Mid-stage Pokemon like Eevee rarely see competitive play outside of special formats. It's a waypoint on the road to Vaporeon, which is where the real potential kicks in. Ghost moves can't touch it, and only a single type hits it super-effectively. Known as the Evolution Pokemon.
An unusually even spread gives Eevee flexibility. Sp. Def barely edges ahead. But Sp. Atk isn't far off. Tough to catch and follows a medium-fast 1M XP curve. Yields 1 Sp. Def EV.
Its ability to evolve into many forms allows it to adapt smoothly and perfectly to any environment.
Its genetic code is irregular. It may mutate if it is exposed to radiation from element stones.
Eevee Weakness
GoodFighting-type moves hit Eevee for super-effective damage. The upside? Ghost-type moves can't touch it at all. Just 1 weak spot to worry about, which keeps teambuilding straightforward.
From here, Eevee's line branches into Vaporeon, Jolteon, Flareon, Espeon, Umbreon, Leafeon, Glaceon, and Sylveon. That's 8 possible evolutions, each with its own method. The evolved forms gain up to 200 total stats over Eevee.
How to Evolve
Breed Eevee (with patience) with 195 breeding partners from the Ground egg group. Pass egg moves like Curse, Detect, Double Kick and 5 more to offspring.
Eevee hasn't fully evolved, but Eviolite's 50% bulk boost makes it viable anyway. Adamant nature with max Attack and Speed EVs shapes the defensive spread, and Adaptability adds utility.
Best Build
Best Eevee Moveset
- Unknown
- Protect
- Quick Attack
- Shadow Ball
Recommended Teammates
Without breeding, Eevee misses out on Curse and Detect. That's 8 egg moves adding depth that the base kit lacks. STAB comes from Last Resort and Double-Edge, with coverage across 7 types rounding things out.
Level-Up Moves
TM Moves
Egg Moves
Tutor Moves
moderate rates for Eevee across 6 locations in early-game routes. Nothing complicated. Check the sorted list below, compare the top few options, and head to whichever is closest.
Best Locations
Which version you're playing matters for Eevee. 6 walking spots at Lv. 11-30 spread across Scarlet and Violet, and some routes only appear in one cartridge. Check the version badges below.
Eevee is meant to evolve into Vaporeon. At 325 BST, the stats aren't there for competitive play yet. Pre-evolution Pokemon rarely hold up against fully evolved threats.
Watch for Hitmonlee (Fighting) when using Eevee. They all hit it super-effectively with STAB. Only 1 weakness means fewer dedicated counters to worry about.
Adaptability is what you want on Eevee. Every competitive set worth running is built with that ability in mind. The alternatives (Run Away, Anticipation) work on paper but Adaptability is what makes Eevee worth using.
At base 55 Speed, it won't be moving first often. On offense, Eevee is leaning toward the physical side (base 55 Attack).
Eevee appears in 22 games, including Yellow, Red & Blue, and Gold & Silver.
Since debuting in Red & Blue, Eevee has appeared in 22 titles over 9 generations. Along the way, it received a Gigantamax form in Generation 8, keeping it relevant across different competitive metas.
- Gen IY
Yellow - Gen IRBDebut

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 VIIISwShGigantamax

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

Brilliant Diamond & Shining Pearl - Gen IXSV

Scarlet & Violet - Gen IXLZA
Legends: Z-A
