The Sinnoh Pokedex from Diamond and Pearl includes 493 Pokemon. Gen 4's biggest change is the physical/special split by move instead of type. Gyarados can finally use its 125 Attack on Water moves. The flipside: Sinnoh has a brutal Fire-type shortage. Infernape and Ponyta are basically it before postgame. Filter by type to see just how limited some coverage is.

Showing all 493 Pokemon that can exist in Diamond & Pearl, including transfers from other games.

Getting the National Pokedex in Diamond & Pearl

Diamond and Pearl only require you to see every Sinnoh dex Pokemon, not catch them. Trainer battles, in-game trades, and story encounters cover most of the 150 entries. The tricky 151st is Manaphy: just view a book in the Pokemon Mansion on Route 212 and it registers.

Once Professor Rowan upgrades your dex, Pal Park opens for one-way GBA transfers (6 per day, no repeats). The dual-slot method also works: insert a GBA cart into your DS and certain species appear on specific routes. Postgame swarm encounters add even more variety.

D
Venonat - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0048

Venonat

bugpoison
C
Venomoth - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0049

Venomoth

bugpoison
D
Diglett - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0050

Diglett

ground
C
Dugtrio - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0051

Dugtrio

ground
D
Meowth - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0052

Meowth

normal
C
Persian - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0053

Persian

normal
D
Mankey - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0056

Mankey

fighting
C
Primeape - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0057

Primeape

fighting
D
Growlithe - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0058

Growlithe

fire
C
Arcanine - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0059

Arcanine

fire
D
Poliwag - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0060

Poliwag

water
D
Poliwhirl - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0061

Poliwhirl

water
C
Poliwrath - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0062

Poliwrath

waterfighting
D
Bellsprout - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0069

Bellsprout

grasspoison
D
Weepinbell - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0070

Weepinbell

GrassPoison
C
Victreebel - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0071

Victreebel

grasspoison
D
Slowpoke - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0079

Slowpoke

waterpsychic
C
Slowbro - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0080

Slowbro

waterpsychic
D
Magnemite - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0081

Magnemite

electricsteel
C
Magneton - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0082

Magneton

electricsteel
D
Farfetch'd - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0083

Farfetch'd

normalflying
D
Doduo - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0084

Doduo

normalflying
C
Dodrio - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0085

Dodrio

normalflying
D
Seel - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0086

Seel

water
C
Dewgong - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0087

Dewgong

waterice
D
Grimer - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0088

Grimer

poison
C
Muk - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0089

Muk

poison
D
Shellder - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0090

Shellder

water
C
Cloyster - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0091

Cloyster

waterice
D
Drowzee - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0096

Drowzee

psychic
C
Hypno - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0097

Hypno

psychic
C
Krabby - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0098

Krabby

water
C
Kingler - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0099

Kingler

water
D
Voltorb - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0100

Voltorb

electric
C
Electrode - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0101

Electrode

electric
D
Exeggcute - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0102

Exeggcute

grasspsychic
C
Exeggutor - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0103

Exeggutor

grasspsychic
D
Cubone - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0104

Cubone

ground
C
Marowak - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0105

Marowak

ground
C
Hitmonlee - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0106

Hitmonlee

fighting
C
Hitmonchan - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0107

Hitmonchan

fighting
D
Lickitung - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0108

Lickitung

normal
D
Koffing - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0109

Koffing

poison
C
Weezing - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0110

Weezing

poison
C
Rhyhorn - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0111

Rhyhorn

groundrock
C
Rhydon - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0112

Rhydon

groundrock
C
Tangela - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0114

Tangela

grass
C
Kangaskhan - Pokemon Diamond & Pearl
#0115

Kangaskhan

normal
  • 493 total across Generations 1 through 4. The Sinnoh regional dex has 151 Pokemon (a nod to Gen 1). Many popular species are locked behind the National Dex, which you unlock after seeing all 150 Sinnoh Pokemon. The regional dex is notoriously limited, especially for Fire types.

  • Before Gen 4, whether a move was physical or special depended on the move's type. All Water moves were special, all Fighting moves were physical, regardless of the actual move. Diamond and Pearl changed it so each move has its own physical or special category. This lets Pokemon like Gyarados (125 Attack) finally use physical Water moves.

  • Chimchar. Infernape is Fire/Fighting with great Speed and mixed offenses. The reason it's the top pick: Sinnoh has almost no Fire types. Chimchar and Ponyta are your only options before postgame. Piplup evolves into Empoleon (Water/Steel, unique typing), and Turtwig's Torterra (Grass/Ground) is solid but slow.

  • The Sinnoh regional dex only includes two Fire-type evolutionary lines before the National Dex: Chimchar and Ponyta. If you didn't pick Chimchar, Ponyta is your only Fire-type option until postgame. Platinum fixed this by expanding the regional dex, but DP is stuck with the drought.

  • Generation 4, released in 2006 in Japan and 2007 in North America for the Nintendo DS. Introduced the physical/special split per move, online trading via the GTS, the Sinnoh region, and 107 new Pokemon including new evolutions for older species.

  • Diamond gets Dialga, Cranidos, Stunky, Murkrow, and Scyther. Pearl gets Palkia, Shieldon, Glameow, Misdreavus, and Pinsir. The legendary you pick is the bigger decision.

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Pokemon Comparison