Poison Barb どくバリ Poison Needle
Pokémon Global Link artwork
Introduced in Generation II
Pocket
Generation II
Items
Generation III
Items
Generation IV
Items
Generation V
Items (Held items)
Generation VI
Items
Generation VII
Items
Generation VIII
Other Items
Generation IX
Other Items
The Poison Barb (Japanese: どくバリ Poison Needle ) is a type of held item introduced in Generation II that boosts the power of Poison-type moves .
In the core series games
Price
Effect
Generations II and III
Boosts the power of the holder's Poison-type moves by 10%.
Generation IV onward
Boosts the power of the holder's Poison-type moves by 20%.
Description
Games
Description
G S C
Powers up poison-type moves. (HOLD)
R S E Colo XD
A hold item that raises the power of Poison -type moves.
FR LG
An item to be held by a Pok émon . A small, poisonous barb that boosts the power of Poison -type moves.
D P Pt HG SS B W B2 W2
An item to be held by a Pokémon. It is a small, poisonous barb that ups the power of Poison-type moves.
X Y OR AS S M US UM P E Sw Sh BD SP LA
An item to be held by a Pokémon. This small, poisonous barb boosts the power of Poison-type moves.
S V ZA
An item to be held by a Pokémon. This small poisonous barb boosts the power of the holder's Poison-type moves.
Champs
Boosts the power of the holder's Poison-type moves by 20%.
Acquisition
Games
Finite methods
Repeatable methods
G S C
Route 32 Fr
Held by wild Beedrill (2% chance)
R S E
Held by wild Cacnea (5% chance) and wild Roselia (5% chance)
FR LG
Held by wild Arbok (5% chance)
Colo
Held by Shadow Qwilfish during the first battle
XD
Held by Shadow Beedrill
D P Pt
Route 206
Held by wild Tentacool , wild Tentacruel , wild Qwilfish , wild Roselia , wild Budew , wild Skorupi , and wild Drapion (5% chance each)
HG SS
Route 32 Fr
Held by wild Beedrill , wild Tentacool , wild Tentacruel , wild Qwilfish , wild Roselia , wild Budew , and wild Skorupi (5% chance each)
B W
Route 8
Held by wild Beedrill , wild Budew , wild Vespiquen , wild Venipede , and wild Whirlipede (5% chance each)
B2 W2
Route 22
Held by wild Skorupi , wild Qwilfish , and wild Roselia (5% chance each)
DW *
Sparkling Sea
X Y
Route 4
Held by wild Tentacool , wild Qwilfish , wild Roselia , wild Budew , wild Skorupi , wild Drapion , and wild Venipede (5% chance each)
OR AS
Held by wild Tentacool , wild Tentacruel , wild Roselia , and wild Skorupi (5% chance each)
S M US UM
Melemele Meadow
Ambush encounters (Tentacool on Hano Beach ; Ekans on Route 2 US UM ; Drapion in Ultra Space Wilds US UM ) Held by wild Beedrill US UM , wild Tentacool , wild Tentacruel , wild Roselia S M , wild Drapion US UM , wild Venipede S M , and wild Mareanie (5% chance each)
Sw Sh
Stow-on-Side (bargain shop) Held by wild Qwilfish , wild Roselia , wild Budew , wild Roserade , wild Vespiquen , wild Skorupi , wild Drapion , wild Mareanie , and wild Toxapex (5% chance each)
Sw Sh IA
Cram-o-matic (Poison : 92-100 points)
Sw Sh CT
Giant's Foot
S V
Delibird Presents (Cascarrafa Branch)
S V ID
Item Printer
ZA
Reward for completing Side Mission 061: My Favorite Holovator
Racine Construction
Champs
Frontier Shop
Gallery
Artwork
In the spin-off games
Pokémon Pokopia
In Pokémon Pokopia , the Poison Barb is one of the lost relics that can be found.
Name
Description
Category
Classification
Tile Size
Paintable
Requirements
Favorites
Trade value
Replication cost
Poison Barb
A small poisonous barb. Try hanging it up in a frame!
Other
N/A
1x1
No
N/A
???
1000 (Standard) 1500 (Favorite)
???
Acquisition
In the TCG
Poison Barb
Main article: Poison Barb (Sun & Moon 124)
Poison Barb was introduced as a Pokémon Tool card in the Pokémon Trading Card Game during the English Sun & Moon Series (the Japanese Sun & Moon Era) in the Sun & Moon expansion. When this Trainer card is attached to the player's Active Pokémon, if an opponent deals damage to that Pokémon, the Attacking Pokémon is now Poisoned .
Trivia
The Poison Barb shares its Japanese name with Poison Sting , with only a minor difference in spelling: the item is written as どくバリ (the first two morae spelled in hiragana and the last two morae spelled in katakana), whereas the move is written as どくばり (all four morae spelled in hiragana).
In other languages
External links