Discard a Stadium in play.
Litleo
When Litleo are young, female Pyroar will teach them how to hunt. Once the Litleo mature, they will leave the pride and set out on their own.
| Supertype | Pokémon |
|---|---|
| Subtype | Basic |
| HP | 70 |
| Types | Fire |
| Attack | Blazing Destruction |
| Attack cost | Colorless |
| Artist | Yuu Nishida |
| Rarity | Common |
| Pokédex | 667 |
Vendor Information
- Store Name: DutchGem
- Vendor: DutchGem
-
Address:
gekkestraat
179
2345GT Utrecht
Lost Thunder
It stores lots of air in its soft fur, allowing it to stay cool in summer and warm in winter.
Celestial Storm
It creates an electric charge by rubbing its feathers together. It dances over to its enemies and delivers shocking electrical punches.
Paldean Fates
Its tail discharges electricity into the ground, protecting it from getting shocked.
Crimson Invasion
Attach a basic Energy card from your discard pile to 1 of your Benched Pokémon.
מוצרים קשורים
Scarlet & Violet
It can sense the feelings of others by touching them with its horns. This species has assisted people with their work since 5,000 years ago.
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
It prefers damp places. By day it remains still in the forest shade. It releases toxic powder from its head.
Scarlet & Violet
With its herculean powers, it can easily throw around an object that is 100 times its own weight.
Scarlet & Violet
It lives in tropical jungles. The bunch of fruit around its neck is delicious. The fruit grows twice a year.
Scarlet & Violet
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.
Scarlet & Violet
This Pokémon was born in a land where flowers bloom. It scatters colorful, toxic scales from its wings during battle.



