From Bulbapedia, the community-driven Pokémon encyclopedia.
This is an alphabetical list of Pokémon by their English language names. No Japanese romaji are included in this list; therefore, any new Pokémon with unknown English names will not be found here. This is also the list order that is seen by the player in Pokémon Colosseum and Pokémon XD in the Strategy Memo (minus Pokémon introduced after Generation III).
List of Pokémon by name
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Trivia
- As of Generation IX, there are 135 Pokémon whose English names begin with S, making it the most frequently used initial letter of English Pokémon names. The full order of frequency of initial letters of English Pokémon names is: S (135 names), C (86 names), M (79 names), G (66 names), P (65 names), T (64 names), D (61 names), B (55 names), A (45 names), F / L / R (40 names), H (34 names), K (32 names), W (30 names), E (26 names), V (25 names), N (23 names), I (19 names), O (15 names), Z (14 names), J (8 names), Q / U (7 names), Y (6 names), and X (3 names).
- As of Generation IX, every generation of Pokémon includes at least one whose name starts with A, B, C, D, F, G, H, K, M, P, S, and T.
- There were no Pokémon introduced in Generation I whose name starts with Q, U, X, or Y.
- There were no Pokémon introduced in Generation II whose name starts with V or Z.
- There were no Pokémon introduced in Generation III whose name starts with O, Q, U, X, or Y.
- There were no Pokémon introduced in Generation IV whose name starts with J, N, O, Q, X, or Z.
- There were no Pokémon introduced in Generation V whose name starts with I, N, Q, or X.
- There were no Pokémon introduced in Generation VI whose name starts with J, O, R, U, or W.
- There were no Pokémon introduced in Generation VII whose name starts with E, Q, or U.
- There were no Pokémon introduced in Generation VIII whose name starts with J, L, Q, V, or X.
- There were no Pokémon introduced in Generation IX whose name starts with J, U, X, Y, or Z.
- The greatest number of characters that can be in a Pokémon's name is 12. 14 Pokémon have names that reach this limit: Crabominable, Squawkabilly, Brambleghast, Brute Bonnet, Flutter Mane, Slither Wing, Sandy Shocks, Iron Jugulis, Roaring Moon, Iron Valiant, Walking Wake, Poltchageist, Gouging Fire, and Iron Boulder.
- Prior to Generation VI, the greatest number of characters that could be in a Pokémon's name was 10. The first Pokémon, and the only one in Generation VI, to have a name longer than 10 letters was Fletchinder.
- The smallest number of characters that have been in a Pokémon's name is 3, with Mew and Muk.
- The smallest number of unique characters that have been in a Pokémon's name is 2, with Eevee.
- Basculegion has multiple unique criteria:
- It is the only Pokémon with all five vowels in its English name.
- It is tied with Slither Wing and Poltchageist for the greatest number of unique characters in its name, with 11 (including spaces).
- It has the longest name that is an isogram.
- Deino is the only Pokémon whose English name's letters are in alphabetical order.
- As of Generation IX, the letter A is used most frequently in Pokémon names, being used a total of 765 times within 574 English names. The full order of letter frequency within English Pokémon names is: A (765 times in 574 names), E (676 times in 504 names), O (660 times in 501 names), R (617 times in 514 names), I (588 times in 484 names), L (511 times in 431 names), N (474 times in 400 names), T (431 times in 357 names), S (390 times in 339 names), U (320 times in 289 names), C (268 times in 242 names), M (260 times in 231 names), D (255 times in 231 names), G (254 times in 221 names), P (231 times in 195 names), H (206 times in 191 names), B (176 times in 152 names), K (170 times in 150 names), Y (125 times in 124 names), W (116 times in 112 names), F (112 times in 92 names), V (76 times in 72 names), Z (60 times in 51 names), X (40 times in 39 names), Q (19 times in 18 names), J (16 times in 16 names).
- While most Pokémon's English names only include letters, several Pokémon include punctuation and other characters in their names.
- Twenty-eight Pokémon have a space in their English names: Mr. Mime, Mime Jr., Type: Null, Tapu Koko, Tapu Lele, Tapu Bulu, Tapu Fini, Mr. Rime, and all Paradox Pokémon other than Koraidon and Miraidon (Great Tusk, Scream Tail, Brute Bonnet, Flutter Mane, Slither Wing, Sandy Shocks, Iron Treads, Iron Bundle, Iron Hands, Iron Jugulis, Iron Moth, Iron Thorns, Roaring Moon, Iron Valiant, Walking Wake, Iron Leaves, Gouging Fire, Raging Bolt, Iron Boulder, and Iron Crown).
- Nine Pokémon have a hyphen in their English names: Ho-Oh, Porygon-Z, Jangmo-o, Hakamo-o, Kommo-o, Ting-Lu, Chien-Pao, Wo-Chien, and Chi-Yu.
- Three Pokémon have a period in their English names: Mr. Mime, Mime Jr., and Mr. Rime.
- Two Pokémon have a gender symbol in their English names: Nidoran♀ and Nidoran♂.
- Two Pokémon have an apostrophe in their English names: Farfetch'd and Sirfetch'd.
- Only one Pokémon has a numerical digit in its English name: Porygon2.
- Only one Pokémon has a letter with a diacritic in its English name: Flabébé.
- Only one Pokémon has a colon in its English name: Type: Null.
- 15 Pokémon have English names that contain one of their types in its entirety: Clefairy, Dragonair, Dragonite, Steelix, Solrock, Regirock, Regice, Registeel, Darkrai, Scatterbug, Charjabug, Rockruff, Celesteela, Blipbug, and Gouging Fire.
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