During your opponent’s next turn, prevent all damage done to this Pokémon by attacks from Basic Pokémon.
| Supertype | Pokémon |
|---|---|
| Subtype | Stage 1 |
| HP | Dragon |
| Attack | Covert Flight |
| Attack cost | Colorless |
| Artist | Eske Yoshinob |
| Rarity | Shiny Ultra Rare |
| Pokédex | 715 |
| Evolves from | Noibat |
Vendor Information
- Store Name: DutchGem
- Vendor: DutchGem
-
Address:
gekkestraat
179
2345GT Utrecht
Burning Shadows
It feeds on the nectar and pollen of flowers. Because it's able to sense auras, it can identify which flowers are about to bloom.
Astral Radiance
A bizarre Pokémon with but a single eye embedded in an iron sphere. I suspect this creature levitates due to the magnetism it emits from its arms, which resemble horseshoe-shaped magnets.
Crimson Invasion
Attach a basic Energy card from your discard pile to 1 of your Benched Pokémon.
Related products
Scarlet & Violet
Though it looks like Tentacool, Toedscool is a completely different species. Its legs may be thin, but it can run at a speed of 30 mph.
Scarlet & Violet
It spits out a fluid that it uses to glue tree bark to its body. The fluid hardens when it touches air.
Scarlet & Violet
This calm Pokémon is very compassionate. It will share its delicious, nutrient-rich oil with weakened Pokémon.
Scarlet & Violet
Though it looks like Tentacool, Toedscool is a completely different species. Its legs may be thin, but it can run at a speed of 30 mph.
Scarlet & Violet
Spewpa doesn't live in a fixed location. It roams where it pleases across the fields and mountains, building up the energy it needs to evolve.
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.



