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[[File:Nickname.png|frame|A {{p|Yooterry}} being nicknamed "Sport"]]
[[File:Nickname.png|frame|A {{p|Yoterry}} being nicknamed "Sport"]]
A '''nickname''' is a name given to a {{obp|Pokémon|species}} by its [[Original Trainer]]. Every time a player catches, hatches, or is given a new Pokémon in a [[main series]] game, he or she is able to nickname the Pokémon to a maximum of ten characters.  In addition to in the games, nicknamed Pokémon have also been shown in the [[Pokémon anime]] and several {{pkmn|manga}} series.  Nicknames serve as a means of personalizing one's Pokémon, and distinguishing them from other individuals of the same species.
A '''nickname''' is a name given to a {{obp|Pokémon|species}} by its [[Original Trainer]]. Every time a player catches, hatches, or is given a new Pokémon in a [[main series]] game, he or she is able to nickname the Pokémon to a maximum of ten characters.  In addition to in the games, nicknamed Pokémon have also been shown in the [[Pokémon anime]] and several {{pkmn|manga}} series.  Nicknames serve as a means of personalizing one's Pokémon, and distinguishing them from other individuals of the same species.



Revision as of 01:26, 13 December 2010

A Yoterry being nicknamed "Sport"

A nickname is a name given to a Pokémon by its Original Trainer. Every time a player catches, hatches, or is given a new Pokémon in a main series game, he or she is able to nickname the Pokémon to a maximum of ten characters. In addition to in the games, nicknamed Pokémon have also been shown in the Pokémon anime and several manga series. Nicknames serve as a means of personalizing one's Pokémon, and distinguishing them from other individuals of the same species.

In the games

Players are given the option to nickname their Pokémon immediately after receiving them in any manner, such as receiving it from an NPC, hatching from an egg, or capturing in a Poké Ball. The only way to change the nickname is by taking the Pokémon to a name rater.

Limits on nicknames

Nicknames have a maximum length of ten characters, five in Japanese games. These characters are in turn limited by the character palette in the games. The characters available have expanded over the generations: in Generation I it was impossible to use numbers in nicknames, while later generations allowed both numbers and non-alpha-numeric symbols.

Traded Pokémon (and those migrated from GBA games) cannot be renamed unless they are returned to their original game. If taken to a name rater, he will say the name is "perfect" and refuse to change it. This is to maintain the unique character given to the Pokémon by its Original Trainer. The game recognizes the trade when the OT number assigned to the Pokémon does not match the number on the save file. Very rarely will two players' numbers coincide; this is the only time when traded Pokémon may be renamed.

Pokémon traded from an English or international Generation III game to a Japanese one will have all letters of their nickname after the fifth hidden by the game, so that a Houndour named "Remilia" in the English game would display its name as "Remil" in the Japanese game. Likewise, unnicknamed Pokémon are affected, with a Pikachu traded to a Japanese game having its name displayed as PIKAC. When traded back to a non-Japanese game, the shortened nickname will return to normal. This name-shortening issue was fixed for the Generation IV games, where a Pokémon will display its full name regardless.

In Pokémon Colosseum and Pokémon XD, a Shadow Pokémon cannot be nicknamed if it has not been purified. Immediately after this happens, the option will be given. Wild Pokémon caught from a Poké Spot in XD can be nicknamed as they are normally in the main series.

Outcomes of nicknaming

Nicknaming Pokémon rarely has any effect on gameplay, and is simply an element of customization that players are free to use or ignore. The only games in which nicknamed Pokémon are treated differently are Pokémon Stadium and Pokémon Stadium 2. In these games, when nicknamed Pokémon transferred from a main series game they have a chance of being alternately colored. This coloration is not the same as being a shiny Pokémon. This feature has not been included in any later games.

Sometimes, in Pokémon Ruby, Sapphire, and Emerald, when the player gives a previously caught Pokémon a nickname at the Name Rater's house, the Hoenn TV network will report the nickname chosen. The host will always commend the player on his or her choice of name, even if the player decides leave the Pokémon's name as it was. When records have been mixed with another save file, the television network may report on the other Trainer's choice of nicknames.

With Generation IV's Global Trade Station, some unfortunate naming issues may arise. The main issues are receiving Pokémon with nicknames in a foreign language and receiving Pokémon whose nicknames are threatening, inappropriate, racist, vulgar or pointless (for example, a name consisting of random characters). As the chances of matching both the Trainer ID and Secret ID are near impossible, these nicknames cannot be changed.

Pokémon with nicknames deemed "inappropriate" may show up in battle videos as Pokémon without a nickname: a Staraptor named "Tits" would have its nickname reverted to "STARAPTOR". It is unknown if this censoring is automatic or done on a case-by-case basis by Nintendo employees.

Non-player characters and nicknames

NPC-nicknamed Pokémon are somewhat rare, and almost never encountered in battles. However, all Pokémon acquired from in-game trades have nicknames, as well as all Pokémon used by NPC Coordinators. Likely to emphasize the color change effect, most of the Pokémon encountered in Pokémon Stadium also have nicknames. Team Rocket's nicknamed Pokémon have numbers in their nicknames (which was impossible on handheld games at the time).

In the anime

Ritchie's Pikachu, who is nicknamed Sparky.

As in the games, nicknaming Pokémon is optional. It is very seldom that main characters have nicknamed their Pokémon, leaving nicknaming largely unique to one-time characters. Often, these characters possess more than one of a species of Pokémon, and nicknaming is to provide distinction, such as in Get Along, Little Pokémon. At other times, the nicknames help to drive the plot, as in Wherefore Art Thou, Pokémon.

The only main characters to possess a nicknamed Pokémon is Misty, who has a Luvdisc known as Caserin, and James, who has a Growlithe called Growlie. Ritchie, a recurring character, also uses nicknames.

In the manga

Some Pokémon manga series use nicknames as a way to differentiate and individualize Pokémon characters. Almost every Pokémon owned by a main character in the Pokémon Adventures series is nicknamed. Quite often, the Trainer will nickname his or her Pokémon with a particular pattern.

Pokémon training
CatchingNicknamingBattlingEvolvingTradingBreedingReleasing