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Tyranitar, The Armor Pokémon. If it rampages, it knocks down mountains and buries rivers. Maps must be redrawn afterward. Its body can't be harmed by any sort of attack, so it is very eager to make challenges against enemies. Extremely strong, it can change the landscape. It has an insolent nature that makes it not care about others. Overview Since the generation it was introduced, Tyranitar has been a contender for one of the best Pokémon in the game. 2nd gen it was great. 3rd gen it got even better with Choice Band and Sandstream. When 4th gen arrived, Tyranitar reached the top of its game. Physical Dark attacks, the boost from Sandstorm, stronger Rock attacks, it really was at its best in 4th gen. Even with competition from Hippowdon, Tyranitar was still the top dog when it came down to Sandstorm. Sadly, with all the new Pokémon in 5th gen that can threaten Tyranitar, it has lost some of its glory. I'm not saying its bad, just... not as good. It peaked in 5th gen, and you can't climb any higher than the peak. Abilities Sandstream: the only ability you should be running, to be honest. Tyranitar still sets up Sandstorm brilliantly. It adds extra damage and gives Tyranitar a huge Special Defence boost. Movesets Choice Band Tar
- Crunch The big daddy of Choice Banders. Crunch is arguably its best physical attack as it is strong yet reliable, and has that sick Defence lowering effect, which, when you get lucky, wins you games. Stone Edge is the better version of Rock Slide. Although less accurate, it's much, much stronger, with a high critical hit chance. Earthquake gets awesome coverage with both Crunch and Stone Edge, and is one of the best physical attacks in the game. Fire Punch handles Ferrothorn, Forretress and other Steels that aren't hurt too much by Earthquake. Pursuit, the move that made Tyranitar so boss in 4th gen, gets less use on a Choice Band set now, but its still cool for trapping Ghosts and physically weak Pokémon. Back to competitive basics
- Substitute Boah was pretty much the king of 3rd gen. It broke stall teams down like nothing else, being able to decimate every defensive wall used at the same. It has changed a bit now, but with the defensive powerhouses such as Ferrothorn, Forretress, Eviolite Porygon2, Boah is actually pretty useful in 5th gen. Substitute protects you from status, damage, and allows you to use Focus Punch with no fear of being flinched. Tyranitar also gets 101 subs. If it didn't, Boah would not have worked. Focus Punch wrecks Normal Pokémon like Blissey, which is the punch's main job. Crunch decimates pringles ghost... sorry, Jellicent, which is a popular special sponge. Flamethrower completely destroys Ferrothorn, Forretress and Skarmory, all of which are very popular in 5th gen. However, Ice Beam can beat down common physical walls and Tyranitar switch ins like Gliscor. Fashion conscious Tyranitar
- Pursuit The most used Tyranitar nearing the end of 4th gen, and for good reason. Tyranitar's odd base Speed surprisingly gives it a great advantage over a lot of other Pokémon. If it was one point lower, it wouldn't be anywhere near as useful, especially with this set. Pursuit is the key move of this set, as it allows it to revenge kill pretty much anything. With Choice Scarf, Tyranitar hits 364 Speed, outrunning base 115s Pokémon like Starmie. Combined with Pursuit, that's brutal. Crunch is your reliable attacking move that is also cool if you want to play some mind games, making the opponent stay in to take a weaker Pursuit. Stone Edge smashes whatever hard, and is always cool on Tyranitar. Tyranitar and Stone Edge are bros. Earthquake hits Steels and what not hard, but so does Superpower, as well as being able to wreck Normal Pokémon like Blissey, which Stone Edge isn't too good at doing. SpecsTar
- Dark Pulse Dark Pulse is your strongest move thanks to good base power and STAB. Flamethrower beats down Steels, which are often the most common switch ins to Tyranitar. Fire Blast is stronger but a little less accurate. Ice Beam really hurts bulky Ground Pokémon like Hippowdon, which also love switching into Tyranitar. Thunderbolt handles Skarmory and various bulky Waters, as well as completing the infamous BoltBeam combo. DDTar
- Dragon Dance Yeah, Dragon Dance on Tyranitar! YOU CAN'T TOP THAT! Well, you can nowadays. It isn't anywhere near as effective as it used to be, and with mole running around outspeeding everything in the world, you might just get revenge killed anyway. Regardless, it can still be effective. Dragon Dance raises your Speed and Attack to pretty high levels, your Attack especially. Stone Edge gets STAB, hits hard, misses at the worst times. Crunch is there for reliability and being awesome. Earthquake sorts out the Steels, but Fire Punch is definitely an option so that you beat Ferrothorn and Forretress before they Gyro Ball you into the ground. ResTalk
- Rest Rest keeps you healthy, which is what everyone wants right? Hey, a life lesson in the POTW, bet you didn't see that coming. Sleep Talk stops you from being a sleeping... Rock... dinosaur... and let's you do something as you recover. Curse brings your Attack and Defence up whilst lowering your Speed, perfect in combination with Payback, which doubles in power if you are damaged before you attack. Fire Punch is an option to beat... you know what it beats. MixTar
- Crunch / Thunderbolt MixTar requires good prediction, as the point of the set is to smash Tyranitar's main switch ins with a powerful move. Crunch just happens to be an awesome move and allows you to beat on special sponges a lot more. However, Thunderbolt is cool for bulky Waters. Superpower mugs Normal types like Blissey, as well as Steels and other Tyranitar. Ice Beam can remove Gliscor and bulky Grounds, whereas Flamethrower sorts out any Ferrothorn. Expert Belt can be used over Life Orb as it can trick the opponent into thinking you are running Choice. However, the extra damage from Life Orb is pretty nice. General-do-everything-support-Tar
- Pursuit Traps stuff, destroys Ferrothorn, phazes and sets up rocks. Awesome, right? Pursuit traps Ghosts such as Shandera and Gengar. Fire Blast annihilates Ferrothorn and other Steels. Dragon Tail deals damage and forces a switch, but Stone Edge is an option for a strong physical attack. Stealth Rock sets up rocks for some easy extra damage. EVs & Natures Choice Band Tar Back to competitive basics Fashion conscious Tyranitar SpecsTar DDTar ResTalk MixTar General-do-everything-support-Tar Other Options Aqua Tail, Avalanche, Counter, Fling, Hone Claws, Rock Polish, Screech, Taunt, Thunder Wave Double & Triple Battle Options Tyranitar's main use in doubles and triples is weather control, preventing the opponent from keeping their favourable weather conditions in play with Sand Stream. Sandstorm also gives a nice boost to the Special Defense of Rock types and doubles Excadrill's Speed, but the main advantage to having it in play is the foe won't be able to fire of 100% accuracy Blizzards in Hail or get a huge power and speed boost for most of their sweepers in Rain. Outside of Sand Stream, Tyranitar is still quite powerful. It's main attacks (Rock Slide and Earthquake) are multi target, and backed by 134 base Attack. Under Trick Room it is a real threat thanks to Rock Slide's power and flinch chance, and the fact that it hits all foes it can reach. Tyranitar is severely let down by all its weaknesses, but can run Protect to save itself from an attack while it's teammates finish off the attacker. Tyranitar in doubles or triples should usually invest heavily in HP. Dragon Dance sets don't have time to set up, Rock Slide becomes the main STAB move, and Protect is a very viable option on non-Choiced sets, but otherwise the sets are about the same. Just remember to keep it alive and bring it in often if your opponent relies on weather, and not to use Earthquake if your other Pokemon are vulnerable to it. Partners Really depends on the set you are running. You definitely want something to have something that takes Fighting Pokémon like Conkeldurr down. Skarmory, Zapdos, Gliscor, Flying types ideally. Speaking of Zapdos, it takes out Water Pokémon and resists five out of six of Tyranitar's weaknesses. Gliscor is another great Pokémon to use with it, thanks to Sandstorm, being resistant to Fighting and immune to Ground, and generally being a good switch in to Tyranitar's counters. Something to switch into Waters is also good, such as another Water type. If you are using a wallbreaking set such as Boah, use Pokémon that can really take advantage of those Pokémon going down. What is normally walled by Ferrothorn? Use it alongside Boah and go wild after the thorny force bites the dust. Pokémon that live for Sandstorm are obviously great parters. Excadrill, Landorus, Cradily (the only time Cradily works at all is in Sandstorm), Gliscor, Reuniclus, Magic Guard Pokémon, Regirock, Rhyperior, the list goes on and on. Point is, there are plenty of Pokémon that work well with Tyranitar. Countering Tyranitar Steels and Grounds are the main switch ins. Ferrothorn, Metagross, Hippowdon, Swampert, bulky Pokémon that are Steel or Ground can switch into Tyranitar's most used moves with little to fear, then KO it or force it out. Bulky Waters also work. Vaporeon and Suicune are two examples that come to mind. Gliscor is a great Pokémon for countering Tyranitar as long as it doesn't have Ice Beam. Fighting Pokémon are amazing counters. Machamp and Conkeldurr are the prime examples, but many others exist like Hitmontop and Breloom, which take Tyranitar out with a single Mach Punch. Low Kick and Grass Knot get maximum power on Tyranitar, so beware of those two moves. Weather messes up Tyranitar pretty badly, and with the introduction of Drizzle and Drought to OU, Sandstorm might not be seen for long, which means Tyranitar loses its awesome Special Defence. Revenge killing Tyranitar is always a great way of taking it out. Mach Punch has been mentioned, but there's Scizor with Bullet Punch, Excadrill with its ridiculous Speed and Attack... actually, there's a lot of Pokémon that can revenge kill Tyranitar, due to its pretty poor Speed. You just have to hit it hard enough. Two Pokémon that are definitely worth mentioning are Lucario and Cobalion, as they are Steel/Fighting, meaning they 4x resist both of Tyranitar's STAB moves, and can force it out or KO it. Tyranitar is not as dangerous as it was in 4th gen. It's still really good, it just... its weaknesses have been exposed with 4th gen, and its strengths have been lessened. It's a much better team player with the new Sandstorm support, but on its own... its seen much better days. Locations in Games Ruby/Sapphire/Emerald: FireRed/LeafGreen: Colosseum/XD: Diamond/Pearl/Platinum: HeartGold/SoulSilver: Black/White: Animé Appearences
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