Aric Airitam
8.4K posts


Wait. Dude. Stantler learns entrainment. So that means Wrydeer must have it. WRYDEER HAS SAP SIPPER AS A HIDDEN ABILITY. I CAN ENTRAIN SAP SIPPER ON MY RELICANTH. ITS CRAZY BUT IT MIGHT JUST WORK IF RELICANTH COMES TO CHAMPIONS. RELICANTH TRULY IS MY POTENTIAL MON

CHIMECHO LEARNS ENTRAINMENT, I LET TYRANITAR SET UP SANDSTORM, I ENTRAIN LEVITATE ON TYRANITAR AND GO MEGA AND SEND OUT STEELIX OR FARIGIRAF IF NEEDED DUDE.

おかんに自撮り送ろうとしたら 画像これと間違えたのしにたい

@mxmacabre me with foxy ❤️

Playing Pokemon where the type chart matters feels like remembering a language you thought you forgot like what do you MEAN my Conkeldurr beats their Tyranitar? They’re obviously gonna Tera Flying?

'ONE PIECE' Netflix Live Action Producers talk about everything needing to be approved by Eichiiro Oda for the show "Sometimes he will say, 'no, put that back in' and we'll say, 'but we don't have any money.' And he says, 'find the money.' And then we find the money [laughs]."

Someone posted this in a server I'm in Pokemon Champions is not a real video game

A Stanford study found that people who played Pokémon heavily as kids developed a small region of the brain that responds specifically to Pokémon characters. Researchers scanned adults who grew up playing on Game Boy and showed them images of Pokémon like Pikachu and Bulbasaur. Their brains lit up in the same exact spot, a consistent area in the visual cortex tied to recognizing specific categories of objects. The reason comes down to childhood. When you’re young, your brain is more flexible, and spending hours memorizing hundreds of similar-looking Pokémon essentially trained it to carve out space just for them. (via @Stanford)

A Stanford study found that people who played Pokémon heavily as kids developed a small region of the brain that responds specifically to Pokémon characters. Researchers scanned adults who grew up playing on Game Boy and showed them images of Pokémon like Pikachu and Bulbasaur. Their brains lit up in the same exact spot, a consistent area in the visual cortex tied to recognizing specific categories of objects. The reason comes down to childhood. When you’re young, your brain is more flexible, and spending hours memorizing hundreds of similar-looking Pokémon essentially trained it to carve out space just for them. (via @Stanford)



















