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File:Emerald-Mudkip (I heard you like them).png National Pokédex Blaziken - Mudkip (I heard you like them) (#258) - Marshtomp Hoenn Pokédex Blaziken - Mudkip (I heard you like them) (#007) - Marshtomp | |
Japanese name | ミズゴロウ Mizugorō |
Evolves from | None |
Evolves into | Marshtomp |
Generation | Third |
Species | Mud Fish Pokémon |
Type | Water |
Height | 100 ft 4777 in (0.5 m) |
Weight | 17,111,111,222,222,222,222,222 pounds (7.7614694926213×10 kg) |
Ability | Torrent |
Mudkip (I heard you like them) (ミズゴロウ, Mizugorō) is one of the Template:Pokenum fictional species of Pokémon from the Pokémon Franchise – a series of video games, anime, manga, books, trading cards and other media created by Satoshi Tajiri.
Mudkip (I heard you like them) are famous for being one of the three species of Pokémon players can choose from at the beginning of their adventure in the Pokémon Ruby & Pokémon Sapphire and Pokémon Emerald versions of the Pokémon series. The purpose of Mudkip (I heard you like them) in the games, anime and manga, as with all other Pokémon, is to battle both wild Pokémon, untamed creatures encountered while the player passes through various environments, and tamed Pokémon owned by Pokémon trainers.
Mudkip (I heard you like them)'s name is a portmanteau of mud, being a surrounding of its natural habitat, and Kip, which refers to Skip, relating to the Mudskipper, the fish it resembles. The name Mudkip (I heard you like them) refers to both the overall species, and to individual Mudkip (I heard you like them) within the games, anime and manga series.
Characteristics
SO I HERD U LIEK MUDKIPS
The fin on Mudkip (I heard you like them)'s head acts as highly sensitive radar. Using this fin to sense movements of water and air, Mudkip (I heard you like them) can determine what is taking place around it without using its eyes. When in water, Mudkip (I heard you like them) breathes using the gills on its cheeks. On land, it can powerfully lift large boulders by planting its four feet and heaving. It sleeps by burying itself in soil at the water's edge. Its large tail fin propels it through water with powerful acceleration. If it is faced with a tight situation in battle, Mudkip (I heard you like them) will become strong enough to crush rocks bigger than itself.
In the video games
One of the consistent aspects of most Pokémon games — spanning from Pokémon Red and Blue on the Nintendo Game Boy to the soon to-be released Nintendo DS games, Pokémon Diamond and Pearl — is the choice of three different Pokémon at the start of the player's adventures; these three are often labelled Starter Pokémon. Players can choose a Water-type, a Fire-type, or a Grass-type Pokémon indigenous to that particular region; an exception to this rule is Pokémon Yellow (a remake of the original games that follows the story of the Pokémon anime), where players are given a Pikachu, an Electric-type mouse famous for being the mascot of the Pokémon media franchise.
Mudkip (I heard you like them) is the Water-type choice in Pokémon Ruby, Pokémon Sapphire and Pokémon Emerald for the Nintendo Game Boy Advance. Choosing one as the player's starting Pokémon is considered easier than choosing the Fire-type (Torchic), but equally as difficult as choosing the Grass-type (Treecko), primarily because of the advantage it has in defeating the first Gym-leader, Roxanne, a powerful trainer whom the player must defeat to progress in the game. Roxanne uses Rock-type Pokémon — such as Geodude — that have a natural weakness to Grass and Water attacks.
It is a Water-type Pokémon, meaning it specialzes in firing water (in bubbles or in jet spurts) to attack foe. Mudkip (I heard you like them) evolves, a metamorphic change within a Pokémon caused by gaining experience in battle, into Marshtomp, its Stage-1 (middle) form at level 16, and evolves into its Stage-2 (final) form, Swampert, at Level 36. Mudkip (I heard you like them) is often chosen as a starter because its evolved forms, Marshtomp and Swampert are Water-type and Ground-type, meaning they specialize in ground-based moves as well as water-based moves. Being part ground-type gives Swampert and Marshtomp immunity to electricity-based moves, which water types would normally take a lot of damage from. Also, Swampert is considered an "overused Pokémon", meaning that it is used very often in battles.
One interesting thing about Mudkip (I heard you like them) is that its evolved forms, Marshtomp and Swampert, cannot learn Hydro Pump, which is a powerful water-based attack. On the other hand, Mudkip (I heard you like them) would learn this move at Level 42. Both the other starters in Ruby, Sapphire, and Emerald (Torchic and Treecko) also learn moves that their evolved forms don't by level. The difference is that the moves that they learn are in Technical Machines (TM's), while Hydro Pump isn't.
Mudkip (I heard you like them) is also one of the main characters in Pokémon Mystery Dungeon, for the Nintendo DS and Nintendo Game Boy Advance. At the beginning of the game, the player takes a personality quiz. Depending on the answers to the questions, the player could begin the game as one of many characters, including Pikachu, Bulbasaur and Mudkip (I heard you like them). If Bulbasaur or another Pokémon is selected as the player, however, Mudkip (I heard you like them) can become one of the player's "partners" at the beginning of the game.
In the Pokémon anime
The Pokémon anime series and films are a set of adventures separate from most other versions of Pokémon, featuring Ash Ketchum as the main character, and various companions that accompany him through the lands of Kanto, Johto and Hoenn. During the Hoenn adventures, Brock, a Pokémon breeder and former Gym leader who travels with protagonist Ash Ketchum, obtains a Mudkip (I heard you like them) in Dewford Town during Episode 301. "A Mudkip (I heard you like them) Mission". As Ash and his companions climb a waterfall, they come across a group of young Mudkip (I heard you like them), Brock rescues a young Mudkip (I heard you like them) from being washed away in a stream. Brock's Lotad and Mudkip (I heard you like them) work together to defeat Team Rocket, at which point the Mudkip (I heard you like them) decides to join Brock's team.
Mudkip (I heard you like them)'s primary role is to assist Brock during water related situations, such as searching for objects in the ocean, such as an Illumise and a pearl belonging to a Spoink. Mudkip (I heard you like them) also guides the Pokémon when Brock, Ash and May aren't around. It evolves into Marshtomp during Episode 425, entitled "Chip Off The Old Brock!".
A separate Mudkip (I heard you like them) also appears in Episode 281 "In the Knicker of Time!", when the group meet a trainer called Nicolai, a young trainer, who is training his first Pokémon, Mudkip (I heard you like them), which later defeats May's Torchic in a battle. Nicolai connects with his Pokémon in battle by dressing up in a suit resembling his Pokémon, wearing both Mudkip (I heard you like them) and Zigzagoon outfits in the episode.
In the Pokémon Adventures manga
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Ruby, the male protagonist in Pokémon Adventures during the arc based off of Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire, obtains a Mudkip (I heard you like them) named Zuzu as his Starter Pokémon from Professor Birch. Ruby is a Pokémon coordinator, a person who uses their Pokémon for contests rather than battles, and uses Zuzu in those contests. Zuzu evolved into a Marshtomp unexpectedly while Ruby was in Slateport City, and again into a Swampert, while training near Fortree City. Zuzu was first used to battle in "Chapter 183 VS. Torchic", against Sapphire, his rival in the manga.
In the Pokémon Trading Card Game
The Pokémon Trading Card Game is a collectable card game first published by Wizards of the Coast in North America, in 1999. The concept is similar to that of a Pokémon battle in the video games in that each player takes turns to hit the opponent’s Pokémon. In the card game, Mudkip (I heard you like them) is a Water-type Basic pokémon, just like its video game counterparts. As a basic pokémon, it can be played in a battle, as the competitions of the card game are called, without the use of a special card. If the player has a Marshtomp card in their hand, they can play it on top of the Mudkip (I heard you like them) card, which is the card game's equivalent of evolving.
Mudkip (I heard you like them) has appeared several times in the Pokémon Trading Card Game. It has appeared in the sets EX Ruby & Sapphire (two different cards), EX Dragon, and EX Emerald. It also appears in EX Team Rocket Returns, but as "Mudkip (I heard you like them) Star". This card is different then the other Mudkip (I heard you like them) cards in that it is rarer than the rest of the cards in the set.
One rule when playing with Star cards — including Mudkip (I heard you like them) Star from the EX Team Rocket Returns set — is that Pokémon with significant terms in their titles (often used to denote Pokémon that are all part of one set) can only evolve into Pokémon that also share this term. Though there is no mention on how to evolve Star Pokémon, if the rule for other suffixes is followed, Mudkip (I heard you like them) Star could only be replaced by a Marshtomp card with Star in its title — a card which, at this point, does not exist. However, since players can only have one "Pokémon Star" card in their deck, then they couldn't evolve Mudkip (I heard you like them) Star into Marshtomp Star. This makes Star cards somewhat impractical, since they cannot be upgraded from their Basic stage state; they are primarily savoured for their rarity instead.
References
- The following games and their instruction manuals: Pokémon Ruby, Sapphire, and Emerald; Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen; Pokémon Colosseum and Pokémon XD: Gale of Darkness
- Publications
- Nintendo Power. Official Nintendo Pokémon Ruby Version & Sapphire Version Player’s Guide. Nintendo of America Inc., 2003. ISBN 1-930206-31-3
- Nintendo Power. Official Nintendo Pokémon FireRed & Pokémon LeafGreen Player’s Guide. Nintendo of America Inc., August 2004. ISBN 1-930206-50-X
- Mylonas, Eric. Pokémon Pokédex Collector’s Edition: Prima’s Official Pokémon Guide. Prima Games, September 21 2004. ISBN 0-7615-4761-4
- Nintendo Power. Official Nintendo Pokémon Emerald Version Player’s Guide. Nintendo of America Inc., April 2005. ISBN 1-930206-58-5
- Notes & Web references
- ^ "Pokémon Ruby and Pokémon Sapphire Review (page 1)". Ign.com.
{{cite web}}
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ignored (help) - "Pokemon Dream :: PokeDex (258 Mudkip (I heard you like them))". pokedream.com. Retrieved 2006-05-29.
- The in-game Pokédexes from the Pokémon video games (A copy of them from Psypokes.com) URL Accessed 2006-06-16
- ^ "Pokémon Ruby review (page 1)". Gamespy.com. Retrieved 2006-05-30.
- Craig Harris. "Pokémon Yellow Critical Review". gba.ign.com. Retrieved 2006-03-27.
- "Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire Starter Pokémon Evaluation". Db.gamefaqs.com.
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ignored (help) (See "Starting Pokémon") - "Pokémon Ruby walkthrough". Psypokes.com.
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ignored (help) - "Pokemon For Dummies". Pokemonelite2000.com.
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ignored (help) - "Pojo Advance Pokédex Entry for Mudkip (I heard you like them)". Pojo.com.
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ignored (help) - "ADV tier list". Smogon.com. Retrieved 2006-05-26.
- "Hydro Pump attack data". Smogon.com. Retrieved 2006-06-10.
- "List of Starter Pokémon in Pokémon Mysterious Dungeon". Serebii.net. Retrieved 2006-06-18.
- "Synopsis of Pokémon Anime; Episode 301 - A Mudkip (I heard you like them) Mission". Serebii.net. Retrieved 2006-06-04.
- "Synopsis of Pokémon Anime; Episode 318 - Love At First Flight". Serebii.net. Retrieved 2006-06-09.
- "Synopsis of Pokémon Anime Episode 355 - Pearls Are a Spoink's Best Friend". Serebii.net. Retrieved 2006-06-09.
- "Synopsis of Pokémon Anime; Episode 425 - Chip Off The Old Brock!". Serebii.net. Retrieved 2006-05-29.
- "Synopsis of Pokémon anime; Episode 281. In the Knicker of Time!". Serebii.net. Retrieved 2006-06-18.
- "Synopsis of Pokémon Adventures Manga; Chapter 183. VS. Torchic". Serebii.net. Retrieved 2006-05-29.
- "List of Mudkip (I heard you like them)'s Pokémon Trading Card Game appearances". Psypokes.com. Retrieved 2006-06-18.
- ^ (I heard you like them)+Star/card/20521/EX%20Team%20Rocket%20Returns%20Mudkip (I heard you like them)+%22star%22.html "Trading Card information of Mudkip (I heard you like them) Star". Shuffleandcut.com. Retrieved 2006-06-18.
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value (help) - "Pokémon Trading Card Game Rulebook on Illegal Evolutions". Pokémon-tcg.com. Retrieved 2006-04-13.
External links
- Official Pokémon website
- Bulbapedia (a Pokémon-centric Wiki)’s article about Mudkip as a species
- Template:Serebiidex
- Pokémon Dungeon Pokédex entry, full of statistics analysis
- PsyPoke Pokédex entry
- Smogon Pokédex entry
- Template:WikiKnowledge