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Quiz about Competitive Pokmon History  Keldeo
Quiz about Competitive Pokmon History  Keldeo

Competitive Pokémon History - Keldeo Quiz


The last but not least of the Swords of Justice, it's Keldeo! See if you can pony up to its long lasting history by performing well on this quiz from gens 5-8.

A multiple-choice quiz by cavalier87. Estimated time: 5 mins.
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Author
cavalier87
Time
5 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
408,512
Updated
Mar 16 22
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
7 / 10
Plays
61
- -
Question 1 of 10
1. Keldeo's statbuild was similar to Terrakion's, only trading the Attack stat for a Special Attack stat that was Keldeo's best. What was Keldeo's Special Attack stat? Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. Where the other three Swords of Justice share the same signature move, Keldeo differs slightly. Where they get Sacred Sword, Keldeo gets Secret Sword. Apart from dealing damage, what secondary effect does Secret Sword have? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. Keldeo was a perfectly deadly threat as a stand-alone Pokémon in fifth generation standard play. However, those who really wanted it to become genuinely near-overpowered and wished to maximize its potential would do very well to have paired it with another popular threat in the tier who could take Keldeo's offenses to the next level. Which Pokémon, with Drizzle for an ability, paired with Keldeo this nicely? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. Keldeo harbored the same ability that its fellow Swords of Justice received. What ability was this? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. The sixth generation was a bit of a mixed bag for Keldeo, though almost entirely in a good way as it became a top tier threat in standard play, undeniably top five in the tier at absolute worst. This, however, placed a bullseye on its back and caused trainers to scramble for answers to it. This led to the discovery of a counter- a Pokémon who could reliably switch into Keldeo and win. Keldeo actually had a few of these. Which of the following was one of them? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. While Keldeo was a perfectly fine offensive Pokémon, some cracks in the armor began to show themselves in the sixth generation- it had one flaw began to really hold it back in here, then got even uglier once Hidden Power was removed in the eighth generation. What flaw was this? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. The seventh generation came about and Keldeo had an absolute roller coaster ride, tiering wise. What tier did it end the generation in? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. Keldeo and its fellow Swords of Justice were able to make an appearance in the eighth generation, whose infamous 'DexIt' caused just over half the National Pokédex to be left behind with the transition from seventh to eighth generation. Was Keldeo immediately available for use in Galar?


Question 9 of 10
9. Keldeo unfortunately dropped to UU full time in the eighth generation. Unfortunately, while its fellow Swords of Justice gained access to some nice new moves courtesy of the new Technical Record mechanic, Keldeo was left somewhat wanting more as the best thing it got as a new TR was a somewhat mediocre pivoting move. What move was this? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. Stuck in UU with little hope to make it back to standard play for the eighth generation, did Keldeo have any counters in UU who could reliably switch into it and win?



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Keldeo's statbuild was similar to Terrakion's, only trading the Attack stat for a Special Attack stat that was Keldeo's best. What was Keldeo's Special Attack stat?

Answer: 129

Much like Terrakion, this allowed Keldeo to be quite the menace to bulky teams. It was well complemented by its good base 108 Speed, enabling it to outrun prominent faces such as Garchomp, Salamence and Volcarona.
2. Where the other three Swords of Justice share the same signature move, Keldeo differs slightly. Where they get Sacred Sword, Keldeo gets Secret Sword. Apart from dealing damage, what secondary effect does Secret Sword have?

Answer: It strikes the target on their Defense stat instead of Special Defense

Secret Sword is basically a Fighting type version of Psyshock, and is marginally stronger than it to boot. Because Chansey and Blissey are weak to Fighting and also have low Defense stats, Secret Sword gave Keldeo an excellent matchup against them, which was extremely valuable for a special attacker. Thus, the move had an excellent niche for Keldeo to utilize.
3. Keldeo was a perfectly deadly threat as a stand-alone Pokémon in fifth generation standard play. However, those who really wanted it to become genuinely near-overpowered and wished to maximize its potential would do very well to have paired it with another popular threat in the tier who could take Keldeo's offenses to the next level. Which Pokémon, with Drizzle for an ability, paired with Keldeo this nicely?

Answer: Politoed

Ninetales would be a strictly poor pairing with Keldeo, as its Drought ability calls forth the sun, which neuters Keldeo's Water type attacks.

Tyranitar and Abomasnow wouldn't be the worst pairings in the world, but they also wouldn't be the best, as their respective weather setting abilities would damage Keldeo at the end of every turn.

Politoed, meanwhile, brought forth a raging maelstrom within Keldeo the likes of which nearly makes Kyogre jealous. With the Drizzle ability, Politoed is able to amplify the potential of Keldeo's Hydro Pumps, which would be astonishingly strong. To give an idea, despite its resistance to the move, Latias, a generally bulky Pokémon, has to be at full health lest it wish to be 2HKOed by the move. Other resistant Pokémon such as Tentacruel and Starmie don't keel over to the move, but also take a ton of damage from it as well.

With an allied Politoed, the number of Pokémon who could actually take a hit from Keldeo reliably diminished greatly. As such, the pairing was naturally quite common.
4. Keldeo harbored the same ability that its fellow Swords of Justice received. What ability was this?

Answer: Justified

Justified grants its user a +1 to Attack if they are struck by a Dark type move.

Keldeo was definitely the least profitable user of this ability. As a Pokémon who is strictly a special attacker, Attack boosts simply do nothing of use for it.
5. The sixth generation was a bit of a mixed bag for Keldeo, though almost entirely in a good way as it became a top tier threat in standard play, undeniably top five in the tier at absolute worst. This, however, placed a bullseye on its back and caused trainers to scramble for answers to it. This led to the discovery of a counter- a Pokémon who could reliably switch into Keldeo and win. Keldeo actually had a few of these. Which of the following was one of them?

Answer: Mega Altaria

Mega Altaria resisted both of Keldeo's STAB types and had the bulk to handle even super effective Icy Wind reasonably well. It's stallbreaking set, the infamous "King DDD" set was capable of just boosting right in Keldeo's face and threatening a sweep. Mega Altaria's specially offensive set could also bypass Substitute with Pixilated Hyper Voice should Keldeo be using the move. Both sets generally tended to carry Heal Bell and thus weren't too bothered by status from a Scald burn or Toxic if Keldeo had either of those moves.

Other counters to Keldeo included Mega Venusaur, Amoonguss and Celebi.
6. While Keldeo was a perfectly fine offensive Pokémon, some cracks in the armor began to show themselves in the sixth generation- it had one flaw began to really hold it back in here, then got even uglier once Hidden Power was removed in the eighth generation. What flaw was this?

Answer: Poor coverage options

Hydro Pump and Secret Sword are fine STAB options. However, threats which resist those two moves have typically been able to stop Keldeo pretty easily. It's best coverage options over the years have pretty much just been Icy Wind and a Hidden Power typing. Those moves are both pretty bad for primary coverage moves, but they're the best that Keldeo has ever had to work with.
7. The seventh generation came about and Keldeo had an absolute roller coaster ride, tiering wise. What tier did it end the generation in?

Answer: Standard play (OverUsed)

Keldeo began by being allowed in UU after its usage in standard play declined. Keldeo resided in UU for sometime until it was eventually banned from the tier after its second suspect test, a tightly contested debate that ended with a 71% majority of qualified voters agreeing that Keldeo was too much for the tier.

Keldeo was off to a sluggish start in standard play, but as balance teams were beginning to become the face of the meta, it was found that Keldeo possessed a series of unique attributes that made it adept and cutting them down. Positive matchups against balance staples such as Ash-Greninja, Chansey, Ferrothorn, Heatran and Mega Scizor were incredibly useful. As such, it took quite awhile, but Keldeo eventually received enough usage statistics to become a native member of standard play a mere two weeks before the generation ended.
8. Keldeo and its fellow Swords of Justice were able to make an appearance in the eighth generation, whose infamous 'DexIt' caused just over half the National Pokédex to be left behind with the transition from seventh to eighth generation. Was Keldeo immediately available for use in Galar?

Answer: No

Keldeo, along with its fellow Swords of Justice, would be made available courtesy of DLC released several months after the eighth generation commenced.
9. Keldeo unfortunately dropped to UU full time in the eighth generation. Unfortunately, while its fellow Swords of Justice gained access to some nice new moves courtesy of the new Technical Record mechanic, Keldeo was left somewhat wanting more as the best thing it got as a new TR was a somewhat mediocre pivoting move. What move was this?

Answer: Flip Turn

Flip Turn is basically a U-Turn clone, doing the same exact thing only being a Water type move instead of a Bug type.

It did have at least a little bit of value on Keldeo, as it could pivot its way out of predicted switches into Pokémon Keldeo matched up poorly against. However, most of the Pokémon who actually check Keldeo could be worn down immensely constantly switching into its powerful attacks anyway, so it would be acceptable for Keldeo to just try and damage them heavily upon switching in instead of pivoting. As such, Flip Turn did not make the most impact on Keldeo.
10. Stuck in UU with little hope to make it back to standard play for the eighth generation, did Keldeo have any counters in UU who could reliably switch into it and win?

Answer: Yes

Specifically, Mantine and Primarina had nothing at all to fear from Keldeo, resisting both of its STAB moves. With Hidden Power being removed, they no longer had to be concerned about switching into a super effective Hidden Power Electric as they had in the past. Mantine can use its Water Absorb ability to block Flip Turn, should Keldeo have it, as well as Haze to stop last-Pokémon Keldeo from trying to break through it with Calm Mind. Primarina's RestTalk set eats hits from Keldeo forever, while its own Calm Mind set can easily boost alongside Keldeo and eventually win.
Source: Author cavalier87

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor kyleisalive before going online.
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