For Pokémon GO information on this species, see the game's section. |
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This article is about the species. For a specific instance of this species, see Weepinbell (disambiguation). |
Weepinbell
Flycatcher Pokémon |
ウツドン
Utsudon |
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#070 |
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Images on the Bulbagarden Archives |
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Type
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Abilities
Chlorophyll |
Gluttony
Hidden Ability |
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Gender ratio
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Catch rate
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Breeding
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Height
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Weight
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Base experience yield
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Leveling rate
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EV yield
Total: 2 |
0
HP |
2
Atk |
0
Def |
0
Sp.Atk |
0
Sp.Def |
0
Speed |
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Shape
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Footprint
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Pokédex color
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Base friendship
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External Links
- On Smogon Pokédex:
- Generation I
- Generation II
- Generation III
- Generation IV
- Generation V
- Generation VI
- Generation VII
- Artwork on Bulbagarden Archives
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Weepinbell (Japanese: ウツドン Utsudon) is a dual-type Grass/Poison Pokémon introduced in Generation I.
It evolves from Bellsprout starting at level 21 and evolves into Victreebel when exposed to a Leaf Stone.
Biology
Weepinbell is a plant Pokémon with a yellow, bell-shaped body. Above Weepinbell's circular eyes are three small green spots and a small, brown hook-shaped stem. It has wide, gaping mouth with pink lips. On each side of its body is a large, green leaf. Weepinbell camouflages itself as a plant in the forest whilst awaiting an unwary victim. When its prey draws near it sprays poison powder to immobilize the target before melting it with its internal acids. It oozes a neutralizing fluid that prevents these internal acids from melting its own body. It will also slice its prey too large to consume into pieces with its razor-sharp leaves. Weepinbell live in temperate forests and jungles where it hangs from tree branches by its stem to sleep. If it moves around during sleep, Weepinbell may slip and awaken to find itself on the ground.
In the anime
Major appearances
James's Weepinbell
Throughout the original series, James had two separate Weepinbell, both of which evolved into Victreebel.
Other
In Pokémon Scent-sation!, Erika sent out a Weepinbell during her Gym battle against Ash. It battled Charmander but was defeated.
In The Green, Green Grass Types of Home!, Ramos used a Weepinbell in a Gym battle against Ash. It easily defeated Fletchinder and Hawlucha despite being at a type disadvantage against both. However, it lost to Frogadier despite having a type advantage.
Minor appearances
In The School of Hard Knocks, Joe used a Weepinbell during a battle against Misty's Starmie and lost despite it having a type advantage.
In Bulbasaur and the Hidden Village, a Weepinbell was in Melanie's care. It reappeared in a flashback in Bulbasaur... the Ambassador!.
A Weepinbell appeared in Battle Aboard the St. Anne.
In Pokémon Scent-sation!, a Weepinbell was in the Celadon Gym, separate from the one Erika kept as one of her battling Pokémon.
In Pokémon Fashion Flash, two Weepinbell were on Scissor Street.
In A Chansey Operation, an injured Weepinbell was brought to the clinic after getting a Voltorb stuck in its mouth.
A Weepinbell appeared in The Breeding Center Secret.
In Pikachu's Vacation, a Weepinbell was at the Pokémon Theme Park.
A Valencia Island variant of Weepinbell appeared in Poké Ball Peril.
In The Power of One, a Weepinbell sensed the disturbance caused by Lawrence III.
A wild Weepinbell appeared in Pikachu's Rescue Adventure.
In Beauty and the Breeder, a Pokémon Breeder's Weepinbell participated in a Pokémon breeding competition.
In The Grass Route, a Trainer's Weepinbell competed in the Grass Tournament.
In Throwing in the Noctowl, two Weepinbell were living at Wings Alexander's barn.
In the banned episode EP250, a Weepinbell lived in a forest outside the Ice Path.
In Gonna Rule The School!, the Pokémon Trainers' School lent a Weepinbell to the school's underage students for use in lessons.
In I Feel Skitty!, two Weepinbell lived in Eliza's garden.
In Grass Hysteria!, two Weepinbell lived at the Forbidden Forest.
In A Hurdle for Squirtle, a Coordinator's Weepinbell competed in the Saffron City Pokémon Contest.
In a flashback in Sweet Baby James, a Weepinbell was being looked after by Nanny and Pop-Pop.
In All Dressed Up With Somewhere To Go!, a Weepinbell was dressed up as a Sunkern for the Pokémon Dress-Up Contest.
A Weepinbell appeared in a flashback or a fantasy in The Forest Champion!.
A Trainer's Weepinbell appeared in Thawing an Icy Panic! and Under the Pledging Tree!. In the latter episode, it attended the Coumarine City Festival.
A Weepinbell appeared in A Fashionable Battle!.
A Weepinbell appeared in I Choose You!.
In Alola, Kanto!, a Weepinbell and a Victreebel got into a fight with some Gloom and a Vileplume, which Bulbasaur had to break up.
Three Trainers' Weepinbell appeared in A Little Rocket R & R!. One was at the market, while another was captured by the Matori Matrix but later freed by Ash and his friends.
Pokédex entries
Entry |
XY058 |
Weepinbell |
Serena's Pokédex |
Weepinbell, the Flycatcher Pokémon. Weepinbell looks like a plant and covers opponents with a poisonous powder in order to catch them. |
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In the manga
Weepinbell in
Pokémon Adventures
Magical Pokémon Journey
In Pikachu and Clefairy's Heroic Tales, Prince Sudowoodo of the Stone Kingdom has a group of Weepinbell which he uses as henchmen. He commands these Weepinbell to kidnap a Bellossom, who he intends to marry. However, they are stopped by Pikachu and Clefairy.
Pokémon Adventures
In A Hollow Victreebel, Red got dragged into an evolutionary ceremony by a wild Victreebel to serve as food in the Kanto Safari Zone. With the help of Pidgebot 1 that was assigned to him, and a few good items he carried around, the Weepinbell that were about to eat him for their evolution were distracted, and he was able to flee. By morning, Red had caught multiple Safari Zone Pokémon including several Weepinbell.
Multiple Weepinbell appeared in Bellsprout Rout. They were seen in Gold's imagination when he asked one of the monks if the third floor had Weepinbell there.
A Weepinbell appeared in The Last Battle XIII as one of the Pokémon sent to participate in the fight in Ilex Forest.
Sebastian, Platinum's resident butler, has a Weepinbell that he uses to drive burglars out of the Berlitz mansion. When Diamond accidentally sneaked in thinking that he walked into a large park, all of the Pokémon accomplished was getting his clothes wet, though it proved to be an adept battler. It first appeared in Well Met, Weepinbell.
A Weepinbell appeared in Pinsir Changes.
Pokémon Gold & Silver: The Golden Boys
A Trainer's Weepinbell appeared in Let's Fight For The Future!!.
Pokémon Gotta Catch 'Em All
A Weepinbell appeared in The Raining Crystal Ball.
A Weepinbell appeared in GDZ23.
A Weepinbell appeared in GDZ34.
Pokémon Pocket Monsters
A Weepinbell appeared in Fierce Competition at the Pokémon Baseball Tournament!, where it was one of the Pokémon that took part in a baseball match.
A Weepinbell appeared in The Thrill of a Perfect Score, Big Rampage at the Amusement Park!.
A Weepinbell appeared in Demanding Tests at the Pokémon School!.
Pokémon Zensho
A Weepinbell appeared in PZ05, under the ownership of a Gym Trainer at Celadon Gym.
In the TCG
- Main article: Weepinbell (TCG)
Game data
Pokédex entries
Generation I |
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Kanto
#070 |
Red |
It spits out PoisonPowder to immobilize the enemy and then finishes it with a spray of Acid. |
Blue |
Yellow |
When hungry, it swallows anything that moves. Its hapless prey is melted inside by strong acids. |
Stadium |
Armed with razor-sharp leaves, it uses toxic pollen to immobilize its enemy and melts the helpless foe with Acid. |
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Generation II |
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Johto
#065 |
Gold |
Even though it is filled with acid, it does not melt because it also oozes a neutralizing fluid. |
Silver |
If its prey is bigger than its mouth, it slices up the victim with sharp leaves, then eats every morsel. |
Crystal |
When its hungry, it swings its razor-sharp leaves, slicing up any unlucky object nearby for food. |
Stadium 2 |
Even though it is filled with acid, it does not melt because it also oozes a neutralizing fluid. |
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Generation III |
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Hoenn
#— |
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Kanto
#070 |
Ruby |
Weepinbell has a large hook on its rear end. At night, the Pokémon hooks on to a tree branch and goes to sleep. If it moves around in its sleep, it may wake up to find itself on the ground. |
Sapphire |
Emerald |
At night, a Weepinbell hangs on to a tree branch with its hooked rear and sleeps. If it moves around in its sleep, it may wake up to find itself on the ground. |
FireRed |
The leafy parts act as cutters for slashing foes. It spits a fluid that dissolves everything. |
LeafGreen |
It spits out poisonpowder to immobilize the enemy and then finishes it with a spray of acid. |
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Generation IV |
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Sinnoh
#— |
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Johto
#065 |
Diamond |
A Pokémon that appears to be a plant. It captures unwary prey by dousing them with a toxic powder. |
Pearl |
Platinum |
HeartGold |
Even though it is filled with acid, it does not melt because it also oozes a protective fluid. |
SoulSilver |
If its prey is bigger than its mouth, it slices up the victim with sharp leaves, then eats every morsel. |
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Generation V |
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Unova
#— |
Black |
A Pokémon that appears to be a plant. It captures unwary prey by dousing them with a toxic powder. |
White |
Black 2 |
A Pokémon that appears to be a plant. It captures unwary prey by dousing them with a toxic powder. |
White 2 |
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Generation VI |
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Kalos
Mountain #027 |
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Hoenn
#— |
X |
The leafy parts act as cutters for slashing foes. It spits a fluid that dissolves everything. |
Y |
It spits out poisonpowder to immobilize the enemy and then finishes it with a spray of acid. |
Omega Ruby |
Weepinbell has a large hook on its rear end. At night, the Pokémon hooks on to a tree branch and goes to sleep. If it moves around in its sleep, it may wake up to find itself on the ground. |
Alpha Sapphire |
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Generation VII |
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Alola
#— |
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Kanto
#070 |
This Pokémon has no Pokédex entries in Sun, Moon, Ultra Sun, and Ultra Moon. |
Let's Go Pikachu |
When hungry, it swallows anything that moves. Its hapless prey is dissolved by strong acids. |
Let's Go Eevee |
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Generation VIII |
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Galar
#— |
This Pokémon has no Pokédex entries in Generation VIII. |
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Game locations
Generation I |
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Red |
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Blue |
Routes 12, 13, 14, and 15 |
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Blue (Japan) |
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Yellow |
Routes 12, 13, 14, and 15, Cerulean Cave |
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Generation III |
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Ruby |
Sapphire |
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Emerald |
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FireRed |
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LeafGreen |
Routes 12, 13, 14, and 15, Berry Forest, Bond Bridge, Cape Brink, Water Path |
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Colosseum |
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XD |
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Generation IV |
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Diamond |
Pearl |
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Platinum |
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HeartGold |
SoulSilver |
Routes 24, 25, and 44, Safari Zone |
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Pal Park |
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Pokéwalker |
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Generation V |
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Black |
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White |
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Black 2 |
White 2 |
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Generation VI |
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X |
Y |
Routes 14, 16, and 19 (Purple Flowers)
Route 19 (Yellow Flowers; Horde Encounter) |
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Omega Ruby |
Alpha Sapphire |
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Generation VII |
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Sun |
Moon |
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Ultra Sun |
Ultra Moon |
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Let's Go Pikachu |
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Let's Go Eevee |
Routes 12, 13, 14, 15 and 21 |
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In side games
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Generation II |
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This Pokémon is unavailable in Generation II side games. |
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Generation III |
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Trozei! |
Secret Storage 2, Mr. Who's Den |
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MD Red |
MD Blue |
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Ranger |
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Generation IV |
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MD Time |
MD Darkness |
Mystifying Forest (1F-13F), Mystery Jungle (1F-29F) |
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MD Sky |
Mystifying Forest (1F-13F), Sky Peak (1st Station Pass 1F - 6th Station Pass 3F), Mystery Jungle (1F-29F) |
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Rumble |
Windy Prairie (Normal Mode B & A) |
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MD Light |
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Generation V |
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Rumble Blast |
Treetops: Sun-Dappled Bank, Soothing Shore |
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Rumble U |
Chill Battle: Garden Keepers |
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Generation VI |
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Battle Trozei |
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Shuffle |
Nacht Carnival: Stage 504 |
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Rumble World |
Leafy Expanse: Lookout Tree (All Areas), Distortion Land: Breezy Grasslands (All Areas) |
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Generation VII |
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Rumble Rush |
Charizard Sea2019, Bulbasaur Sea, Charizard SeaFinal |
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Masters EX |
Sync Pair Scout (Ramos's), Evolve Scottie/Bettie's Bellsprout |
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Held items
Game |
Held Item(s) |
Red* |
Blue* |
Berry (100%) |
Yellow* |
Stats
Base stats
Stat |
Range |
At Lv. 50 |
At Lv. 100 |
HP:
65
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125 - 172 |
240 - 334 |
Attack:
90
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85 - 156 |
166 - 306 |
Defense:
50
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49 - 112 |
94 - 218 |
Sp. Atk:
85
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81 - 150 |
157 - 295 |
Sp. Def:
45
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45 - 106 |
85 - 207 |
Speed:
55
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54 - 117 |
103 - 229 |
Total:
390
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Other Pokémon with this total |
- Minimum stats are calculated with 0 EVs, IVs of 0, and (if applicable) a hindering nature.
- Maximum stats are calculated with 252 EVs, IVs of 31, and (if applicable) a helpful nature.
- This Pokémon's Special base stat in Generation I was 85.
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Pokéathlon stats
Type effectiveness
Under normal battle conditions in Generation VIII, this Pokémon is: |
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Notes: |
- In Generation I, the effectiveness of Bug-type moves is 4×.
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Learnset
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This Pokémon is unavailable within Generation VIII.
Click on the generation numbers above to see Weepinbell's learnsets from other generations. |
Side game data
Evolution
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Level 21
→ |
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Leaf Stone
→ |
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Sprites
Generation I |
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Red |
Blue |
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Yellow |
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Red |
Green |
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Front |
Back |
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Front |
Back |
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Front |
Back |
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Generation II |
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Gold |
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Silver |
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Crystal |
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Front |
Back |
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Front |
Back |
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Front |
Back |
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Generation III |
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Ruby |
Sapphire |
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Emerald |
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FireRed |
LeafGreen |
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Front |
Back |
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Front |
Back |
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Front |
Back |
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Generation IV |
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Diamond |
Pearl |
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Platinum |
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HeartGold |
SoulSilver |
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Front |
Back |
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Front |
Back |
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Front |
Back |
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Generation V |
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Black |
White |
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Black 2 |
White 2 |
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Front |
Back |
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Front |
Back |
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Generation VI |
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X |
Y |
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Omega Ruby |
Alpha Sapphire |
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Front |
Back |
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Front |
Back |
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Generation VII |
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Sun |
Moon |
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Ultra Sun |
Ultra Moon |
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Front |
Back |
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Front |
Back |
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For other sprites and images, please see
Weepinbell images on the Bulbagarden Archives.
Trivia
- Despite learning Leech Life through breeding, Weepinbell and its evolutionary relatives cannot learn it through TM28.
Origin
Weepinbell may be based on carnivorous pitcher plants.
Name origin
Weepinbell may be a combination of weeping and bell (referring to its bell-like shape). A weeping plant is one that droops.
Utsudon is derived from 靫葛 utsubokazura (pitcher plant).
In other languages
Language |
Title |
Meaning |
Japanese |
ウツドン Utsudon |
From 靫葛 utsubokazura |
French |
Boustiflor |
From boustifaille and flora |
Spanish |
Weepinbell |
Same as English name |
German |
Ultrigaria |
From Utricularia |
Italian |
Weepinbell |
Same as English name |
Korean |
우츠동 Uchudon |
Transliteration of Japanese name |
Cantonese Chinese |
口呆花 Háudāaifā |
Literally means "Vacant-looking mouth flower" |
Mandarin Chinese |
口呆花 Kǒudāihuā |
Literally means "Vacant-looking mouth flower" |
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[hide]More languages |
Hindi |
वीपिनबेल Weepinbell |
Transcription of English name |
Russian |
Випинбелл Vipinbell |
Transcription of English name |
Thai |
อุซึดง Usuedong |
Transcription of Japanese name |
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Related articles
External links
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This Pokémon article is part of Project Pokédex, a Bulbapedia project that aims to write comprehensive articles on each Pokémon as a species. |