Suspect Reasoning
Cinderace has been a particularly polarizing presence for a few months now, boasting an unmatched offensive proficiency that remains extremely hard to take on. Alongside its excellent Speed tier, its ability Libero, while dampened in counterclaim to the overt nature of power creep featured throughout Gen 9, still allows it to function as an effective striker, further bolstering the power of its coverage moves. In particular, all of Sucker Punch, Gunk Shot, and High Jump Kick can easily make their way onto traditional offensive sets, which allow it to easily plough through most defensive Pokemon used to withstand its archetype, like Clefable, Tapu Fini, or Mega Tyranitar, to where only very few answers can reliably handle it at all. Additionally, the current metagame is also offensively oriented to the extent common teammates like Hydreigon and Thundurus-T can easily pile on the advantage set in motion by Cinderace’s powerful and easily spammable U-turn against the aforementioned defensive pivots. Combine that with other nifty tools in Will-O-Wisp and Taunt to mess up specific checks long-term, such as Skeledirge and Mandibuzz, and you have a Pokemon whose contributions to the tier, particularly in the direction which its dynamic pushes the metagame into, as a major topic of concern lately.
Beyond the aforementioned list of defensive checks, it is also worth noting that thanks to Heavy-Duty Boots, Cinderace itself is also very hard to wear down in conjunction with the traits mentioned earlier, to the extent that we’ve also been seeing the use of items on Pokemon that would otherwise prefer different options, most notably Rocky Helmet on the likes of Hippowdon and Toxapex, who’d otherwise prefer Boots or Leftovers/Black Sludge to more consistently pivot into Pokemon also worthy of being checked, such as Iron Moth and Aegislash. However, the reliance of these tactics is also unreliable to the extent most Cinderace teams can easily play around these if need be, most notably through aggressive switching and/or Knock Off support.
Additionally, recent tiering changes, such as the banning of Ceruledge and Meowscarada, also opened up further circumstances of exploration indirectly beneficial to Cinderace. Most notably Swords Dance has also shown itself to be more than capable in its own right, with Z-Crystals such as Normalium Z giving it ample opportunity to double down on its aforementioned counters, namely regarding the ability to immediately break down physically defensive walls such as Hippowdon and Slowbro with minimal chip required, while also possessing very strong priority that allows it to overwhelm faster threats such as Zeraora and weakened Mega Aerodactyl.
Nevertheless, it can be argued that the aforementioned defensive counterplay is still sufficient enough to hold in tandem - among the full list of Pokemon capable of withstanding Cinderace include Hippowdon, Gastrodon, Rotom-W, Toxapex, Skeledirge, and more situationally, physically defensive Clefable, Ting-Lu, Iron Hands, Mega Tyranitar, Mandibuzz, and Tapu Fini, alongside faster Pokemon that can outspeed and threaten to KO it through its frailty on non-pivot sets, such as Choice Scarfers like Galarian Zapdos and Hydreigon. While Cinderace does have the tools to break past many of these answers, these issues are easily exasperated by the opportunity costs that come with each moveset choice and the difficulties that come with positioning some of them, with said defensive pivots being more than capable of scouting these options for their teams if need be, which can leave it to struggle in certain matchups.
Suspect Test Information
- Reading this is mandatory to participate in the suspect test. The voting requirements are a minimum GXE of 79 with at least 40 games played. In addition, you may play 1 less game for every 0.2 GXE you have above 79 GXE, down to a minimum of 20 games at a GXE of 83. Also, needing more than 40 games to reach 79 GXE will suffice.
GXE | minimum games |
79 | 40 |
79.2 | 39 |
79.4 | 38 |
79.6 | 37 |
79.8 | 36 |
80 | 35 |
80.2 | 34 |
80.4 | 33 |
80.6 | 32 |
80.8 | 31 |
81 | 30 |
81.2 | 29 |
81.4 | 28 |
81.6 | 27 |
81.8 | 26 |
82 | 25 |
82.2 | 24 |
82.4 | 23 |
82.6 | 22 |
82.8 | 21 |
83 | 20 |
- You must use a fresh account that begins with the given prefix for this suspect test. That prefix is NDUU9ACE. For example, I could signup and qualify with the name NDUU9ACE Arishem.
- You may not impersonate or mock another user with your account name. If there is any slight hesitation, you're probably better off picking a different name. We reserve the right to null your voting requisites if you are found impersonating or mocking another user with your account name. Moderator discretion will be applied.
- If you are found trying to manipulate voting requisites in any way, you will be met with a harsh infraction. Manipulating voting requisites ranges from faking your screenshot to asking another user to forfeit.
- The Pokemon that's being suspect tested, Cinderace, will be allowed on the National Dex UU ladder for the next two weeks so that we can properly assess its position in the metagame.