Heal 30 damage from 1 of your Pokémon.
Smoliv
It protects itself from enemies by emitting oil from the fruit on its head. This oil is bitter and astringent enough to make someone flinch.
| Supertype | Pokémon |
|---|---|
| Subtype | Basic |
| HP | 60 |
| Types | Grass |
| Attack | Nutrients |
| Artist | Shibuzoh. |
| Rarity | Common |
| Pokédex | 928 |
Vendor Information
- Store Name: DutchGem
- Vendor: DutchGem
-
Address:
gekkestraat
179
2345GT Utrecht
Ancient Origins
This attack does 20 damage times the number of damage counters on this Pokémon. This Pokémon is now Confused.
Scarlet & Violet
They flock around mountains and fields, chasing after bug Pokémon. Their singing is noisy and annoying.
Celestial Storm
Once ingested into this Pokémon's body, even the hardest object will melt into nothing.
Scarlet & Violet
This Pokémon stores up energy in its lungs, then shoots it out. It takes care of Dreepy and battles alongside them until they're all grown up.
Related products
Scarlet & Violet
This calm Pokémon is very compassionate. It will share its delicious, nutrient-rich oil with weakened Pokémon.
Scarlet & Violet
Until recently, people living in the mountains would ride on the back of these Pokémon to traverse the mountain paths.
Scarlet & Violet
Traditional Paldean dishes can be extremely spicy because they include the shed front teeth of Capsakid among their ingredients.
Scarlet & Violet
Floragato deftly wields the vine hidden beneath its long fur, slamming the hard flower bud against its opponents.
Scarlet & Violet
Traditional Paldean dishes can be extremely spicy because they include the shed front teeth of Capsakid among their ingredients.
Scarlet & Violet
It prefers harsh environments, such as deserts. It can survive for 30 days on water stored in its body.
Scarlet & Violet
This Pokémon was born in a land where flowers bloom. It scatters colorful, toxic scales from its wings during battle.
Scarlet & Violet
It spits out a fluid that it uses to glue tree bark to its body. The fluid hardens when it touches air.



