Pokémon by Generation: All 9 Gens Explained

Every generation profiled, every species quiz-ready

From Kanto's 151 monochromatic Game Boy sprites to Paldea's 1025th milestone, this page maps all nine Pokémon generations by region, release year, species count, and the design logic that defines each roster — with direct links to generation-specific memory drills.

How Pokémon generations work

Each generation corresponds to a new set of mainline games, a new region, and a new block of Pokédex entries. Generation 1 runs from #001 Bulbasaur to #151 Mew; Generation 9 ends at #1025 Pecharunt, as of Scarlet and Violet including DLC. The count per generation ranges from 72 (Kalos, Gen 6) to 156 (Unova, Gen 5), meaning no two generations place the same memory load on a player trying to learn the full roster.

Generational boundaries also define design philosophy. Kanto names lean on literal portmanteaus — Squirtle from 'squirt' and 'turtle', Psyduck from 'psychic' and 'duck' — while Generation 9 breaks decades of single-word convention entirely with two-word Paradox Pokémon names like Iron Valiant and Roaring Moon. Knowing these patterns helps when you're staring at a silhouette and trying to recall whether a fish belongs to Johto or Hoenn.

All 9 Pokémon generations at a glance

The table below gives the headline figures for each generation. Species counts reflect the original new entries introduced per generation, not the regional or National Pokédex totals for those games.

Which generation is hardest to memorize?

Generation 5 is the most demanding by raw count: 156 entirely new designs with no older anchors available during the main campaign. A player relying on Zubat or Geodude as mental landmarks will find none of them in Unova until post-game. Generation 2 is arguably harder per-species in a different way — many Johto Pokémon are gated behind obscure held-item trades or post-game Kanto routes, so players simply never encounter them enough to form a memory.

Generation 6, despite having the fewest new entries, poses a subtler challenge: because Mega Evolutions dominated player attention in Kalos, the 72 native species received less mental airtime. Carbink, Binacle, and Spritzee consistently show up in community lists of Pokémon players are surprised to learn are Gen 6 originals rather than earlier entries.

Design language shifts across generations

The naming conventions alone tell you a lot about each generation's design priorities. Gen 1 favored short, phonetically transparent portmanteaus aimed at children learning to read — Clefairy, Squirtle, Psyduck. Gen 4 pushed toward Latinate mythology: Arceus derives from 'arch-' and 'deus', Garchomp from 'gargantuan' and 'chomp'. Gen 5 went architectural and historical — Cofagrigus fuses 'sarcophagus' and 'egregious', Chandelure blends 'chandelier' and 'allure'. Gen 6 leaned into French culture: Greninja combines the French _grenouille_ (frog) with 'ninja'.

These shifts matter for memorization because names encode design logic. If you know Hoenn favored marine biology, 'Relicanth' resolves quickly as a fossil fish. If you know Galar was built around British culture, Corviknight ('corvid' plus 'knight') slots into place. Pokédrill's generation-specific quiz modes let you practice within one design vocabulary at a time, which builds recall faster than jumping across all nine at once.

The pokémon by generation quiz pages

Each generation has its own dedicated drill on Pokédrill, configured to show only the species introduced in that generation. You can practice by sprite, silhouette, cry, type tile, or Pokédex entry. Wrong answers get added to your mistake notebook and resurface in future rounds — so if Finneon keeps slipping past you, it will keep appearing until it sticks.

Spelling tolerance is set to Levenshtein distance 1, meaning a single transposed letter ('Qwilfish' typed as 'Quilfish') won't cost you the answer. The quiz works on mobile, needs no account, and carries no ads. Start with the generation you know best to calibrate your baseline, then use the error-rate leaderboard to see which species trip up everyone else.

Community data: which Pokémon does everyone forget

Pokédrill's community error-rate leaderboard surfaces the Pokémon that produce the most wrong answers across all users. The pattern aligns closely with what fan communities on Reddit and Bulbapedia have documented for years. Middle-stage evolutions with minimal visual distinction — Klang between Klink and Klinklang, Brionne between Popplio and Primarina — produce some of the highest miss rates. Single-stage Pokémon without evolutionary pressure, like Lumineon, Stantler (before Legends: Arceus gave it an evolution), and Chimecho, cluster at the difficult end regardless of generation.

Paradox Pokémon and the Treasures of Ruin quartet from Generation 9 — Wo-Chien, Chien-Pao, Ting-Lu, and Chi-Yu — add a new category of difficulty: multi-word names that share a structural pattern and are easy to mix up with each other. If you are working toward a clean full-Pokédex run, the generation hub pages are the fastest way to isolate and eliminate those blind spots one generation at a time.

Frequently asked questions

How many Pokémon generations are there?
There are 9 main generations as of Pokémon Scarlet and Violet including the Teal Mask and Indigo Disk DLC. Each generation is tied to a new region and a new block of National Pokédex entries, running from Generation 1 (Kanto, 1996) through Generation 9 (Paldea, 2022).
How many Pokémon are there in total across all generations?
There are 1025 Pokémon in the National Pokédex as of Scarlet and Violet plus DLC, ending at #1025 Pecharunt. This includes all forms counted as separate species but does not count regional variants like Alolan or Hisuian forms as separate Pokédex entries.
Which generation has the most Pokémon?
Generation 5 (Unova) introduced the most Pokémon of any single generation, adding 156 new species ranging from #494 Victini to #649 Genesect. It also uniquely banned older Pokémon from the main campaign, making it the generation with the most demanding standalone roster to learn.
Which generation has the fewest Pokémon?
Generation 6 (Kalos) introduced the fewest new species, adding only 72 Pokémon from #650 Chespin to #721 Volcanion. The small count reflects the enormous development cost of converting hundreds of older Pokémon models into full 3D for the Nintendo 3DS hardware.
What region corresponds to each Pokémon generation?
Gen 1 is Kanto, Gen 2 is Johto, Gen 3 is Hoenn, Gen 4 is Sinnoh, Gen 5 is Unova, Gen 6 is Kalos, Gen 7 is Alola, Gen 8 is Galar, and Gen 9 is Paldea. Each region draws from a real-world geographic inspiration, ranging from Japan (Kanto, Johto, Sinnoh) to France (Kalos), Hawaii (Alola), the UK (Galar), and Spain (Paldea).
Which generation is hardest to remember in a quiz?
Generation 5 (Unova) is hardest by volume, with 156 unique designs and no older anchor Pokémon during the main campaign. Generation 2 (Johto) is arguably harder per-species, since many Johto Pokémon are locked behind item trades or post-game routes, meaning players encounter them too rarely to form strong memories.
Does the Pokédrill quiz let you practice one generation at a time?
Yes. Each generation has its own dedicated quiz page filtered to show only the species introduced in that generation. You can drill Generation 1's 151 Kanto Pokémon separately from Generation 9's 120 Paldea entries, and wrong answers are tracked in a mistake notebook that resurfaces those specific species in future rounds.
What is the first Pokémon of each generation?
The first entry for each generation is: Gen 1 — Bulbasaur (#001), Gen 2 — Chikorita (#152), Gen 3 — Treecko (#252), Gen 4 — Turtwig (#387), Gen 5 — Victini (#494), Gen 6 — Chespin (#650), Gen 7 — Rowlet (#722), Gen 8 — Grookey (#810), Gen 9 — Sprigatito (#906).
Which generation introduced Mega Evolution?
Mega Evolution was introduced in Generation 6, debuting in Pokémon X and Y (2013) set in the Kalos region. It allowed certain Pokémon to temporarily transform during battle, and is widely regarded by fan communities as one of the most popular battle mechanics in the franchise's history.
Why do some generations feel harder to memorize than others?
Several factors drive memory difficulty: species count, how often you encounter a Pokémon during normal gameplay, whether it belongs to an evolutionary line, and how distinctive its name and design are. Middle-stage evolutions like Klang or Brionne, and single-stage obscurities like Lumineon or Chimecho, consistently produce the highest miss rates in quiz data because they lack the reinforcement anchors that make starter evolutions and version mascots unforgettable.