Muk
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- For the Korean food, see Muk (Korean food).
Muk | |
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National Pokédex Grimer - Muk (#089) - Shellder Johto Pokédex Grimer - Muk (#177) - Magnemite Hoenn Pokédex Grimer - Muk (#107) - Koffing |
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Japanese name | Betbeton |
Evolves from | Grimer |
Evolves into | None |
Generation | First |
Species | Sludge Pokémon |
Type | Poison |
Height | 3 ft 11 in (1.2 m) |
Weight | 66.0 lb (30.0 kg) |
Ability | Stench / Sticky Hold |
Muk (ベトベトン Betobeton?, Betbeton in original Japanese language versions) is one of 493 fictional species from the Pokémon franchise. "Muk" is a derivation of the word "muck", meaning dirt or slime, as per its body structure and appearance. Its Japanese name is a play on べとべと betobeto, the word for "sticky".
Contents |
[edit] Biology
Muk is a living manifestation of sludge and waste. Muk thrives in toxic waste and garbage. It inhabits any polluted area; including abandoned factories, garbage dumps and sewers. It is said that its smell is comparable to that of reeking kitchen garbage, especially during hot summers.
Muk itself is also a source of pollution. As Muk slides across the ground, it leaves behind a trail of highly poisonous sludge. Muk and Grimer are known for traveling into water and polluting it and killing plants with their sludge. Muk could be considered antagonistic of Suicune, a Pokémon with the ability to purify dirty or polluted water. It can also be considered antagonistic of Celebi, which can bring dead plants back to life.
Muk's thick, sticky sludge can be used to trap foes in battle. Muk can Body Slam the foe, entangling them in its sludgy belly. It can appear suddenly, ensuing panic.
[edit] In the video games
In Pokémon Red and Blue and Fire Red and Leaf Green, Muk is available for capture in Cinnabar Island's Pokémon Mansion. In Ruby and Sapphire Muk can be obtained by having a Grimer reach level 38.
Muk is considered the counterpart of Weezing, as they are both Poison-type and both appear in the Pokémon Mansion. One of them represents sludge while the other represents smog, two forms of pollution. Weezing has high Defense against normal attacks, whereas Muk has higher Special Attack.
In addition to the Pokémon-repelling Stench ability, Muk can possess the Sticky Hold ability, which keeps foes from stealing Muk's held-item with attacks like Trick or Thief.
Muk has high special defense and decent attack strength. It can use what is known as Subpunch, the usage of Substitute and Focus Punch to gain a free hit. Overall it is a good Pokémon but pales in comparison to Weezing when used as a physical tank. Weezing has the "Levitate" trait, which removes its Ground-type weakness. Muk is a better special wall, however and can play a similar role as a Snorlax in tournaments where Snorlax is banned.
To find Muk in Pokémon Snap, the player has to throw pester balls at a Grimer until it evolves.
[edit] In the animé
Ash and friends encounter a horde of Grimer in an abandoned power plant. As Pikachu is suffering from a nasty electrical cold, Pikachu's electrical attacks are useless against the Grimer. When a Muk appears, all seems hopeless until a group of friendly Magnemites and Magnetons arrive to help. They all shock the Muk into submission. Ash seizes the opportunity to capture his own Muk.
A running gag in the series involves Muk expressing gratitude towards Professor Oak by hugging him, and in the process smothering him with its gooey body, he also started to do this with Professor Birch (however, it is this same technique that helps Ash later beat an Indigo League trainer with an undefeatable Bellsprout.)
When Ash first caught Muk, its smell was able to escape the PokeBall, much to everyone's displeasure. For this reason, Muk was given to Professor Oak. Strangely, however, in all of Ash's future use of Muk, the smell does not bother anyone.
[edit] In other properties
[edit] In the card game
Muk makes the following appearances in the Pokémon Trading Card Game:
- Fossil
- Team Rocket (as Dark Muk)
- Gym Challenge (as Koga's Muk)
- Aquapolis
- EX Team Rocket Returns (as Dark Muk; as a Dark/Grass dual-type)
- EX Legend Maker
Muk's first appearance in the Fossil set featured a useful Pokémon Power that caused the Pokémon Powers of all other Pokémon in play to stop working.
[edit] References
- The following games and their instruction manuals: Pokémon Red, Green, and Blue; Pokémon Yellow; Pokémon Stadium and Pokémon Stadium 2; Pokémon Gold, Silver, and Crystal; Pokémon Ruby, Sapphire, and Emerald; Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen; Pokémon Colosseum and Pokémon XD: Gale of Darkness
- 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
- Official Pokémon website
- Bulbapedia (a Pokémon-centric Wiki)’s article about Muk as a species
- Muk’s fourth-generation Pokédex entry on Serebii.net
- Pokémon Dungeon Pokédex entry, full of statistics analysis
- PsyPoke - Muk Pokédex entry and Usage Overview
- WikiKnowledge.net’s entry for Muk Previously hosted by Wikibooks