of Cerulean City |
---|
Pokémon that reside in Gym
Several Pokémon, mostly Water types, reside in the Gym's aquariums, though are not known to have been used in Gym battles.
In Pokémon Origins
Cerulean Gym was briefly seen in File 2: Cubone, when Red recalled of having a tough battle with Misty, but eventually emerging victorious, thus earning the Cascade Badge.
Pokémon used in Gym
Starmie was used in Misty's Gym battle against Red, but ended up being defeated. | ||
Debut | File 2: Cubone |
---|
In the manga
In The Electric Tale of Pikachu manga
The Cerulean Gym appeared in Play Misty For Me. After defeating Brock rather easily, Ash was confident of his abilities, and headed to Cerulean City in order win his second Badge. At the Gym, Ash met Daisy, Lily, and Violet, who briefly talked about which one of them would battle Ash, until Misty arrived, declaring that she'd battle him.
At the Gym's water battlefield, Misty revealed her Pokémon to be Gyarados, which proceeded to snatch away Ash's hat. Misty declared that if Ash would be able to get his hat back from her, she'd give him the Cascade Badge. With Pikachu being too scared of Gyarados, Fearow being asleep, Pidgeotto being away, and Metapod only being capable of using Harden, Ash's chances for succeeding in the given task seemed nonexistent. However, Metapod then suddenly evolved into Butterfree, allowing Ash to put Gyarados asleep with Butterfree's Sleep Powder. Although Pikachu was now willing to move, Misty distracted the Electric Mouse with a rice ball before it could get the hat back. Ash countered by throwing a soy sauce-covered dumpling at Misty, causing his dumpling-loving Fearow to snatch the hat away from her. As promised, Misty's sisters then rewarded Ash with the Cascade Badge, despite Misty trying to protest that Ash's victory was a fluke.
In the Pokémon Adventures manga
The Cerulean Gym appeared in Suddenly Starmie, where Red and Misty trained together at the Gym for a few days to improve their skills in order to fight Team Rocket. After the training was complete, Misty gave Red a Cascade Badge.
In the Pokémon Pocket Monsters manga
The Cerulean Gym appeared in Obtain the Moon Stone!!, where Red and his Pokémon fought Misty in order to obtain the Moon Stone she had with her. In the manga, Cerulean Gym is depicted in a very traditional Japanese architectural style.
In the Pokémon Zensho manga
The Cerulean Gym appeared in Cerulean City, where Satoshi went to the Gym to challenge Misty. However, since Satoshi and his Pikachu had trouble swimming in the Gym's pool, they had to practice for a while in order to learn how to swim. Soon after, the Gym was attacked by a Team Rocket Grunt using a Gyarados, but Satoshi defeated the Grunt, driving him away. As a reward for saving the Gym, Misty gave Satoshi a Cascade Badge. She also gave Satoshi her Seel before the young Trainer left.
In the TCG
The Cerulean Gym was featured in the TCG as both a Japan exclusive Theme Deck and as a card. The following is a list of cards named Cerulean City Gym.
Related cards Cards listed with a blue background are only legal to use in the current Expanded format. Cards listed with a green background are legal to use in both the current Standard and Expanded formats. | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Card | Type | English Expansion |
Rarity | # | Japanese Expansion |
Rarity | # |
Cerulean City Gym | T [St] | Gym Heroes | 57/132 | Leaders' Stadium | |||
Trivia
- In the English Generation I games, the Gym guide here refers to Pokémon of the Grass type as "plant Pokémon". In the English versions of Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen, he instead mentions "Grass-type Pokémon". In the Japanese versions of the Generation I games and FireRed and LeafGreen, he mentions the Grass type itself, calling it the "Plant type" (Japanese: しょくぶつタイプ).
- In Pokémon Red, Green, Blue, Gold, and Silver, due to an oversight, it is possible to fish wild Pokémon in the Gym's water. This was fixed in Pokémon Yellow and Crystal (although in Yellow, the Old and Good Rods still work here).
- Cerulean Gym is the only place in any Pokémon game where it is possible to battle swimming Swimmers without Surfing.
- In Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver, if the player brings a Togepi inside the Gym, it may begin to cry softly when the player talks to it. This is a reference to Misty's Togepi in the anime.
- In Generation II, it is possible for the player to pick up the Machine Part from the Gym before learning of its location from the Team Rocket Grunt on Route 24. This is no longer the case in Generation IV, where the player must defeat the Grunt in a battle in order to make the Machine Part obtainable.
- In Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee!, the Beauties in the Gym are named after the The Sensational Sisters (Misty's three older sisters in the anime): Lily, Violet, and Daisy.
This article is part of Project Locations, a Bulbapedia project that aims to write comprehensive articles on every location in the Pokémon world. |