Considering Spritzee learns Draining Kiss twice though, I am led to believe this occlusion was unintentional, and was a result of some aspects of level-up movesets appearing rushed.But it was completely removed from Spritzee's learnset.
Yup, more or less the sameThat's hilarious, I don't think I've seen that before. I assume it was like that in gen 6 & 7 too? Probably most relevant for 7 since Diglett/Dugtrio can use Supersonic Skystrike (& a number of other z moves make them "airborne")
Probably it's more about how they are coded. Diglett likely has a special flag somewhere that says "do not lift in air" but for some moves the coding or animation process might not have allowed for itWeird that Diglett went into the air for Sunsteel Strike, and nothing else. Makes me wonder about the thought process behind these animations.
*looks at Zacian*Though, I mean, personally my philosophy is that if you’re going to make something broken just go all out; but Game Freak rarely seems to agree with that
I thought: "Oh, that's probably because summoning hurricanes is more Lugia's thing. The devs probably just want to distingish between the two". So I checked Lugia's movepool, and it doesn't get hurricane either, not naturally anyway. The only way to get Lugia with hurricane is from an event. What...Here’s another one: despite being king of the ocean and being able to summon storms and all that flavor, Kyogre cannot learn Hurricane as of Gen 7.
Could somebody confirm if it ever learnt it in past generations?
Edit: I checked myself and no it does not
Edit 2: it’s lore makes numerous mentions about it being able to summon rain; “A mythical Pokémon said to have swelled the seas with rain and tidal waves. It battled with Groudon.” (X). Rain and tidal waves are commonly seen and associated with hurricanes, although less with strong winds. Could that be a possible explanation? Is the move Hurricanes conjuring a real hurricane or simply strong winds?
That said, I believe Hurricane is actually referring to winds. It's learned almost only by pokemon with wings or control over actual wind outside of a handful exceptions (including... Sandaconda for some reason).
To be fair, I think it's more of a reference to the fact G-max sandaconda is a literal tornado shape... If it was just due to the "sandstorm", then Tyranitar and Hippo would also learn it.Sandaconda can likely create sand tornadoes through spitting its sand
Here’s another one: despite being king of the ocean and being able to summon storms and all that flavor, Kyogre cannot learn Hurricane as of Gen 7.
Could somebody confirm if it ever learnt it in past generations?
Edit: I checked myself and no it does not
Edit 2: it’s lore makes numerous mentions about it being able to summon rain; “A mythical Pokémon said to have swelled the seas with rain and tidal waves. It battled with Groudon.” (X). Rain and tidal waves are commonly seen and associated with hurricanes, although less with strong winds. Could that be a possible explanation? Is the move Hurricanes conjuring a real hurricane or simply strong winds?
That said, I believe Hurricane is actually referring to winds. It's learned almost only by pokemon with wings or control over actual wind outside of a handful exceptions (including... Sandaconda for some reason).
Looking through hurricane's distrubution, it definitely seems like it's more associated with just strong wind rather than an actual hurricane. There is some overlap with Pokemon like Gyarados, Pelliper and especially Kingdra?!
I thought: "Oh, that's probably because summoning hurricanes is more Lugia's thing. The devs probably just want to distingish between the two". So I checked Lugia's movepool, and it doesn't get hurricane either, not naturally anyway. The only way to get Lugia with hurricane is from an event. What...
Sandaconda can likely create sand tornadoes through spitting its sand, which could pass as hurricanes... but then why can't Hippowdon do the same? (it DOES learn Whirlwind... what would the difference between WW and Hurricane be?)
As for Whirlwind, I think the main difference with Hurricane is that Whirlwind is meant to be just a "swift gust of wind" that blows the enemy away, while Hurricane is actually meant to be able to create an air current which would lift and slap around the opponent.
So for whatever reason Hippo has a breath strong enough to blow away enemies, but wouldn't be able to do more than that.
Whirlwind's Japanese name is just "Blow Away", hence why it's Normal-type as there's no original connection to wind. The translation team just based the English name off its Gen I animation:
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"I fart in your general direction!"
Similar case with Zapdos. Moltres and Articuno can learn Hurricane, but not Zapdos cause it already gets Thunder so in the rain it would get two increbily powerful & 100% accurate moves. This makes me wonder if, instead of Hurricane becoming accurate in the rain, they should do something else like it resets Rain's turn counter to 5 (heck, maybe have it work in all weather if they do) or maybe introduce it's own weather like "Strong Winds".
There is the fact Zapdos is said to receive Hurricane this gen, which has a lot of people hyped me included. And obviously Lugia is also getting it as regular TR rather than event move
Normal, Galarian does not exist in the code yet.Normal Zapdos or Galarian Zapdos?
The datamine only has leftover data for pokemon already existing on Home. For any of the new ones, we know nothing at all other than what's on GameFreak's site pretty much. (this extends to forms, for example we have no idea of what Galar Slowking type or moveset will be)Normal Zapdos or Galarian Zapdos?