Anywho, it’s time for the juicy stuff! First up, we’ve got our grass starter; the Regal Pokémon
Serperior! When they say regal they do really mean regal. Remember the good old days of Smugleaf? Well, the name definitely suits it. The final evolution of this grass line sure is, well, pretty. I like how it looks out of all of the other starters. Again, you all know I’m partial to grass types, but Serperior truly does look the best. But how does Serperior hold up to its two fire and water counterparts?
Being a pure grass type, it leaves Serperior open to some common weaknesses. Fire and ice are blatantly used in the metagame, so one needs to handle this regal serpent with care when sending it out on the battlefield. For some reason GameFreak decided to expunge about a million new, but more importantly GOOD, bug types, which was an often overlooked type until now (the only real exception is Scizor and the more uncommon Heracross). So that adds three potential threats that can deal some severe damage to Serperior. Typing aside, its stats are a completely different matter. When the final stat distribution was released for the starters, I seriously gasped. At first glance, Serperior’s stats seem just downright horrible: mediocre attack, special attack, and HP, which all clock in at 75. It has decent defenses, boasting 95 for each stat. Its speed is what Serperior really focuses on, and that’s at 113; STILL not that high. Not only that, but its movepool is as shallow as shallow can be (Gamefreak really needs to change it up with their grass types). Aside from the random offensive grass and normal type moves, it learns Dragon Tail (which can actually be somewhat useful for force switching in stealth rock, spikes, etc.). I was floored at how crappy Serperior came off to be. It didn’t help much that I wasn’t a fan of the other starters, so now the one that I actually liked just plain sucked. That is . . . I discovered something interesting about this tricky grass type. . .
Again, let’s take a gander at Serperior’s terrible movepool. Sure, there’s hardly any type coverage. But what this poke is built for is support. Now most may be thinking “Oh lord, another Meganium”. This is not the case, however. Serperior ends up being the fastest SubSeeder in the game (SubSeeder is a competitive term for the usage of Substitute and Leech Seed). Not only that, but his defenses make him rather sturdy, especially for a grass type. This is the one main moveset that I’ve been using for Serperior; Leech Seed, Substitute, Protect, Leaf Storm/Leaf Blade (whichever you prefer. I like Leaf Blade as it doesn’t lower my stats). Here’s what you do – first, before the battle, slap some Leftovers on Serperior. The first thing you should do when the fight begins is seed your opponent. Sure you might get damaged,
but again due to his bulk he could very well survive even a super effective hit. The next attack that is used depends on your HP. I would go for a Protect next. This will guard you from any potential damage/statuses. Your opponent has health leeched, and you get recovery from the equipped Leftovers. Next, use Substitute. Again if your opponent attacks, no HP damage will be done to you other than the Substitute. Your opponent’s HP is leeched, you gain some from Leftovers. Now use Protect. . .from here on switch from using Protect and Substitute. Between the usages of these two attacks, you will always heal the amount of damage inflicted by Substitute, thus allowing you to drag on the fight until your opponent has its entire HP drained. Pretty cool, huh? I’ve tested this out while dueling my friend’s level 100 Zoroark and I killed it just from using this stall method. Now, just to make things better, Serperior get’s what I think is one of the most useful Dream World abilities: Contrary. This reverses the stat changes afflicting Serperior. Your opponent uses Leer? Well, you just got +1 defense instead of -1. Serperior uses Calm Mind? You get -1 to special attack and defense instead of +1. What benefits Serperior is the usage of Leaf Storm. This will up its special attack by two whenever it’s used instead of subtracting two. After a few Leaf Storms, even contending grass types get damaged pretty well.
Now, this moveset is definitely not invincible. A grass type like Serperior’s worst enemy is, well, other grass types. Ferrothorn is one that comes to mind. Not only does it negate Leech Seed, but grass attacks do a mere 25% damage. Combined with its elite defenses, Serperior ends up being pretty useless. So with that said, Serperior is definitely and interesting Poke to use. Just snag yourself a defensive natured Snivy at the beginning of the game and you’ve got it made.