Pokédex Quiz: Name the Pokémon from Its Entry
Real Pokédex entries, no hints, pure recall
Each round shows you an authentic Pokédex entry pulled straight from the games. Your job is to name the Pokémon it describes. Some entries are unmistakable; others could fit a dozen species — and that gap is exactly what makes this quiz worth playing.
How the Pokédex Quiz Works
Each question presents a single Pokédex entry drawn from the mainline games, covering all 1025 Pokémon across nine generations. Read the flavor text, type the Pokémon's name, and move on. Spelling is forgiving — a one-character typo won't cost you an answer — because the point is whether you recognized the Pokémon, not whether you can type 'Cofagrigus' under pressure.
Every entry you miss gets logged. The next time you drill, those Pokémon surface earlier than the rest. Over time the quiz reshapes itself around your actual weak spots rather than cycling through the full Pokédex at random.
Pokédex Entries That Are Dead Giveaways
Some flavor text is so specific it almost answers itself. Cubone's entries describe a small Pokémon that wears the skull of its deceased mother and cries at night — you are not confusing that with Marowak. Mimikyu hides its true form beneath a hand-drawn Pikachu costume because it wants to be loved, a detail so memorable that the Pokémon won third place in the official 2020 Pokémon of the Year poll with 99,077 votes. Drowzee's entries mention it feeding on the dreams of sleeping children, a detail disturbing enough that nobody forgets which Pokémon it belongs to.
Entries like these reward players who actually read the Pokédex rather than skipping past flavor text during playthroughs. If you spent time in Unova reading item descriptions and cave text, Foongus's entry — 'it lures people in with its Poké Ball pattern, then releases poison spores' — will feel like a free point.
Entries That Are Surprisingly Hard to Place
Generic descriptions of 'a Pokémon that lives in mountainous regions and rarely shows itself to humans' could plausibly belong to dozens of species. Mid-evolution Pokémon are especially brutal here: Brionne, Quilladin, and Klang have entries that describe their behavior without leaning on any visual hook, so if you have not memorized their names, the text gives you almost nothing to grab onto.
Legendary quartets cause the same problem from a different angle. The Treasures of Ruin — Wo-Chien, Chien-Pao, Ting-Lu, and Chi-Yu — all share a Dark typing and a mythology rooted in Chinese legend. Their entries are thematically related, which means recognizing 'a Pokémon born from grudge and malice sealed inside ancient tablets' still leaves you guessing whether the answer is Wo-Chien or Ting-Lu. That kind of intra-group blur is exactly why Wo-Chien ranks among the ten hardest Pokémon to recall by name.
Ten Pokémon Hardest to Identify from Their Entries
Community error-rate data consistently surfaces the same names at the top of the miss list. Memorizing these ten will move your score more than grinding the easy ones twice.
- Wo-Chien: Lowest stat total of the Treasures of Ruin and the least-seen in competitive play — its entry rarely sticks without deliberate study.
- Tapu Bulu: Tapu Koko anchored Ash's Sun and Moon arc; Tapu Lele and Tapu Fini have stronger competitive identities. Tapu Bulu's entry blends in with the others.
- Virizion: The Swords of Justice member with the weakest competitive footprint and no defining promotional moment in Gen 5 — its Grass/Fighting entry reads like several other elegant quadrupeds.
- Vanillish: Vanilluxe is notorious, Vanillite is the cute base form. Vanillish is the overlooked middle stage whose entry describes an ice-cone Pokémon without any distinguishing hook.
- Klang: Klink and Klinklang both have visual anchors (two gears, a gear with a ring). Klang's entry describes a slightly larger gear arrangement that most players picture as one of the others.
- Brionne: Popplio is beloved and Primarina is striking, but Brionne's entry describes a dancing seal in a way that could fit several performance-themed Pokémon.
- Quilladin: Chespin and Chesnaught have distinctive silhouettes. Quilladin's entry describes a round, spiky creature whose design was openly criticized in the community, making the name itself slippery.
- Stantler: A single-stage Normal-type for roughly 23 years before Legends: Arceus introduced Wyrdeer. Its entry about hypnotic antler orbs is memorable once you know it — but most players never needed to learn it.
- Enamorus: Added in Legends: Arceus rather than a mainline title, Enamorus has the smallest install-base exposure of the Forces of Nature. Its entry about love and spring winds is easy to mix up with Tornadus.
- Lumineon: Finneon and Lumineon rank among the most-forgotten Sinnoh Pokémon. Lumineon's deep-sea butterfly-fish entry describes behavior that could belong to any number of Water-types.
Why Pokédex Entry Mode Tests Different Memory Than Sprites
Recognizing a sprite draws on visual memory — color palette, silhouette, proportions. Identifying a Pokémon from its Pokédex entry draws on semantic memory: facts, lore, type associations, and whatever story you attached to the Pokémon when you first encountered it. Most players have stronger visual memory for Pokémon than semantic memory, which is why switching to entry mode reliably exposes gaps that sprite mode never finds.
Pairing both modes across a study session is more effective than drilling either one alone. After this quiz surfaces a Pokémon whose entry you could not place, the silhouette quiz will let you lock in the visual connection. That cross-modal reinforcement is why Pokédrill offers five distinct training modes rather than one.
What the Community Error Rates Show
Pokédrill tracks which Pokémon get answered incorrectly most often across all players, and the entry-mode leaderboard is different from the sprite-mode leaderboard in instructive ways. Pokémon with mocked or controversial designs — Garbodor, Trubbish, Klinklang — are actually recalled more reliably from entries than from sprites, because the notoriety creates a memory hook. The hardest Pokémon in entry mode tend to be the quietly forgettable ones: mid-stages of popular lines, lesser-seen members of legendary groups, and regional forms from Legends: Arceus, which reached 14.83 million units sold versus Scarlet and Violet's 26.79 million.
Checking the leaderboard before a study session lets you prioritize the Pokémon the entire community misses rather than just the ones you personally blank on. That combination — your personal miss log plus community error rates — gives a more complete picture of where your Pokédex knowledge has gaps.
Tips for Improving Your Pokédex Entry Score
Pokémon grouped into trios or quartets deserve dedicated attention because their entries share thematic language. Running a Generation 7 drill focused only on the Tapus, or a Generation 9 session on the Treasures of Ruin, forces your memory to distinguish between entries that are intentionally similar in tone. The same approach works for the Forces of Nature — Tornadus, Thundurus, Landorus, and Enamorus all have genie-inspired entries, and practicing them as a group is faster than encountering them randomly.
For spelling, the quiz accepts one-character differences, but knowing the tricky names in advance removes that margin of error entirely. Farfetch'd and Sirfetch'd both contain an apostrophe. Flabébé carries two acute accents. Ho-Oh has a hyphen and two repeated vowels. Type: Null includes a colon. None of those details show up in the flavor text, so the entry quiz is actually a forgiving place to practice spelling without being penalized for missing punctuation.