During your opponent’s next turn, the Defending Pokémon can’t retreat.
| Supertype | Pokémon |
|---|---|
| Subtype | Basic |
| HP | 220 |
| Types | Metal |
| Attack | Rock Tomb |
| Attack cost | Colorless |
| Rarity | Ultra Rare |
| Pokédex | 968 |
Vendor Information
- Store Name: DutchGem
- Vendor: DutchGem
-
Address:
gekkestraat
179
2345GT Utrecht
Obsidian Flames
Houndstone spends most of its time sleeping in graveyards. Among all the dog Pokémon, this one is most loyal to its master.
Rebel Clash
After being reborn as a ghost Pokémon, Dreepy wanders the areas it used to inhabit back when it was alive in prehistoric seas.
Lost Origin
Look at the top 4 cards of your deck and put 2 of them into your hand. Put the other cards in the Lost Zone.
Astral Radiance
A violent creature that fells towering trees with its crude axes and shields itself with hard stone. If one should chance upon this Pokémon in the wilds, one's only recourse is to flee.
Related products
Scarlet & Violet
Floragato deftly wields the vine hidden beneath its long fur, slamming the hard flower bud against its opponents.
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 prefers harsh environments, such as deserts. It can survive for 30 days on water stored in its body.
Scarlet & Violet
Dolliv shares its tasty, fresh-scented oil with others. This species has coexisted with humans since times long gone.
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
This calm Pokémon is very compassionate. It will share its delicious, nutrient-rich oil with weakened Pokémon.
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.



