Aipom

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Aipom
Aipom
National
Jumpluff - Aipom (#190) - Sunkern

Johto
Electrode - Aipom (#122) - Snubbull

Sinnoh
Heracross - Aipom (#063) - Eteboth
Japanese name エイパム Eipamu
Stage Basic
Evolves from None
Evolves to Eteboth (from Pokémon Diamond and Pearl onwards)
Generation Second
Species Long Tail Pokémon
Type Normal
Height 2 ft 6 in (0.80 m)
Weight 25.4 lb (33.5 kg)
Ability Run Away / PickUp

Aipom (エイパム Eipamu ?) is one of the 493 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.

The purpose of Aipom 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.[1]

Aipom's name is derived from the words ape, because it resembles a monkey, and palm, which refers to its hand-like tail.

Its French name is Capumain, a portmanteau of capucin (capuchin) and main (hand). Its German name is Griffel (a pun on the German word "greifen", meaning "to grip or grasp").

Contents

[edit] Characteristics

Aipom resembles a purple monkey, despite its name calling it an ape, with its face forever frozen in a maniacal grin that can be described as rictus and a blank stare from its round eyes (possibly inspired by the blank stare on the toy cymbal monkeys). However, it can move its face. On its thin tail is a three fingered glove. It is possibly inspired by the Aztec legendary beast Ahuizotl. It also somewhat resembles the Cheshire Cat character from the Alice in Wonderland series by author Lewis Carroll.

Aipom is not aggressive by nature and will attempt to tire its natural opponents through dextrous dodging of the opponent’s attacks in hope that the enemy will be discouraged and leave. Otherwise, if the enemy is persistent, the Aipom will try to retreat, but if it is unable to, it will attack by diving at its opponent from the trees.

Aipom is an diurnal omnivore, though it mostly prefers fruit. It will occasionally eat insects if fruits are unavailable. Aipom's most notable feature is its tail. The tail ends in a large hand-like appendage that is very dextrous -- in fact, its tail-hand is used so often, that an Aipom's tail is usually a more dexterous appendage than its hands. The grip of its tail-hand is strong enough to allow it to hang from tree branches for extended periods of time. Additionally, that tail provides both propulsion and balance while Aipom leaps from tree to tree.

[edit] In the video games

Aipom can be found in seven games. In Gold, Silver, and Crystal, Aipom could be found by using Headbutt on trees. In Pokémon Colosseum, it can be snagged from Cipher Peon Cole in the Shadow Research Institute. In FireRed/LeafGreen versions, it was rumored to be in the Altering Cave, as its programming was found there, but the entire cave is unusable due to the discontinuation of the E-Reader. In Emerald, it is found in the special Safari Zone extension.

Aipom can have one of two special abilities: Run Away, which allows it to escape from any battle except when trapped (such as with the move Mean Look or the ability Arena Trap) or when the battle is an official battle of the Pokémon League; or Pickup, which gives it a one-in-ten chance per battle of finding an item.

In Pokémon Gold and Silver and Pokémon Crystal, Aipom learned eight abilities; six Normal-type, one Ground-type, and one Psychic-type. Of these, three (Scratch, Fury Swipes, and Swift) are physical attacks, three (Tail Whip, Sand-Attack, and Screech) are stat-draining abilities, one (Baton Pass) is a unique move, and one (Agility) is a stat-boosting move. In Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire, two moves were added (Astonish, a Ghost-type energy attack, and Tickle, a Normal-type stat-draining ability), and the levels that particular moves were learned were slightly tweaked.

Aipom is one of several Pokémon introduced in Gold/Silver with mid to low range stats and no evolutions. Aipom's Special Attack is in the bottom 20% of all Pokémon.

In Pokémon Diamond and Pearl Aipom can evolve into a pure Normal-type Pokémon called Eteboth.

[edit] In the animé

Aipom's most notable appearance was in Pokémon 3: The Movie. There, an Aipom was used in battle by the trainer Lisa, whose advice to head to Green Fields eventually lead to them meeting the antagonist of the movie.

Aipom also play minor roles in Episode 116 (Mean With Envy), 169 (A Hot Water Battle), Episode 243 (Hocus Pokémon), 247 (Will The Real Prof. Oak Please Stand Up?), 287 (A Bite To Remember) and the short Party Panic. During episode 455 (Slaking Kong!), a large number of Aipom and other monkey-like Pokémon appeared in a mountainous region that was home to a gigantic Slaking. One of these stole Ash's hat, and would follow the group to the Kanto Grand Festival. There, it stole his hat again, and after Ash got the hat back, Aipom wound up hanging around with their group. Finally, in episode 458 (Channeling the Battle Zone), Ash battled and captured the Aipom, who was revealed as a female in the following episode. Aipom has the distinction of being the only Pokémon (aside from Pikachu) that Ash brought with him to Shinou. It is speculated that this happened in order to eventually introduce Aipom's new evolution to the anime which it will evolve into Eteboth only at the Sinnoh region.

[edit] In other media

Aipom has appeared four times in the card game as a colorless Basic Pokémon:

  • Neo Genesis
  • Neo Revelation
  • Aquapolis
  • EX Unseen Forces

Oddly, each set Aipom has appeared in thus far is also a set where Sudowoodo has appeared. There is no apparent relation between the two Pokémon.

[edit] References

Publications
  • Barbo, Maria. The Official Pokémon Handbook. Scholastic Publishing, 1999. ISBN 0-439-15404-9.
  • Loe, Casey, ed. Pokémon Special Pikachu Edition Official Perfect Guide. Sunnydale, CA: Empire 21 Publishing, 1999. ISBN 1-930206-15-1.
  • 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

[edit] External links

In other languages