| Supertype | Pokémon |
|---|---|
| Subtype | Basic |
| HP | 110 |
| Types | Psychic |
| Attack | Glide |
| Attack cost | Colorless |
| Artist | chibi |
| Rarity | Rare |
| Pokédex | 381 |
Latios
It understands human speech and is highly intelligent. It is a tender Pokémon that dislikes fighting.
Vendor Information
- Store Name: DutchGem
- Vendor: DutchGem
-
Address:
gekkestraat
179
2345GT Utrecht
Lost Origin
They are better at swimming than flying, and they happily eat their favorite food, peat moss, as they dive underwater.
BREAKthrough
It uses its tail to absorb electricity from power plants or from outlets in houses, and then it fires the electricity from its whiskers.
Paldea Evolved
Attach up to 2 Basic Energy cards from your discard pile to 1 of your Benched Pokémon.
Cosmic Eclipse
As the hot season approaches, the petals on this Pokémon's face become more vivid and lively.
Related products
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
It prefers harsh environments, such as deserts. It can survive for 30 days on water stored in its body.
Scarlet & Violet
It prefers damp places. By day it remains still in the forest shade. It releases toxic powder from its head.
Scarlet & Violet
The thread it secretes from its rear is as strong as wire. The secret behind the thread's strength is the topic of ongoing research.
Scarlet & Violet
This Pokémon was born in a land where flowers bloom. It scatters colorful, toxic scales from its wings during battle.
Scarlet & Violet
The thread it secretes from its rear is as strong as wire. The secret behind the thread's strength is the topic of ongoing research.
Scarlet & Violet
It coils its 10 tentacles around prey and sucks out their nutrients, causing the prey pain. The folds along the rim of its head are a popular delicacy.
Scarlet & Violet
Floragato deftly wields the vine hidden beneath its long fur, slamming the hard flower bud against its opponents.



