The Pokémon Quiz That Trains You to Name All 1025
Every wrong answer becomes your next lesson
Pokédrill is a memory trainer for the full National Dex — all 1025 Pokémon across 9 generations. Tap a sprite, type the name, and every miss gets queued for review so you actually improve.
A Pokémon Quiz That Remembers Your Mistakes
Most Pokémon quizzes test you once and move on. Pokédrill works differently: every Pokémon you miss gets logged and served back to you until you stop missing it. Forget Brionne three sessions in a row? It will keep appearing until you recognize that mid-stage seal without hesitation.
The mistake notebook tracks your weakest Pokémon across every session. Instead of grinding the same random pool, you spend more time on Wo-Chien and Klang — the ones the community forgets most — and less time on Charizard.
Five Ways to Quiz Yourself on Every Pokémon
Recognition is multi-sensory, and so is training. Pokédrill offers five distinct modes so you can approach the National Dex from every angle.
Switching modes is the fastest way to break a plateau. If you can name every Gen 4 sprite cold but freeze on a Sinnoh silhouette, you have identified exactly where to drill next.
- Sprite: The classic front-facing Pokémon sprite. Type the name to confirm.
- Silhouette: Black outline only — the original "Who's That Pokémon?" challenge, applied to all 1025.
- Cry: Audio only. Can you identify Kricketune from its cry alone?
- Type: Given a type combination, name a matching Pokémon.
- Pokédex Entry: A real Pokédex description from any generation — no image, just text.
Train by Generation, Type, or Full Rotation
Starting with Gen 1's 151 Pokémon before adding Johto's 100 is the most reliable path to full-dex fluency. Each generation introduces naming patterns — the "Tapu" quartet in Gen 7, the hyphenated Treasures of Ruin in Gen 9 — that are far easier to absorb in isolation before mixing them with 900 other sprites.
Once you're comfortable with individual generations, the continuous rotation pulls from the entire Pokédex and surfaces your weakest entries first. That's where the real interference training happens: telling Vanillish from Vanilluxe, or knowing whether the silhouette in front of you is Tornadus or Thundurus.
See Which Pokémon the Community Forgets Most
Pokédrill's community error-rate leaderboard aggregates miss data across all users to show which Pokémon trip people up most often. Wo-Chien, Tapu Bulu, Virizion, Klang, Enamorus — these are the Pokémon that look vaguely familiar but whose names vanish the moment a sprite appears on screen.
The leaderboard isn't about speed or streak length. It ranks by accuracy on genuinely hard material, which makes it a more honest measure of Pokédex knowledge than finishing a timed quiz in two minutes by guessing the legendaries first.
No Account Required, No Ads, Works on Mobile
Pokédrill runs in any browser without a login. Your progress and mistake notebook are stored locally so they persist across sessions on the same device. There are no ads interrupting a drill set — a frustration that surfaces repeatedly in discussions about other Pokémon quiz sites.
Spelling is forgiving by design. The answer checker uses Levenshtein distance, so a one-character typo on Cofagrigus or Wobbuffet won't count against you. Your memory is being tested, not your keyboard accuracy.
The Hardest Pokémon to Name — and Why They're Hard
The toughest Pokémon to recall aren't always the most obscure. The real difficulty comes from intra-group blur: when four Pokémon share a naming prefix — Tapu Koko, Tapu Lele, Tapu Bulu, Tapu Fini — or a design language, the brain stores them as a fuzzy cluster rather than four distinct entries. Mid-stage starters like Quilladin and Brionne suffer from a different problem: their final evolutions (Chesnaught, Primarina) dominate memory, leaving the middle forms nearly invisible.
Gen 5 adds another layer. The Klink line — Klink, Klang, Klinklang — are three near-identical Steel-type gears. Knowing "the gear Pokémon" exists doesn't help you distinguish Klang from Klinklang when the sprite appears. That's exactly the kind of intra-line confusion Pokédrill's weakness-first selection is built to address.
How Pokédrill Compares to a Standard Pokémon Quiz
A standard Pokémon quiz — the kind on JetPunk or Sporcle — tests recall once and reports a score. That format is fine for measuring existing knowledge, but it doesn't build new knowledge. Missing Lumineon on a timed quiz doesn't mean you'll recognize Lumineon next week; it means you'll miss it again.
Pokédrill is designed around the gap between those two experiences. The quiz surface looks familiar: see a sprite, type a name. But underneath, misses feed into a review queue that prioritizes your weakest Pokémon in future sessions. The goal isn't a high score today — it's a complete Pokédex memory over time.