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Sudowoodo

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is a fictional character from the Pokemon franchise.
In its name, Sudo is a purposeful misspelling of pseudo (false), and woodo refers to its tree-like appearance; hence, Sudowoodo is a specimen of "pseudo-wood". The japanese name, Usokkii, shares the same joke; it is derived from the words uso, false, and ki, tree. Coincidentally, the Japanese word for "liar" is usotsuki.

Interestingly, there is a minor enemy in the Famicom game Mother called "Woodoh," of whom Sudowoodo's appearance and stance are greatly reminiscent.

Sudowoodo could be seen as a petrified wood-like pseudofossil, as it is inorganic and could be mistaken for a fossilized tree. Crystal Dendrites are a type of crystal in the real world that develops with a tree-like form.

Characteristics

Sudowoodo appears to be a bending, bipedal creature vaguely in the shape of a tree trunk. It has a hook-shaped protuberance on its head, tiny feet, a simple face, and a pair of three-fingered hands where the fingers are green spheres resembling leaves on a tree.

Sudowoodo is an intriguing creature. Its body, first of all, is made not out of wood, but rock, and that goes for the green spheres on its hands. Sudowoodo pretends to be a tree, with its body designed to look like a tree trunk and its green fingers masquerading as leaves for the trunk, as its form of camouflage, where it hides among forest areas to avoid being attacked by enemies. It earns its classification as the imitation Pokémon through its practice of imitating a tree in this fashion.

There are, however, several conditions under which Sudowoodo cannot hold up its camouflage. In the winter seasons, when trees are either white with snow or have had their leaves fall off from autumn, Sudowoodo is easy to spot as a fake because its hands remain green, making Winter a more dangerous time for Sudowoodo to be in the presence of foes. Also, as a creature whose composition resembles rock, Sudowoodo hates water, so it will disappear and seek shelter when rainfall begins.

In the video games

Its appearance in the Gold, Silver and Crystal versions near Ecruteak City is indicated by a small tree icon blocking an important junction between routes. Upon using the Squirt Bottle item that is given to the player in Goldenrod City, the player enters battle against Sudowoodo, similar to the Pokéflute/Snorlax relationship in Red, Blue, and Yellow.

In the Emerald version, it can be found in the Battle Frontier at the top of the Waterfall--- use the Wailmer Pail to fluster the tree and make it battle you.

It can also be caught (or, in this case, snagged) in Pokémon Colosseum, as it appears in Mirror B's squad as a Shadow Pokémon.

Sudowoodo is not particularly widely used in competitive battling. It has very high Attack and Defense stats, but has near abysmal stats everywhere else. It can learn Mimic, Block, and Flail, and in Emerald it can learn Endure to form a combo with Flail. However, extremely low speed will probably mean that Sudowoodo will be KO’ed in any case, whatever it does.

Anime appearances

The major appearance of a Sudowoodo in the Pokémon anime was in the episode "Usokki wa doko ni iru!?", which was named "Type Casting" when translated. In the episode, Team Rocket attempt to steal a Sudowoodo, and after doing so, stand perplexed at what type it actually is. In a notable scene, Team Rocket continually asked the Sudowoodo what its type was. They could not receive a straight answer, as, since "uso" means "false" or "lie" in Japanese and the extent of a Pokémon's speech patterns is its name, any answer the Sudowoodo could give would be negative. The scene was translated to English, but the original joke was largely lost.

The confusion was compounded when Jessie's Wobbuffet released itself (as it tends to do in the anime). Since Wobbuffet's Japanese name (ソーナンス sōnansu) is a transcription of a common phrase of agreement (そうなんす sō nan 'su, a contraction of そうなんです sō nan desu), the only replies that Team Rocket received from the two Pokémon were strings of "yes" and "no". A golden Sudowoodo appeared in the Battle Frontier series, and Brock's Bonsly seemed to befriend it.

In the trading card game

Sudowoodo is more of a novelty Pokemon in the card game than an actual warrior, so its array of cards is modest: In each case, it is a Basic-level Ground/Fighting type.

References

;Publications
  • Barbo, Maria. The Official Pokémon Handbook. Scholastic Publishing, 1999. ISBN 0439154049.
  • Loe, Casey, ed. Pokémon Special Pikachu Edition Official Perfect Guide. Sunnydale, CA: Empire 21 Publishing, 1999. ISBN 130206151.
  • Nintendo Power. Official Nintendo Pokémon FireRed & Pokémon LeafGreen Player’s Guide. Nintendo of America Inc., August 2004. ISBN 193020650X
  • Mylonas, Eric. Pokémon Pokédex Collector’s Edition: Prima’s Official Pokémon Guide. Prima Games, September 21 2004. ISBN 0761547614
  • Nintendo Power. Official Nintendo Pokémon Emerald Version Player’s Guide. Nintendo of America Inc., April 2005. ISBN 1930206585
  • External links

     


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