Snorlax: Difference between revisions

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:''Snorlax love to sleep and love to eat: these portly Pokemon get grumpy if they don't get 880 pounds of food per day. After snacking out, they always nap. They have cast-iron stomachs and can eat moldy and even rotten food with no digestion problems. They are the heaviest Pokemon on record, weight in at over 1,000 pounds.''
:''Snorlax love to sleep and love to eat: these portly Pokemon get grumpy if they don't get 880 pounds of food per day. After snacking out, they always nap. They have cast-iron stomachs and can eat moldy and even rotten food with no digestion problems. They are the heaviest Pokemon on record, weight in at over 1,000 pounds.''


Note that this trophy description is out of date; Following Melee, even heavier Pokemon have been introduced, with the current record-holder for Pokemon weight being [[Groudon]].
Note that this trophy description is out of date; Following Melee, even heavier Pokemon have been introduced, with the current record-holder for Pokemon weight being [[Groudon]], or technically MissingNo.
 


==In ''Super Smash Bros. Brawl''==
==In ''Super Smash Bros. Brawl''==

Revision as of 14:31, February 7, 2009

Snorlax (カビゴン, Kabigon in Japanese language versions) is a fictional creature in the Pokémon media franchise. It appears as a Poké Ball Pokémon in all three Smash Bros. games.

Creature description

Template:PokeballPokemon Snorlax is a massive, extremely heavy, vaguely ursine lifeform. The Pokédex says it is very lazy, and its typical day consists of nothing more than eating and sleeping. It is not satisfied unless it eats over 880 pounds of food every day, and it promptly goes back to sleep once it is done eating. As its rotund bulk builds, it becomes steadily more slothful. Its stomach's digestive fluids can dissolve any kind of food or poison, and it never gets an upset stomach even if it eats moldy or rotten food off the ground. What sounds like its cry may actually be its snores or the rumblings of its hungry belly. It is such a docile specie that there are children who use its expansive belly as a place to play.

Snorlax is one of the original 151 Pokémon that appears in the first generation games Pokémon Red & Blue. The player could capture a Snorlax by playing the Poké Flute to wake it up. The Poké Flute was used to awaken Snorlax in both the Pokémon anime and Pokémon Snap. Ash Ketchum at one time caught a Snorlax on his Orange Island adventures. When the fourth generation came around, Snorlax gained a pre-evolved form Pokémon named Munchlax. A player could obtain a Munchlax by either breeding two Snorlaxes while one holds a Full Incense or using honey on a tree.

In Super Smash Bros.

As a Poké Ball Pokémon

Snorlax uses Body Slam as his attack. Snorlax jumps in the air and disappears off the screen. Snorlax will then inflate himself and descend towards the bottom of the screen. Any character that makes contact with Snorlax will take damage. Snorlax also destroys certain things on a stage. He will destroy items like Bob-ombs and Motion-sensor Bombs. Snorlax's attack does not harm the summoner.


In Super Smash Bros. Melee

File:Snorlax copy.jpg
Snorlax in his SSBM form.

As a Poké Ball Pokémon

Snorlax returns in Melee with exactly the same functionality.

As a stage element

A giant balloon of Snorlax (in actuality the 3D model of Snorlax used in Pokémon Stadium for Nintendo 64) is one of the many floating and bending "platforms" that comprise the Poké Floats stage. The balloon's belly raises and lowers as if "breathing".

As a trophy

Snorlax features as a collectible trophy, unlocked as one of the 100+ trophies that can be collected randomly during normal play, such as in the Trophy Lottery and throughout the various Single-player Regular Matches. It reads as follows:

Snorlax
Snorlax love to sleep and love to eat: these portly Pokemon get grumpy if they don't get 880 pounds of food per day. After snacking out, they always nap. They have cast-iron stomachs and can eat moldy and even rotten food with no digestion problems. They are the heaviest Pokemon on record, weight in at over 1,000 pounds.

Note that this trophy description is out of date; Following Melee, even heavier Pokemon have been introduced, with the current record-holder for Pokemon weight being Groudon, or technically MissingNo.

In Super Smash Bros. Brawl

As a Poké Ball Pokémon

Snorlax returns in Brawl with exactly the same functionality, making it the only Poké Ball Pokemon to appear in all 3 installments with an attack not changed or given to another Pokemon. Oddly enough, its baby form (Munchlax) is also in Brawl.