Draw a card for each of your Houndour in play.
Houndour
To corner prey, they check each other’s location using barks that only they can understand.
| Supertype | Pokémon |
|---|---|
| Subtype | Basic |
| HP | 60 |
| Types | Fire |
| Attack | Team Hunt |
| Attack cost | Colorless |
| Artist | Ken Sugimori |
| Rarity | Common |
| Pokédex | 228 |
| Evolves to | Houndoom |
Vendor Information
- Store Name: DutchGem
- Vendor: DutchGem
-
Address:
gekkestraat
179
2345GT Utrecht
Sword & Shield
If a job requires serious strength, this Pokémon will excel at it. Its copper body tarnishes in the rain, turning a vibrant green color.
Sun & Moon
It grills berries and bug Pokémon with electric shocks and makes a meal of them. It usually nests in the holes gouged in trees by Pikipek.
Sun & Moon
A legendary Pokémon that is said to live in thunderclouds. It freely controls lightning bolts.
Silver Tempest
It shows off by spraying jets of seawater from the nostrils above its eyes. It eats a solid ton of Wishiwashi every day.
151
During your next turn, attacks used by this Pokémon do 120 more damage to your opponent’s Active Pokémon (before applying Weakness and Resistance).
Ähnliche Produkte
Sun & Moon
While grooming itself, it builds up fur inside its stomach. It sets the fur alight and spews fiery attacks, which change based on how it coughs.
Sun & Moon
A delectable aroma pours from its body. They are often swallowed whole by Toucannon lured by that wafting deliciousness.
Sun & Moon
As it drowses the day away, it nourishes itself by sucking from tree roots. It wakens at the fall of night, wandering off in search of a new tree.
Sun & Moon
It emits flickering spores that cause drowsiness. When its prey succumb to sleep, this Pokémon feeds on them by sucking in their energy.
Sun & Moon
It fires arrow quills from its wings with such precision, they can pierce a pebble at distances over a hundred yards.
Sun & Moon
Its shell is filled with its soft innards. It doesn't move much because of the risk it might carelessly spill its innards out.



