Change always comes bearing gifts. -Price Pritchett
Flygon remains almost the same Pokemon as it was one generation ago - no groundbreaking new toys, no new Dream World ability... if anything it appears comprehensively outclassed by the dragons introduced in Gen V, with their greater offensive stats and wider attacking options. What's keeping Flygon in the game then?
1) A Set-up Move (at last)
It gained a new set-up move in Claw Sharpen (which boosts Atk and Acc), which opens up new possibilities for it. Yes, it's probably inferior to Swords Dance and Dragon Dance that Ononokuso got. But Flygon has been yearning for any means of setting up at all, and it's got it now.
2) Significant Base Speed
Base 100 Spe is faster than all the dragons introduced this dragon and - going by previous generation's tiering - it remains the fastest OU Dragon-type. This speaks volumes about its ability to revenge its counterparts or get in a sweep late game. A number of new Pokemon lie in the 90s: Warubiaru, Hihidaruma, Ononokuso and Sazando to name but a few, and Flygon can serve as a check to them.
3) Invulnerability to Passive Damage
Thanks to its part-Ground typing and levitate, Flygon takes reduced damage from Stealth Rock and nothing from Spikes, Toxic Spikes or Sandstorm. This allows it to wield a Choice item with greater freedom and flexibility and hold its own against spike-stacking teams.
Here are the moves Flygon learns:
Viable Sets:
1) Choice Scarf
Flygon@Scarf
252 Atk 252 Spe; Jolly
- Outrage
- Earthquake
- Stone Edge/Thunderpunch
- U-turn
Standard for a while now, but possibly even more useful this generation. Coupling Choice Scarf with Base 100 Speed allows Flygon to serve as a reliable revenge killer and even a late-game cleaner. Outrage is only available from old tutors so this Flygon has to be transferred over from Gen IV.
2) Claw Sharpen Sweeper
Flygon@Life Orb
252 Atk 252 Spe; Jolly (or Naive with Fire Blast)
- Claw Sharpen
- Outrage/Dragon Claw
- Earthquake
- Stone Edge/Fire Blast/Roost
Thanks to Claw Sharpen, Flygon can get a boost and (hopefully) initiate a sweep. Outrage/Earthquake provide great coverage if you can eliminate Skarmory and company earlier in the game, while Stone Edge gets rounds out the set with good power, SE coverage and perfect accuracy following Claw Sharpen. It might be outclassed by other physical attackers but considering Flygon's powerful STAB attacks, resistance to SR and immunity to Sandstorm, Spikes and Toxic Spikes, this could be easier to set-up and harder to take down with Stall.
Fire Blast has been suggested by a few users to defeat Steel types independently. It also benefits from the acc boost.
3) Defensive
Flygon@Leftovers
252 HP, 252 Spe; Jolly
- Substitute/Toxic
- Roost
- Dragon Tail
- Earthquake/Toxic
With a resistance to EdgeQuake and decent 80/80/80 defences (better than Starmie's and comparable to Kurimugan's) Flygon can serve as a decent defensive Pokemon, against the likes of Doryuuzu and Gigiaisu. With great speed a new phazing move in Dragon Tail, Flygon will be able to shuffle Hippowdon, Swampert and Gyarados before they get to Roar. Similarly, Substitute + Toxic + Dragon Tail if one chooses to go that route will let it beat stallbreaker Gliscor by virtue of a faster sub and status and ability to continue phazing in spite of Taunt. This can also act as a stall team's emergency check to SD Ononokuso and stuff with its good speed, while causing double switches with Dragon Tail if the opponent chooses to withdraw Ononokuso on the same turn.
While Flygon barely presents itself as anything new, the metagame around it has certainly changed in form. Does Flygon serve any new role or will it decline in utility/usage thanks to stronger Dragons introduced this generation?
Please post your views here freely (:
But remember to avoid discussing it's tiering or whether it will get bannedwhich it wont d:
FLYGON
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Flygon remains almost the same Pokemon as it was one generation ago - no groundbreaking new toys, no new Dream World ability... if anything it appears comprehensively outclassed by the dragons introduced in Gen V, with their greater offensive stats and wider attacking options. What's keeping Flygon in the game then?
1) A Set-up Move (at last)
It gained a new set-up move in Claw Sharpen (which boosts Atk and Acc), which opens up new possibilities for it. Yes, it's probably inferior to Swords Dance and Dragon Dance that Ononokuso got. But Flygon has been yearning for any means of setting up at all, and it's got it now.
2) Significant Base Speed
Base 100 Spe is faster than all the dragons introduced this dragon and - going by previous generation's tiering - it remains the fastest OU Dragon-type. This speaks volumes about its ability to revenge its counterparts or get in a sweep late game. A number of new Pokemon lie in the 90s: Warubiaru, Hihidaruma, Ononokuso and Sazando to name but a few, and Flygon can serve as a check to them.
3) Invulnerability to Passive Damage
Thanks to its part-Ground typing and levitate, Flygon takes reduced damage from Stealth Rock and nothing from Spikes, Toxic Spikes or Sandstorm. This allows it to wield a Choice item with greater freedom and flexibility and hold its own against spike-stacking teams.
Here are the moves Flygon learns:
Sonicboom, Sand-Attack, Faint Attack, Sand Tomb, Sand-Attack, Faint Attack, Sand Tomb, Supersonic, DragonBreath, Screech, Dragon Claw, Sandstorm, Hyper Beam, Dragon Tail
Focus Energy, Quick Attack, Gust, Flail, Fury Cutter, Mud Shot, Endure, Earth Power, Bug Bite, Signal Beam
Claw Sharpen, Dragon Claw, Toxic, Hidden Power, Sunny Day, Hyper Beam, Protect, Frustration, Solar Beam, Earthquake, Return, Dig, Double Team, Flamethower, Sandstorm, Fire Blast, Rock Tomb, Aerial Ace, Facade, Rest, Attract, Troll, Complete Burn, Giga Impact, Stone Edge, Bug Resistance, Smooth Over, Rock Slide, Dragon Tail, Swagger, U-Turn, Substitute, Rock Smash, Fly, Strength
Giga Drain, Iron Tail, Steel Wing, Roost, Dragon Pulse, Silver Wind, Captivate, Sleep Talk, Natural Gift
Draco Meteor
Air Cutter, Fire Punch, Fury Cutter, Ominous Wind, Thunderpunch, Snore, Swift, Earth Power, Heat Wave, Mud-slap, Outrage, Twister, Tailwind, Bug Bite, Headbutt
Bite, Crunch, Dig, Earth Power, Earthquake, Feint, Fissure
Viable Sets:
1) Choice Scarf

Flygon@Scarf
252 Atk 252 Spe; Jolly
- Outrage
- Earthquake
- Stone Edge/Thunderpunch
- U-turn
Standard for a while now, but possibly even more useful this generation. Coupling Choice Scarf with Base 100 Speed allows Flygon to serve as a reliable revenge killer and even a late-game cleaner. Outrage is only available from old tutors so this Flygon has to be transferred over from Gen IV.
2) Claw Sharpen Sweeper

Flygon@Life Orb
252 Atk 252 Spe; Jolly (or Naive with Fire Blast)
- Claw Sharpen
- Outrage/Dragon Claw
- Earthquake
- Stone Edge/Fire Blast/Roost
Thanks to Claw Sharpen, Flygon can get a boost and (hopefully) initiate a sweep. Outrage/Earthquake provide great coverage if you can eliminate Skarmory and company earlier in the game, while Stone Edge gets rounds out the set with good power, SE coverage and perfect accuracy following Claw Sharpen. It might be outclassed by other physical attackers but considering Flygon's powerful STAB attacks, resistance to SR and immunity to Sandstorm, Spikes and Toxic Spikes, this could be easier to set-up and harder to take down with Stall.
Fire Blast has been suggested by a few users to defeat Steel types independently. It also benefits from the acc boost.
3) Defensive

Flygon@Leftovers
252 HP, 252 Spe; Jolly
- Substitute/Toxic
- Roost
- Dragon Tail
- Earthquake/Toxic
With a resistance to EdgeQuake and decent 80/80/80 defences (better than Starmie's and comparable to Kurimugan's) Flygon can serve as a decent defensive Pokemon, against the likes of Doryuuzu and Gigiaisu. With great speed a new phazing move in Dragon Tail, Flygon will be able to shuffle Hippowdon, Swampert and Gyarados before they get to Roar. Similarly, Substitute + Toxic + Dragon Tail if one chooses to go that route will let it beat stallbreaker Gliscor by virtue of a faster sub and status and ability to continue phazing in spite of Taunt. This can also act as a stall team's emergency check to SD Ononokuso and stuff with its good speed, while causing double switches with Dragon Tail if the opponent chooses to withdraw Ononokuso on the same turn.
While Flygon barely presents itself as anything new, the metagame around it has certainly changed in form. Does Flygon serve any new role or will it decline in utility/usage thanks to stronger Dragons introduced this generation?
Please post your views here freely (:
But remember to avoid discussing it's tiering or whether it will get banned