Emerald reshuffles the Hoenn tier list with move tutors, expanded encounters, and Wallace replacing Steven at the end. Move tutors hand out coverage moves that weren't in RS, and some Pokemon show up earlier or in new locations. Swampert is still the top starter with one weakness and great STAB. Your final fight is against Water-types now, so plan accordingly. Rayquaza is catchable before the Elite Four here, making it a real option for your main team.
- Elite Pokemon
- Base Stat Total of 600+i
- Legendary
- Story-central, catchable in-gamei
- Mythical
- Rare, event-exclusivei
- BST
- Base Stat Total (sum of all 6 stats)i
- Fast with strong offensei
- Bulky with good offensei
- Very high offense, slowi
- Extremely bulky, low offensei
- High offense but fragilei
- Bulky support, low offensei
- Fast utility, momentum controli
Rayquaza is the biggest difference from RS. It's catchable at Sky Pillar (Level 70) before the Elite Four, turning a post-game trophy into a real team member. Swampert is still the best starter and one of the strongest Pokemon all game. Move tutors also give a few mid-tier picks better coverage than they had in Ruby and Sapphire.
Wallace replaces Steven as Champion, so you need Water-type answers for the final fight instead of Steel. Both Team Aqua and Team Magma appear in the story. Move tutors teach new coverage moves that weren't in RS. Some encounter tables change, making certain Pokemon available earlier. And the Battle Frontier replaces the Battle Tower for post-game challenges.
Mudkip, same as Ruby and Sapphire. Swampert's Water/Ground STAB handles most of the game. The difference in Emerald: Wallace is the Champion, and Swampert's Water typing gives you a mirror-match edge. Torchic is a solid second choice since Blaziken's Fighting STAB hits Steven hard (he's a post-game battle in Emerald instead of the Champion).
Yes, and this is a major difference from Ruby and Sapphire. During the Sootopolis storyline, you visit Sky Pillar to wake Rayquaza and stop the Groudon/Kyogre fight. After that event, you can return to catch it at Level 70. That's before the eighth gym and the Elite Four, making it a real team member for your main playthrough. Bring plenty of Ultra Balls.
Emerald has free one-time move tutors scattered across Hoenn that teach moves like Double-Edge, Explosion, and Thunder Wave. These help during your main playthrough. The Battle Frontier (post-game) offers BP tutors for coverage moves like Ice Punch, ThunderPunch, and Fire Punch, but those only matter for post-game challenges. The free tutors are the bigger deal for ranking purposes.
Salamence has 600 BST and is one of the strongest non-legendary Pokemon available. The grind: you find Bagon deep in Meteor Falls (need Surf and Waterfall), then level it to 30 for Shelgon and 50 for Salamence. If you commit, you get a Dragon/Flying type with 135 Attack and Intimidate. Worth it if you're patient. The game is beatable without it, but it makes the Elite Four a lot easier.
- Gen IY
Yellow - Gen IRB

Red & Blue - Gen IIGS

Gold & Silver - Gen IIC
Crystal - Gen IIIRS

Ruby & Sapphire - Gen IIIFRLG

FireRed & LeafGreen - Gen IIIE
Emerald - Gen IVPt
Platinum - Gen IVHGSS

HeartGold & SoulSilver - Gen IVDP

Diamond & Pearl - Gen VBW

Black & White - Gen VB2W2

Black 2 & White 2 - Gen VIXY

X & Y - Gen VIORAS

Omega Ruby & Alpha Sapphire - Gen VIIUSUM

Ultra Sun & Ultra Moon - Gen VIISM

Sun & Moon - Gen VIILGPE

Let's Go Pikachu & Eevee - Gen VIIISwSh

Sword & Shield - Gen VIIIPLA
Legends: Arceus - Gen VIIIBDSP

Brilliant Diamond & Shining Pearl - Gen IXSV

Scarlet & Violet - Gen IXLZA
Legends: Z-A - Gen XWW

Winds & Waves