The Hoenn Pokedex from Ruby and Sapphire covers 386 Pokemon across three generations. Gen 3 added abilities, natures, and EVs, which means every Pokemon has more going on under the hood than just stats and typing. Double battles are new too. Use the type filter to narrow down the Hoenn roster, or sort by BST to find the stat leaders. Click any card for the full details.

D
Bulbasaur
#0001

Bulbasaur

grasspoison
D
Ivysaur
#0002

Ivysaur

grasspoison
C
Venusaur
#0003

Venusaur

grasspoison
D
Charmander
#0004

Charmander

fire
D
Charmeleon
#0005

Charmeleon

fire
B
Charizard
#0006

Charizard

fireflying
D
Squirtle
#0007

Squirtle

water
D
Wartortle
#0008

Wartortle

water
C
Blastoise
#0009

Blastoise

water
D
Caterpie
#0010

Caterpie

bug
D
Metapod
#0011

Metapod

bug
C
Butterfree
#0012

Butterfree

bugflying
D
Weedle
#0013

Weedle

bugpoison
D
Kakuna
#0014

Kakuna

bugpoison
C
Beedrill
#0015

Beedrill

bugpoison
D
Pidgey
#0016

Pidgey

normalflying
D
Pidgeotto
#0017

Pidgeotto

normalflying
C
Pidgeot
#0018

Pidgeot

normalflying
D
Rattata
#0019

Rattata

normal
C
Raticate
#0020

Raticate

normal
D
Spearow
#0021

Spearow

normalflying
C
Fearow
#0022

Fearow

normalflying
D
Ekans
#0023

Ekans

poison
C
Arbok
#0024

Arbok

poison
C
Pikachu
#0025

Pikachu

electric
C
Raichu
#0026

Raichu

electric
D
Sandshrew
#0027

Sandshrew

ground
C
Sandslash
#0028

Sandslash

ground
D
Nidoran♀ (female)
#0029

Nidoran♀ (female)

poison
D
Nidorina
#0030

Nidorina

poison
C
Nidoqueen
#0031

Nidoqueen

poisonground
D
Nidoran♂ (male)
#0032

Nidoran♂ (male)

poison
D
Nidorino
#0033

Nidorino

poison
C
Nidoking
#0034

Nidoking

poisonground
D
Clefairy
#0035

Clefairy

fairy
C
Clefable
#0036

Clefable

fairy
D
Vulpix
#0037

Vulpix

fire
C
Ninetales
#0038

Ninetales

fire
D
Jigglypuff
#0039

Jigglypuff

normalfairy
C
Wigglytuff
#0040

Wigglytuff

normalfairy
D
Zubat
#0041

Zubat

poisonflying
D
Golbat
#0042

Golbat

poisonflying
D
Oddish
#0043

Oddish

grasspoison
D
Gloom
#0044

Gloom

grasspoison
C
Vileplume
#0045

Vileplume

grasspoison
D
Paras
#0046

Paras

buggrass
C
Parasect
#0047

Parasect

buggrass
D
Venonat
#0048

Venonat

bugpoison
  • 386 total across Generations 1 through 3. The Hoenn regional dex has 202 Pokemon available during the main story. The rest require trading with FireRed, LeafGreen, Emerald, or Colosseum/XD. Gen 3 can't trade with Gen 1 or Gen 2 games.

  • Ruby gets Groudon, Mawile, Zangoose, Solrock, and Seedot line. Sapphire gets Kyogre, Sableye, Seviper, Lunatone, and Lotad line. Plus about a dozen other minor differences.

  • Mudkip and it isn't close. Swampert is Water/Ground with only one weakness (Grass, 4x). It gets Earthquake and Surf for dual STAB and tanks most things. Torchic evolves into the solid Blaziken, and Treecko's Sceptile is fast but frail.

  • Abilities are passive traits introduced in Gen 3. Every Pokemon species has one or two possible abilities that provide an automatic effect in battle. Examples: Slaking's Truant forces it to skip every other turn despite 670 BST. Swampert's Torrent boosts Water moves when HP is low. Abilities can make or break a Pokemon.

  • Generation 3, released in 2002 in Japan and 2003 in North America for the Game Boy Advance. Introduced abilities, natures, double battles, and the EV/IV system that still exists today. Set in the Hoenn region.

  • Groudon (Ruby) vs Kyogre (Sapphire) is the main decision. Kyogre is generally considered stronger for in-game use since Water STAB with Drizzle covers more matchups. But the non-legendary exclusives matter too. Ruby's Zangoose and Sapphire's Seviper are thematic rivals.

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Pokemon Comparison