PKMN.NET :: Pokemon of the Week #26 - Porygon-Z :: #26 of Pokemon of the Week :: Columns
Pokemon of the Week #26 - Porygon-Z by Richard and Blaziken at Sun 28 Jul 2013 04:00:00 UTC

Welcome to Pokemon of the Week! This week, as per request, I will be focusing on a man-made Pokemon gone wrong. This week, we discuss Porygon-Z.

Overview

Porygon-Z is an oddball, to say the least. It's not nearly as polarizing a Pokemon as many others, but it has fans. It's one of few Pokemon that competes with the evolutionary stage before it in usefulness (sharing this with Blissey, as well as others I'm forgetting, I'm sure), but it has a role completely different to Porygon2 (unlike Chansey and Blissey, which basically do the same things). This man-made Pokemon is far from a virus that will plague your team, however, as it can certainly prove itself a valuable Pokemon on the right teams.

Competitive Corner

Since introduction, Porygon-Z was sort of... there. It has fantastic base 135 Sp. Attack and an okay base 90 Speed, and even has access to Nasty Plot and Agility to boost both of those stats. Porygon-Z has what it needs to be a fierce competitor in UU, but in OU, it's more of a victim of it's typing than anything. Pure Normal isn't fantastic defensive typing, providing only one immunity and one common weakness, while every other type of Pokemon can hit it with STAB attacks neutrally. Offensively, Normal is Super Effective against nothing, and that's part of what keeps Porygon-Z down. But more than anything, Base 90 Speed is not fantastic in OU when Terrakion, Conkeldurr, and Keldeo are running around OU, to name a few. Despite all this, Porygon-Z is fantastic in UU, and is usable in OU with the right set of team-mates and support.

Your Computer Will Shutdown Immediately
Porygon-Z@ Life Orb
Download
Timid nature (+Speed, -Attack)
EVs: 252 Sp. Attack / 160 Speed / 96 HP
Agility
Tri-Attack
Dark Pulse
Hidden Power Fighting

Porygon-Z finds a wonderful boosting move in Agility, doubling it's Speed into something that allows it to outrun the rest of the unboosted UU metagame. Tri-Attack gives Porygon-Z his best STAB attack, while also offering a nice 20% chance of either Paralysis, Burn or Freeze, all of which are welcomed in most circumstances. Dark Pulse and Hidden Power Fighting provide perfect neutral coverage along with your Normal STAB attack, giving you a move to hurt Ghost, Steel and Rock types that would otherwise hinder your strategy of just mashing Tri-Attack.

Most users of Agility have trouble with needing a turn of setup and then finding themselves not powerful enough to pull off a sweep. Porygon-Z outperforms most of the UU Agility users by grace of Download, an ability that will give you a one-stage boost to Sp. Attack if the opponent's Defense stat is higher than their Sp. Defense (though if their Sp. Defense is higher, you get a useless Attack boost). With the Sp. Attack boost acquired, Porygon-Z has Choice Specs level of power without even taking the Life Orb into account. When accounting for the Life Orb, you're looking at destructive amounts of power.

Fighting types are good team-mates for Porygon-Z, to remove the bulky Normal type walls of UU, such as Snorlax, and yes, even young brother Porygon2, who are both capable of taking your Hidden Power Fighting and cripple you with Body Slam or Thunder Wave respectively, ending your chances at sweeping. Mienshao or Heracross make good partners, as Meinshao's Regenerator allows it to keep healing after it leaves the field via U-Turn, while Heracross can take status attacks if needed and fire back more powerful moves courtesy of Guts.

I'll say it here, but it applies to every single set: Porygon-Z loves entry hazard support. Stealth Rock and Spikes are wonderful for turning 2HKOs into 1HKOs and even some bulkier walls in UU will be 2HKOd after having to take 37% from Stealth Rock and 3 layers of Spikes. Toxic Spikes are also incredibly useful to Porygon-Z, as they cripple the special walls that would otherwise come in and laugh Porygon-Z away. While they'll still do that initially, they'll be forced to recover their health often and not stay in play for too long, giving you more opportunities to smack them around as they struggle against the Poison.

What Is This Cloth You Humans Wear?
Porygon-Z@ Choice Scarf
Adaptability
Timid nature (+Speed, -Attack) / Modest nature (+Sp. Attack, -Attack)
EVs: 252 Speed / 252 Sp. Attack / 4 HP
Tri-Attack
Dark Pulse
Hidden Power Fighting
Trick / Thunderbolt

Equipping Porygon-Z with a Choice Scarf turns it into an immediately fast and powerful revenge killer, capable of sweeping weakened teams that lack some of Porygon-Z's counters. Tri-Attack returns as the STAB of choice, providing incredible power equivalent to using a base 160 power move, due to Adaptability, which is used as this type of set doesn't have the luxury of switching between moves, and needs Tri-Attack to be consistently powerful no matter the situation. Dark Pulse and Hidden Power Fighting are back for coverage, and expect this to be a running theme on all of Porygon-Z's sets, as they're invaluable for hitting the types that resist your STAB. Using them here requires more prediction sometimes, so think carefully about what your opponent may do, and what you stand to risk by any given move selection.

Trick is a nice tool for crippling Porygon-Z's usual counters, such as Snorlax, Porygon2, and Umbreon, removing them of their ability to effectively wall you, and in the case of Porygon2, robbing it of Eviolite, making any attacks against it even more powerful, a welcome change from how bulky it would be otherwise. Thunderbolt can be used, however, for hitting bulky Water types and Flying types. While this extra coverage may sound appealing, it's only doing slightly more than your boosted Tri-Attack, so think carefully about why you're using it, and if it these types can't be better covered by another Pokemon on your team.

I'm Sorry, Dave, I can't Let You Do That
Porygon-Z@ Choice Specs
Adaptability
Modest nature (+Sp. Attack, -Attack)
EVs: 252 Sp. Attack / 252 Speed / 4 HP
Tri-Attack
Dark Pulse
Hidden Power Fighting
Trick

Say hello to one of the most powerful special attackers in the game. Porygon-Z's immediate power granted by Choice Specs is so incredible that it is capable of 2HKOing every single special wall in UU (though Umbreon requires you to have Stealth Rock on the field to get the 2HKO) with Tri-Attack boosted by Adaptability. This is especially frightening if you've also got Toxic Spikes setup on the opponent's side of the field, as they may be temped to immediately switch their special wall back out when realizing you're running a Specs set, and Poisoning their special wall will either ruin it entirely and make it not worth saving, or force it to heal with a status-removing move the next time it switches in, giving you another opportunity to hammer away at it. Dark Pulse and Hidden Power Fighting give Porygon-Z a real opportunity of eliminating the Ghost, Steel or Rock types that switch in hoping to take Tri-Attack, comfortably 1-2HKOing the most common Pokemon of these types in UU.

Trick again makes a wonderful move for crippling special walls if you'd rather play it safe late into the game, or for just cripple their special wall right away if you're not too keen on prediction and the opponent's team has many Pokemon that resist or are immune to Tri-Attack. Thunderbolt isn't a viable option on this set, as Tri-Attack already smashes the hell out of everything that isn't immune or resistant to it. Modest nature is chosen to give Porygon-Z the power to 2HKO the special walls in the tier, which Timid fails to accomplish. Timid can be used if you plan on being able to reliably setup Stealth Rock and 2-3 layers of Spikes, but this is a pretty difficult feat to accomplish in 100% of your matches, especially if the opponent packs Xatu to troll your entry hazards back at you.

The Program Is Learning... We're Doomed
Porygon-Z@ Life Orb
Adaptability
Timid nature (+Speed, -Attack)
EVs: 252 Speed / 252 Sp. Attack / 4 HP
Nasty Plot
Tri-Attack
Dark Pulse
Hidden Power Fighting

Nasty Plot Porygon-Z has power that frightens every single Pokemon in the game. After the boost, you're at 738 Sp. Attack. Add in Adaptability Tri-Attack, and you're disintigrating the entire tier. Dark Pulse and Hidden Power return for Ghost, Rock and Steel coverage, mowing these Pokemon down with your boosted attacks.

The real issue here is Porygon-Z's speed. It's not as much of an issue on previous sets, as Agility outspeeds the tier after use, Choice Scarf has immediate Speed and Choice Specs is mostly used for wall-breaking and would switch out of faster threats. But with this set attempting a boost that isn't Speed, you absolutely have to make sure the faster threats on your opponent's team are removed before attemping to boost up. Such Pokemon as Mienshao and Choice Scarf Heracross will immediately end your sweep and make Porygon-Z very sad, so know your opponent's Speed, know their threats, and use Porygon-Z's partners to eliminate them before it attempts to level the opponent completely with power that is nearly unrivaled.

In-Game Information

Being a member of the Porygon family, Porygon-Z is somewhat hard to obtain in-game, especially in casual runs, and therefore isn't a commonly used Pokemon. Take into consideration that by the time you can get it, you usually have a full party already, and you have to trade twice with specific items to evolve up to this form... it's usually more of a hassle than it's worth.

In Black2 and White2, Porygon is not available at all, and will require a trade from White Version's White Forest, provided you have Backpacker Herman in your White Forest. This is one instance where I would not recommend Dream World to aid you in obtaining a Pokemon for in-game, as Porygon-Z does not usually benefit at all from Analytic, and would rather have either of it's other abilities. I'd suggest finding someone online who has one, sending one from White, or sending one up from a previous generation. However, once you have one, here is the set I'd recommend:

Porygon-Z
Tri-Attack
Shadow Ball
Thunderbolt
Ice Beam

Yep, we've got colorful moves this time, but it's honestly only because breeding for Hidden Power Fighting with a power of 70 is unreasonable for an in-game Porygon-Z. Anyway, Tri-Attack makes up the STAB of choice, hitting hard while having a 20% chance of status, which is nice when it happens. Shadow Ball is chosen for hitting Ghost types simply because it's easier to obtain than Dark Pulse, which is a move tutor in Black2/White2. The difference in-game is very insignificant, as you won't have opponent's switching out a lot, but if you're curious about why Dark Pulse is used in competitive, here's the reason: Nothing is immune to it. While Fighting types resist it, unlike Shadow Ball, Normal types are completely immune to Ghost attacks, and in competitive battling, you'd rather deal out some damage, even if it's resisting, than none at all. Anyway, Thunderbolt and Ice Beam provide nearly un-resisted coverage that hits many Pokemon Super-Effectively.

I don't usually discuss abilities for in-game Pokemon, but this time I feel it's slightly more important to do so, so that people know which is better. Download is always better than Adaptability ONLY if you get the Sp. Attack boost. When you don't (when the opponent's Defense stat is lower than their Sp. Defense, you get an ATTACK boost, and vise-versa), you have a completely useless ability. It is for this reason that I fully recommend Adaptability, as it turns Tri-Attack into a base 160 power move, and hits harder than basically all of your other moves unless the opponent is immune to Tri-Attack, or has a weakness to Thunderbolt or Ice Beam.

My Thoughts

Whew... that was a lot of text to write. Anyway, I really don't know how I feel about Porygon-Z. It's a powerhouse, for sure, but I... don't really care for the design too much. I am much more partial to Porygon2 in terms of looks, as it's just so darn adorable. I don't hate Porygon-Z, I just feel it lingers in the shadows of it's younger evolutionary brother in overall terms of usefulness. It would be a mistake to forget about it completely, though, as it has developed the human emotion of bitterness, and it might just have a Nasty Plot to get rid of you... and with a boost to Special Attack that high, there won't be much you can do to stop it.

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COMMENTS
NTN on Sun 28 Jul 2013 22:03:02 UTC.
Hmm... I'm glad our opinions differ.

I was looking for Pokémon with both Substitute and Pain Split, and I found that Porygon-Z had just the right moves. I have a set which Porygon-Z can hide behind, while it plays around with its own HP, and I'd like you to judge it:

Porygon-Z@ Life Orb
Adaptability
Modest nature (+SpAtk, -Atk)
EVs: 252Speed/252Sp.Atk/4HP
Substitute
Pain Split
Tri Attack/Hyper Beam
Shadow Ball/Nasty Plot

Substitute is Porygon-Z's trench, in which it can gear up, rest, strike, and reload. Within this wall, the Pokémon can power itself up with Nasty Plot, or it can break down the opponent's special stats in the opposite direction, through its Special Defense, with Shadow Ball. Although there is a risky 20% chance of Shadow Ball's added effect kicking in, it's slashed ahead of Nasty Plot since Ghost-type coverage is needed. Porygon-Z has a fine Special Attack and is enough of a killer in battle as is, so Nasty Plot is secondary to Shadow Ball and I'd much rather go with that. Adaptability with Life Orb is a solid boost, powering up Shadow Ball one-way since Porygon-Z doesn't get STAB from it. Shadow Ball is more of a quick hit. Tri Attack, on the other hand, is a move with STAB (and a status or two), so it's backed up by both its ability and item. But then there's Hyper Beam. The move might not last on its own, but it should fit into Substitute's duration, which is why I'd be patient with it taking up another turn. Hyper Beam is a STAB move, it's backed up by Life Orb, and it's a killer, with high base power, decent accuracy, Substitute coverage, and its dependence on Special Attack, falling in favor of Porygon-Z's highlighted stat. Its low PP is excused since it can get the job done fast, it takes up enough turns all in all, and it's virtually regarded as an OHKO move here in most cases, so the move won't be missed. And before Substitute is depleted, we top it off with Pain Split to throw our loss of HP onto the foe, if Hyper Beam misses or you have less HP than the foe, or something to use to pass the turn. Hyper Beam's recharge can be helpful to pass a turn without Life Orb taking more of your HP, and the move can fit your entire set perfectly within Substitute's duration. This set is defensive and offensive. Porygon-Z is in its own little trench, attacking its enemies behind the lines.

Thoughts: Could Pain Split have been slashed with Nasty Plot? Porygon-Z is a powerhouse already, and Pain Split cleans up Substitute's mess. I'm not to keen on Substitute's duration, but from how the move has handled me, I'm guessing it's durable just as I need it.


Questions? Criticisms? Weaknesses? Please let me know. I haven't tried out this set yet, and I would like to see what common setups shatter this one.
NTN on Sun 28 Jul 2013 22:05:13 UTC.
I'm sure "solid" wasn't exactly what I meant about Shadow Ball's single power boost.
NTN on Sun 28 Jul 2013 22:21:54 UTC.
About your sets though, there's something I don't quite get. Fighting has no effect on Ghost at all, but you're saying it's super effective against it.
Richard and Blaziken on Sun 28 Jul 2013 23:53:32 UTC.
No, I'm saying Dark and Fighting together cover Ghost (Dark), Rock and Steel (Fighting).

As for the P-Z set, Sub is viable, but Pain Split on P-Z is not in competitive. This is because P-Z has pretty bad HP and defenses, and this is really just wasting a turn he could be using to do something else. Further, you're walled by Steel types with this set. If you're going to use Sub, you'll still want your core of Tri-Attack, Dark Pulse and Hidden Power Fighting for the coverage necessary. Sub just isn't a wonderful option because Porygon-Z loves taking one turn to setup a boost and going for a sweep, or hitting fast or hard immediately with Choice items.

Sub takes 25% of your health and uses that as a buffer. It is /extremely/ easy to do 25% to Porygon-Z, and as you use Substitute, the opponent can easily just keep hitting you until you're forced to Pain Split, at which point they'll more than likely knock you out. SubSplit is a viable option on other Pokemon, but not on a Pokemon like Porygon-Z, who has pretty meager defenses and would rather be launching a full-on offensive.
NTN on Mon 29 Jul 2013 02:11:51 UTC.
Hmm... I forgot to take into account Porygon-Z's awful defenses. Well, this model goes in the trash.