Rhydon

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Rhydon
Image:Rhydon.png
National Pokédex
Rhyhorn - Rhydon (#112) - Chansey

Johto Pokédex
Rhyhorn - Rhydon (#207) - Murkrow

Hoenn Pokédex
Rhyhorn - Rhydon (#170) - Snorunt
Japanese name Sidon
Evolves from Rhyhorn
Evolves into Dosidon (from Pokémon Diamond and Pearl onwards)
Generation First
Species Drill Pokémon
Type Ground / Rock
Height 6 ft 3 in (1.9 m)
Weight 265.0 lb (120.0 kg)
Ability Rock Head / Lightning Rod

Rhydon (サイドン Saidon?, Sidon in original Japanese language versions) is a fictional character of the Pokémon franchise.

Rhydon's name is based on the word "rhyton" which is "A hornlike drinking vessel of ancient times, often having a pointed end shaped like an animal or animal's head." The "-don" in Rhydon could also be based on the word "Don", a formal title used by Spanish cultures with similar meaning to the English "Sir". Thus, Rhydon is the leader of the Rhyhorns, or, alternatively, could have originated from "rhi-noceros", with changed spelling, plus the Spanish title "don". Or it could be that the "Don" comes from the suffix commonly found in dinosaur names, such as Dimetrodon, or Iguanodon. (definition from Dictionary.com)

Contents

[edit] Biological characteristics

Rhydon appears to be a cross between a rhinoceros and a dinosaur. It is a massive gray bipedal creature with clawed forepaws and hindfeet and a long tail. Rhydon's head has two horns: one is on its forehead, and another one at the end of its snout. The latter is bigger and seems to be styled after a drill. After the production of Pokemon Diamond/Pearl, it is revealed that the male Rhydon has a longer drill horn than the female.

Rhydon's brain is considerably more developed than that of its pre-evolved form Rhyhorn, which allows it to exhibit some signs of advanced intelligence, including the ability to stand upright and walk on two legs.

Rhydon is excellently equipped both in terms of both offense and defense. Its thick hide is capable of shrugging off even direct hits from a cannon and can withstand molten lava of 3,600 degrees Fahrenheit in temperature (close to 2,000 degrees Celsius). However, Rhydon's rugged skin also makes it insensitive, preventing it from realising when it is seriously hurt.

Offensively, Rhydon's powerful tail can topple buildings (compare with Charmeleon). However, its best weapon is its horn, which Rhydon can freely rotate like a drill. The horn drill's strength is such that it, too, can destroy buildings, bore holes through solid stone and even shatter uncut diamonds, which are among the hardest substances in the world. It is said that Rhydon's Takedown attack is like being hit by a tank.

[edit] In the video games

Besides being the evolution of Rhyhorn (from which it evolves at level 42), Rhydon can also be found in some games. In Pokémon Red and Blue, Rhydon appears inside the Unknown Dungeon. In Pokémon Yellow it is additionally available through an in-game trade in Cinnabar Island. An in-game trade is also the way to acquire Rhydon in Pokémon Gold and Silver, only it takes place in Blackthorn City. In Pokémon Crystal Rhydon is also found in Victory Road. Finally, in Pokémon XD one could be snagged from Cipher Grand Master Greevil.

Rhydon has very high Attack, Defense and Hit Points, making it a powerful and durable Pokémon. Unfortunately, besides being very slow, its Special Defense is extremely low. This, combined with its Rock/Ground type combination which makes it quadruple weak against Grass and Water-type attacks, makes Rhydon a lot more fragile than it appears at first glance. Rhydon can have the ability Lightningrod, making it an effective user of said ability as Electric attacks have no effect on it.

Rhydon can learn many powerful physical attacks, many of which concern its horn. It has the distinction of learning naturally Mega Horn, the most powerful Bug-type attack, which can make it effective against Grass-type Pokémon. However, this is an extremely risky play seeing Rhydon's very poor speed means that the enemy Grass type may attack first, and defeat Rhydon before it even gets the chance to use Megahorn. Attacks often preferred in Rhydon movesets include Ground and Rock-type techniques such as Earthquake, Rock Slide and Rock Blast. Double-Edge is also a good option, since Rhydon's Rock Head ability allows it to use this strong move without suffering recoil damage. Rhydon also has the potential to learn many special attacks, but its low relative stat does not make then particularly worthwhile. Although, the Elemental Punches and Elemental Fangs are worth using in the Diamond and Pearl games, due to the fact that those six moves count as physical attacks in those games.

Rhydon has an evolution in the new Pokémon game Pokémon Diamond and Pearl which is called Dosidon. Stats-wise, Dosidon is only slightly stronger than Rhydon, with fairly small increases across the board (probably because traditionally, Pokémon that evolve when traded are strong anyways, due to the fact that not all players have access to trade). However, this is balanced by Dosidon's new ability Solid Rock (which replaces Rock Head), which lowers the damage done by super-effective moves. He also has a new signature attack, Rock Wrecker, a Rock-type version of Hyper Beam. Rhydon will only evolve into Dosidon by being traded with an item called the Protector.

[edit] In the anime

Rhydon has made many appearances in the anime. The form of Rhydon first appeared in episode #17 (Island of the giant Pokémon), but it turned out to actually be a gigantic robotic Rhydon replica used in a theme park. A real giant Rhydon appeared in episode #106 (Bound for trouble), in Fairchild Island of the Orange Archipelago.

Rhydon has also been used by trainers: Blaine, the Cinnabar Island Gym Leader used one in his badge battle against Ash in episode #58 (Riddle me this). Another one, on loan from Giovanni, was used by Team Rocket as acting Gym Leaders of the Viridian City Gym in episode #63 (Battle for the Badge). Rhydon appeared in episode 40 (Showdown at Dark City) under the ownership of one of the trainers at Kaz Gym; that was the Rhydon's debut episode. Finally, in episode #206 (Right on, Rhydon), a girl named Pietra managed to catch a very special Rhydon which knew the Surf skill (compare with the Surfing Pikachu) because her other Rock-type Pokémon could not build a tunnel that involved them coming into contact with water. However, in the RPG series, all Rhydons are capable of learning Surf from HM03. Brock's dad, Flint has a Rhydon, but it was just mentioned.

[edit] In the trading card game

Rhydon has made many appearances in the card game, and all are stage 1 and Ground/Fighting type:

  • Jungle
  • Gym Heroes (as Brock’s Rhydon)
  • Skyridge
  • EX Team Magma vs. Team Aqua (as Team Magma’s Rhydon, as a Dark-Ground dual type)
  • EX Hidden Legends
  • EX Emerald
  • Pokémon VS GS Half-Deck Series (as Chuck's Rhydon)

[edit] Trivia

  • The glitch Pokémon 'M and Missingno. can evolve into Rhydon or Kangaskhan. The resulting Pokémon will be normal, though it will also know moves it normally would not be capable of learning.
  • Rhydon was the first Pokemon ever programmed during the making of Red and Green. This can be seen through Rhydon's hexadecimal number being 01.
  • In the episode of Pokémon entitled "Riddle Me This", Pikachu ends up battling a Rhydon in Blaine's gym and ends up winning by shocking it's horn. It claimed that it acted like a lightning rod. In the games, electric attacks have no effect on Rhydon.
  • Rhydon (along with its evolution Dosidon) is the only Rock/Ground type that can learn surf.(Or any water type move for that matter.)

[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