
Snivy, long forgotten a threat of previous generations is back to reap the benefits of being gone for so long. Surviving the "dexit" cuts of this generation, Snivy returns to form with the same strength it left with, and a new trick up its sleeve—Terastallization. In previous generations, Snivy was seen as a one-note Pokemon, the game plan being to use Leaf Storm, coupled with Contrary to quickly boost its Special Attack stat. This turned the garden snake into an immediate threat, as giving it free turns could potentially snowball the Pokemon out of control. The biggest flaw at the time was its pitiful move pool, with a decent selection of support moves and Hidden Power being its best coverage option. Snivy was blessed with one of the most threatening options at the cost of being stuck with just Grass moves and Hidden Power, which designated it as a wallbreaker first, and a sweeper second in several situations. Snivy could also be shut down in several ways, with things like Gastly and Foongus being reliable answers to remove Snivy from the field, along with anything faster than it or priority users being able to win if Snivy attempted to set up on the wrong choice.
With the advent of the current generation, Snivy returned to the metagame with DLC2 with a passion, still blowing through walls with its tried and true Leaf Storm, but this time something has changed. Snivy has not only coverage from Tera, but the ability to change types to something more defensive, to run through its most reliable checks. Snivy now has a reliable way to beat its most dedicated answers, a safe option to curtail priority users. Snivy has coverage, not just coverage, but coverage with STAB, a massive improvement from a Hidden Power. But Snivy wasn't done, more complex sets like the often niche Scarf Snivy set became a paramount set. Coupled with Tera Grass, Leaf Storm went from a powerful move to a game-changing option which became even stronger with each use of the move. Snivy's ability to blow through checks, sweep even the most prepared teams, and delete entire Pokemon given the chance, has led us to a suspect test.
The voting requirements are a minimum GXE of 78 with at least 50 games played. In addition, you may play 1 less game for every 0.2 GXE you have above 78 GXE, down to a minimum of 30 games at a GXE of 82. As always, needing more than 50 games to reach 78 GXE is fine.
GXE | minimum games |
78 | 50 |
78.2 | 49 |
78.4 | 48 |
78.6 | 47 |
78.8 | 46 |
79 | 45 |
79.2 | 44 |
79.4 | 43 |
79.6 | 42 |
79.8 | 41 |
80 | 40 |
80.2 | 39 |
80.4 | 38 |
80.6 | 37 |
80.8 | 36 |
81 | 35 |
81.2 | 34 |
81.4 | 33 |
81.6 | 32 |
81.8 | 31 |
82 | 30 |
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...Don't believe in the stats, to the contrary.
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