These entries do not make it sound as malevolent as some other Ghost-types, but Chandelure is known to cause immense harm nonetheless. According to a Sword entry, "Supersized Gourgeist aren't picky. They will forcefully drag anyone off to the afterlife. This is especially true of Dusclops, the second-stage evolution.
It can absorb anything as if it were a black hole. This is for good reason, and its Mega Evolution makes it even more terrifying. Still, Trainers should tread lightly around this spectral cyclops, or else they might find themselves trapped inside its belly forever. It will attack anything that moves, immediately deeming it a foe unless proven otherwise. As a Pseudo-Legendary, Hydreigon is mighty powerful , and in the past, it destroyed many villages, cementing its reputation as a ferocious and unforgiving beast.
Despite having three heads, only one has a brain. The other two are subservient to the middle one and do not move or act on their own. At first sight, Darkrai looks like the Grim Reaper. Banette is a discarded doll possessed by pure hatred, becoming sentient due to the sheer force of its grudge against the owner who abandoned it.
It keeps its life force inside its body, protected by the zipper on its mouth, and uses its body like a voodoo doll to inflict curses on others.
Plus, seeing it with pins stuck to its body would surely be a traumatizing sight for anyone who came across it. David is a twenty-eight-year-old Mexican writer and reader. When the hair bunches up around its limbs, Grimmsnarl becomes even stronger than Machamp, which can historically move mountains with one arm. The thought of using hair like muscle fibers is an unsettling one. Its Gigantamax form means even more hair, which it can allegedly use to drill through the earth.
We'll stick with Machamp, thanks. Generally speaking, any time someone mentions a curse, things get creepy quickly. The phrase "lingering spirits" also has chilling implications. For Sword and Shield , Game Freak decided to put a curse on a lingering spirit, so if you're superstitious, you may want to avoid Yamask.
This Pokemon was introduced back in Generation 6 , and it embodies the spirits of the dead. It evolves into Cofarigus, a literal coffin with spectral arms. In Generation 8, you can stumble upon a Galarian Yamask. Instead of a mask, this Pokemon carries a cursed clay slab that possessed it.
The slab continues to absorb Yamask's power, until it eventually evolves into Runerigus. This creature becomes more clay than spirit, as the hex engraved on the slab takes over.
If you touch it, you'll be flooded with whatever dark memories caused those engravings to appear in the first place. Spirit possessions are hardly a new concpet; that's par for the course when it comes to horror. But when a cursed object possess a spirit?
That's a whole lot of no. Everyone intrinsically recognizes the human form. The shape marks a core part of the human identity, and when something is a little off about it, it's easy to notice. So, when you stroll into your first gym and see Ball Guy, you know you're in for a wild ride.
He looks like an average guy from shoulders to toes. His head, however, is perfectly round , just like a Pokeball. Ball Guy's discomfiting silhouette presents a recurring challenge in Pokemon Sword and Shield , as he shows up throughout your journey. Every time you see him, he hands you a few Pokeballs, but don't let his niceness fool you.
This is a man who willingly wears a ball-shaped mascot head, complete with unblinking eyes and a tuft of what is, presumably, hair, not to mention his paper-white skin. In some ways, Ball Guy shares a few similarities with Brutus Buckeye , the equally unsettling college mascot of Ohio State. Long story short, an anthropomorphic body doesn't pair well with an incredibly unnatural head.
Rarely do we confront the harsh realities of the world of Pokemon. After all, the games appeal to children with their colorful designs and simplified gameplay. Nonetheless, we're talking about animals here, and when it comes to the animal kingdom, nature pulls no punches.
Predators eat their prey to survive. Previous Pokemon games alluded to a food chain, like how Pidgeot preys on Magikarp. Sword and Shield makes you confront that concept in a more visceral way thanks to Cramorant. Cramorant hunts and eats Arrokuda, a fish Pokemon exclusive to Galar. In battle, different moves give Cramorant a chance of finding its prey, and it actually uses the "food" as a weapon.
When it's been hurt, Cramorant can go as far as stuffing a Pikachu down its throat. According to the Pokedex, when it does this "Cramorant is choking a little, but it isn't really bothered. Their cries sound like eerie screams. That's our childhood destroyed then, as well as those of these poor Phantumps. Mimikyu — Generation VII. The latest games in the series, Sun and Moon, gave us the Hawaiian-inspired world of Alola to explore, which packed in plenty of new 'mon and unique Alolan forms for older monsters, and of course, a few new creepy critters to gawp at.
A scholar who saw what was under its rag was overwhelmed by terror and died from the shock. We love Mimikyu — it even has its own song, as seen below — but we're honestly a little bit scared too. We rank our favourite Nintendo consoles Where does the Nintendo Switch fit in the …. Komala — Generation VII. All its movements are apparently no more than the results of it tossing and turning in its dreams. How utterly heartbreaking. Guzzlord — Generation VII. Guzzlord just keeps on eating and eating Moon tells us, "A dangerous Ultra Beast, it appears to be eating constantly, but for some reason its droppings have never been found.
The entry in Sun tells us that Guzzlord is capable of eating mountains and buildings whole, which we can just about grasp, but weirdly, Guzzlord never excretes.
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