Ditto (Pokémon)

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Ditto

National Pokédex
Lapras - Ditto (#132) - Eevee

Johto Pokédex
Alakazam - Ditto (#092) - Pineco
Japanese name Metamon
Evolves from None
Evolves into None
Generation First
Species Transform Pokémon
Type Normal
Height 1 ft 0 in (0.3 m)
Weight 9.0 lb (4.0 kg)
Ability Limber

Ditto (メタモン? Metamon in original Japanese language versions) are one of the 493 fictional species of Pokémon creatures from the multi-billion-dollar[1] Pokémon media franchise – a collection of video games, anime, manga, books, trading cards and other media created by Satoshi Tajiri. The purpose of Ditto 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.[2] Ditto is known as the resident shape-shifter in the Pokémon world.

In (Ancient) Greek the masculine adjective "dittos" (διττός) means "double", the neuter form of this adjective is the well known "ditto" implying the duplicate usage of certain things. "Ditto" is a slang word related to the Latin "dictum." Its use implies copying or reiterating an idea, this makes sense as Ditto's only attack is Transform, which allows it to "ditto" another Pokémon. Its Japanese name is Metamon, probably related to the words "metamorphose" and "monster."

Contents

[edit] Biological characteristics

Ditto takes the form of an amorphous pink (although classified as purple) blob with a simplistic face. Despite apparently not having a brain nor vital organs, Ditto acts and communicates like a normal Pokémon, and its pink body is lightning resistant.

Ditto demonstrates one of the most perplexing and amazing talents in the Pokémon world: Transformation. It is able to rearrange its cellular structure into that of another Pokémon nearby at will so that it both looks like that Pokémon and can wield its powers. It can do this with any Pokémon, no matter how large or complex, be it Onix or Wailord—Ditto can become large enough to resemble these giant Pokémon exactly. The way it can rearrange its cells to apparently expand in size to accommodate its forms as larger Pokémon forever baffles scientists studying it. Strangely, when a Ditto laughs while transformed, it cannot hold its transformation. This is a major weakness.

There are various intriguing properties that occur with some Ditto. First, some inexperienced Ditto who have not perfected their transformation abilities end up not transforming completely into whatever Pokémon they are trying to mimic, unable to change its retained simplistic face accordingly, making it look bizarre and artificial. Another uncommon Ditto property is that sometimes the individual Ditto involved has the inability to mimic the size of the Pokémon it transforms into. In these cases, when it does transform into Onix, it is still the size of a standard Ditto—small enough to fit in one’s lap, rendering the transformation useless for battle, as an Onix relies purely on its massive size & strength. Most astounding of all is a property that seems to break the limits of what Ditto is advertised to be capable of: Some Ditto can transform into inanimate objects roughly their size, objects that may not be Pokémon-related at all, such as a book or a small artillery cannon (as seen in the Pokémon Anime). This is further enforced by the Pokédex fact that it turns into a stone before going to sleep to avoid being attacked.

[edit] In the video games

Ditto is found in the Red, Green, Blue, Yellow, Gold, Silver, Crystal, Firered, Leafgreen, Emerald, Diamond and Pearl versions, all generally in the same area. In Emerald, if the player returns to the Fossil Maniac's house after the player beats the Elite Four and go in to the newly dug hole; there will be an abundance of Ditto there. Loudred and Whismur can be found in the same tunnel, however, they are less common.

Ditto, in terms of Pokémon battle, is purely a novelty, basically serving as an opportunity to have a Pokémon identical to the opponent (except for HP). Because its stats are readjusted to mirror the stats of the opponent, Ditto can end up being a menace to whatever it is battling, depending on type matchups of moves. But this does not happen often enough to warrant it in most professional players’ teams.

Ditto is generally not used for battling. It is mainly used for breeding with all but Legendary and baby Pokémon. This is very useful, especially for Pokémon that are rare and prominently male, prominently female, male-only, female-only, or genderless. Tyrogue's evolutions, Hitmonchan, Hitmonlee, and Hitmontop, are the types of Pokémon that are good examples of that, as Tyrogue and its evolutions are always male, and they are one-of Pokémon. Thus, you would need a Ditto and breed it with Hitmonchan, Hitmonlee, or Hitmontop in order to produce a Tyrogue. Ditto is also the only way to breed with other genderless Pokémon that aren't Legendary, like Voltorb. This applies to all but Legendary and baby Pokémon, as mentioned prior.

In the games, if the player runs into a Ditto, the player is advised not to defeat it swiftly, because when Ditto transforms into the Pokémon the player is using first, it gives more experience when defeated. However, this doesn't apply to all Pokémon. Some, such as a Caterpie or Magikarp, may give out less experience points than a normal Ditto. In fact, one of the easiest ways to catch a Ditto, followed by a way to catch Mew, is to have a non-legendary, easy to catch water pokemon, and then use the Net Ball after weakening it.

Ditto can also be found in the Nintendo 64 game Pokémon Snap in the Cave Course. They will have transformed into Bulbasaur, however, but their faces will be simplistic like what is seen in the anime. They will revert to their normal forms if hit by Pester Balls.

In Pokémon Diamond and Pearl it has been revealed that, if fainted while transformed, Mew or Ditto will still keep the moves they learned while transformed, thus making this very useful for breeding (in Ditto's case, not Mew's). Because Ditto can Transform into any Pokémon, except already Transformed Pokémon and Substitutes, it can have any moveset. Thus, a player can have their Ditto transform into Smeargle, who already knows the moves the player wants. Then, the Ditto will be defeated in battle. The player can breed this Ditto with a Pokémon and pass on the wanted moves to the offspring. Thus, any non-legendary, non-baby Pokémon can receive a custom moveset, without the player paying for valuable TMs. Also, some impossible movesets will become possible. Skarmory must breed with Fearow to learn Drill Peck, but Fearow cannot learn Curse. Skarmory must breed with Farfetch'd to learn Curse, but Farfetch'd cannot learn Drill Peck, unless it breeds. If the Farfetch'd knows Drill Peck, then Curse is impossible, since Farfetch'd must breed to learn Curse. In this way, Skarmory cannot have both Curse and Drill Peck. However, if a parent Ditto knows both the moves, then both moves can be passed on to Skarmory. In this way, Milotic can have both Dragonbreath and Confuse Ray.

Ditto's cry is the same as Poliwag's cry.

[edit] Glitches

For some reason, Ditto seems to have connections in the Red and Blue versions to the glitch Pokémon Missingno. and 'M. After an 'M is caught in the game during a battle, there will be an invisible Pokémon that will still be battling your Pokémon. When that is caught, the screen will say "you caught Ditto" (It might be another 'M). Once it is caught it won't be invisible anymore. If a player-controlled Ditto uses Transform to change into the invisible Ditto, its image will turn into a Missingno.'s image, but it will actually still be a Ditto.

Also, in Pokémon Stadium 2, any Missingno. or 'M that are uploaded to the game will get turned into Ditto. A Missingno. that becomes Ditto will be a normal shade of pink but an 'M that becomes Ditto will have a slightly different color. This is due to the different names--in Pokémon Stadium, a Pokémon's nickname dictates what shade it ends up as.

Another thing is the fact that since the Missingno. was not a Ditto, it does not have 'Transform'. This means that when linked into the Pokémon Stadium 2 game, the Missingno. which had been turned into a Ditto ends up keeping its original attacks. The funny thing about this is that even when this bizarre Ditto launches an attack, unless it was 'Transform', the animation attack goes flying and strikes the opponent while the bizarre Ditto is shown still standing around doing its usual taunt as if it was not even doing anything at all.

A famous glitch in Pokémon Gold and Silver can be used to Transform a Ditto into a Smeargle, allowing it to use Sketch to permanently gain an attack used on it. Ditto can then breed the attack into its (non-Ditto) offspring. In Pokémon Emerald and similar games of the generation where Ditto and Smeargle appeared, this was fixed--A Ditto using Sketch will always fail and a Smeargle will find it impossible to Sketch Transform.

In Pokémon Emerald, Blue Ditto is obtained like any normal pokemon- by catching it very rarely in Desert Underpass. When it Transforms into Pokémon, the transformation will also be shiny.

[edit] Super Smash Bros. Melee

Ditto makes a cameo in Super Smash Bros. Melee. In the VS Tournament mode (either winner out or loser out) you can scroll through characters before starting your next battle. But, by pressing L and R, you change your character to "Random" which is represented by a Ditto (as if it transforms into whatever character you end up using). It was also going to be a Pokémon inside the Pokeball item, but due to limitations(partly caused by the Ice Climbers, you can only get it with the Debug menu. However, the original transform idea is not present, leading to Ditto disappearing seconds after being released. Ditto also appears as a trophy.

[edit] Pokémon Trozei

In the Nintendo DS game Pokémon Trozei, Ditto plays a large role as a wildcard Pokémon; it can Trozei with any kind of Pokémon. It's immensely useful to Trozei with rare Pokémon after the player has made Continuous Trozei. Also, lining up Jammer Balls with Ditto are the only way to get rid of them during boss fights with Generals.

[edit] Pokémon Snap

Ditto will appear in the guise of other Pokémon, namely, Bulbasaur. The player must figure out a way into tricking the "Bulbasaur" into revealing its true nature to obtain a Ditto picture.

[edit] Pokémon Mystery Dungeon

Ditto is found in the Buried Relic dungeon. It is quite useless, as Transform does not copy the opponents moves or stats. Instead, it gives the user the appearance of a random Pokémon found on that floor. As it only has 1 PP, allowing only one use per dungeon without restoring items, it's only options after using Transform are to struggle or use the basic tackle attack exclusive to Mystery Dungeon.

[edit] In the anime

Ditto first appeared in the Pokémon Indigo League series, helping to run a theater with its trainer, Duplica (Imite in Japanese version). Ditto has trouble transforming into other Pokémon, as it cannot alter its face to the same as his source.

Ash and company help Duplica and Ditto overcome their problems, and memorably impersonate Team Rocket's motto, much to the annoyance of Jessie, James and Meowth. Ditto overcomes its transforming powers, and becomes an artillerary weapon to defeat Team Rocket.

In the Orange League, Ash encounters a Ditto in his battle with Drake, the leader of the Orange League. Ash pits Pikachu against Ditto, and Ditto Transformed into Pikachu. A close match ensued, with Pikachu winning.

In Johto, Ash and company run into Duplica again, but this time Duplica has a second Ditto that stays the same size even if it copies a very large Pokémon, like Onix. That Ditto was nicknamed Mini-Dit.

Brody, a former Team Magma member, used a Ditto to steal ancient Pokémon data. Brody today still has Ditto. Brody's nickname is Brody the Phantom Thief.

[edit] In the trading card game

Prior to the release of EX Delta Species, Ditto has seen several sporadic cards throughout the card game’s lengthy history, all as Basic Colorless Pokémon:

  • Fossil
  • Gym Challenge (as Koga’s Ditto)
  • Skyridge
  • EX Hidden Legends

However, once EX Delta Species was released, Ditto was given an entirely new image and role; Ten new Ditto cards were printed, all as Basic Pokémon, and they were almost all of different elements. The artwork on each card depicts a Ditto having transformed into a different Pokémon, but with its different, simplistic face still on it, much like the Ditto seen in the anime. There was one Colorless Ditto as itself, one Grass-type Ditto resembling Bulbasaur, two Fire-type Ditto resembling Charmander, two Water-type Ditto resembling Squirtle, two Lightning-type Ditto resembling Pikachu, one Ground-type Ditto resembling Geodude, and one Psychic-type Ditto resembling Mr. Mime.

[edit] References

Publications
  • Barbo, Maria. The Official Pokémon Handbook. Scholastic Publishing, 1999. ISBN 0439154049.
  • 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 193020650X
  • Mylonas, Eric. Pokémon Pokédex Collector’s Edition: Prima’s Official Pokémon Guide. Prima Games, September 21 2004. ISBN 0761547614
  • Nintendo Power. Official Nintendo Pokémon Emerald Version Player’s Guide. Nintendo of America Inc., April 2005. ISBN 1930206585

[edit] External links