Poipole

Finally, we’ve dealt with ALL the Ultra Beasts. Nihilego, Buzzwole, Pheromosa, Xurkitree, Celesteela, Kartana, Guzzlord, all seven of them have been reviewed.

…

…what do you mean, they added more!?

Okay, so… 802 Pokémon was not enough, it’s never enough, it will never be enough until I’m dead, so Ultra Sun and Ultra Moon added another five Pokémon that weren’t in the original Sun and Moon, and can’t be traded back to those games either. Four of those were additional Ultra Beasts, and for the sake of thematic unity I’m going to cover them before returning to the legendary Pokémon of Alola. Our subjects for today are the first two, the only Ultra Beasts to evolve: Poipole and Naganadel, the Poison Pin Pokémon (the same species name as Nidoran!).

A Poipole nest that the anime characters encounter in Ultra Space.

Poipole and Naganadel are poisonous Ultra Beasts with both reptilian and insectoid features, whose bodies are perhaps loosely based on syringes or hypodermic needles. They are equipped with stingers connected to large reservoirs of poisonous fluid with some interesting properties: it’s extremely sticky, hence Poipole’s codename UB Adhesive, it’s luminescent, and Naganadel can squirt it up to six miles (just under 10 km). In the anime, Ash has a Poipole for a while, and it can produce two colours of liquid, red and blue (although I don’t think we ever see them glow), which it delights in using to draw pictures that become increasingly elaborate over the time it spends in Alola. If all this is meant to be a reference to any specific adhesive compound from the real world, I can’t find it. Natural adhesives are common enough, though; many species of insects, molluscs, echinoderms and so on can secrete glue-like substances to anchor themselves or their eggs to a surface, and social insects like the paper wasp can build nests out of saliva and plant fibres. Some species of swiftlet bird even construct their nests completely out of adhesive saliva, without collecting any twigs or other materials at all. And, of course, Pokémon is already familiar with offensive uses of natural adhesives, because we have Pokémon based on spiders, whose webs are liberally studded with droplets of gluey glycoproteins that help to ensnare prey. In the anime we see a colony of Poipole, led by a single (queen?) Naganadel, living in a colossal, vaguely mushroom-shaped structure draped in strands resembling spider silk, with interior chambers that have hexagonal-patterned walls and luminescent needles hanging from the ceiling. It very much seems as though they live like social insects, and use their powerful adhesive secretions not only in combat, but to construct highly complex nests.

Alien babies (a.k.a. honeybee pupae)

Poipole’s physical design has been confirmed to be partly inspired by a bee larva (I assume we’re thinking here of the pupal stage, where the shape of the bee’s adult anatomy is starting to become distinct), so the stingers, the venom, and the colony with an architecturally complex nest are all elements that make some thematic sense. The reasons for the adhesive and luminous properties are still elusive, but those both sound vaguely like properties that some complex biopolymer might have. Naganadel is clearly draconic, but also has a plump abdomen like a bee’s or wasp’s, as well as lots of stripes, angular shapes and spikes – to me it almost looks a little like a spaceship, playing into the sci-fi aesthetic that a lot of the Ultra Beasts share (especially Celesteela). Naganadel’s abdomen, with its three stingers, actually looks a lot like Poipole’s head, as if the Pokémon turned itself upside down when it evolved. This is in fact exactly what has happened: the Ultra Smoon website claims that Naganadel’s brain is in its abdomen, and is directly connected to its abdominal stingers, which makes them extremely sensitive. So… that means Naganadel’s poison… its adhesive, glowing poison that it can fire at a distance of six miles… is brain goo? Maybe that’s why it’s such a mess of different properties; it’s not just a poison, but a vital fluid that serves a range of purposes in Poipole and Naganadel’s bodies. For comparison, we could note that real insects don’t have blood; instead they have a blood-like plasma called haemolymph, which is usually blue-green because it carries oxygen using copper-based haemocyanin rather than iron-based haemoglobin (we could even speculate a purple manganese-based protein for Poipole – then again, note the blue glow of Poipole’s eyes and mouth). Moreover, if the brain is in the abdomen, then what seems to be Naganadel’s head should perhaps be understood, instead, as a kind of decoy. Enemies will instinctively target the head, thinking that it’s a weak spot, when actually it’s the dangerous stingers that are most vulnerable, packed with nerves and directly connected to the brain. This kind of strategy certainly has parallels in the real world. The hilariously named fluffy tit butterfly has hindwings that are patterned to look like a second head, while many species of butterflyfish have prominent eyespots towards the rear end of their dorsal fin. Either way, predators thinking that they’re aiming for the head might instead clip a part of the animal that it can live without.

Ultra Megalopolis, the dark city of Ultra Space.

According to the Ultra Smoon website, Poipole “displays many emotions” and is “said to be able to understand human speech,” which is not terribly impressive, considering that most Pokémon have a pretty wide emotional range, can at the very least understand commands, and generally seem to be capable of empathising with humans. I think the statement makes more sense, though, if we take it as something that is unusual for an Ultra Beast. The other Ultra Beasts are inscrutable to us, and we seem inscrutable to them; they didn’t coevolve with humans, the way Pokémon from our own world did, so they can neither understand humans instinctively nor express their own needs and desires in ways we can immediately process. For whatever reason, that isn’t true of Poipole, who takes to human companionship in much the same way as a terrestrial Pokémon. This could conceivably be because Poipole and Naganadel are familiar with humans already: they are apparently native to the world of Ultra Megalopolis, the high-tech city in Ultra Space where we confront Necrozma in Ultra Smoon. We obtain Poipole in the games after defeating Necrozma, when it is presented to us as a gift by members of the Ultra Recon Squad (a team of Ultra Megalopolitans who have been sent to Alola to study our world). According to the Ultra Sun Pokédex, Poipole is “well enough liked to be chosen as a first partner in its own world,” although when you first meet the Ultra Recon Squad it seems like the concept of Pokémon training is initially alien to them. They solve their problems with technology, not with the help of Pokémon, and are impressed by the novelty (to them) of the Alolans’ approach. They begin training a Poipole only during the course of the story, after apparently becoming frustrated in their attempts to train a Furfrou that they caught Alola. It’s possible that the Pokédex’s assessment reflects Poipole’s status after the events of the game, when the Ultra Recon Squad has learned about Pokémon training from the Alolans and brought those lessons back to their own world. Poipole itself still has those traits that seem to stem from a longer history with humans, though. To launch ourselves briefly into the realm of speculation, I’d like to suggest that Poipole evolved on a world where humans once trained Pokémon, but no longer do. The lost light of Necrozma is a power that (in Alola, anyway) humans share with Pokémon, so maybe the ancestors of the people of Ultra Megalopolis lost their ability to train Pokémon, including Poipole, when their world became dark. Only now are they beginning to recover it.

Poipole’s world in the aftermath of the Necrozma crisis, with the light returned.

According to the artist Trial Captain, Mina, Ash’s Poipole’s drawings (particularly a lightning bolt symbol based on Pikachu’s tail) are an expression of its love for Ash and their “Alolan family.” What’s more, her Ribombee can supposedly sense Poipole’s emotions in its drawings. Now… this is something we should be cautious about hanging too much speculation on, because 1) communicating emotions is sort of the point of art, and 2) Mina is pretty consistently portrayed as, to put it nicely, a total cloud-cuckoo-lander. However, the episode’s dialogue does suggest that there’s something about Poipole’s drawings that only Ribombee can perceive, and all the other characters seem surprised and impressed at Mina’s assessment that Poipole can “draw its feelings.” Recall now that Poipole and Naganadel’s adhesive secretions are apparently their brain goo. To me, it’s… admittedly a stretch, but not a dramatic one, to suggest that the goo might have psychoactive properties – allowing Poipole to literally draw its feelings, imprinting a psychic impression of its mental state into its art. This isn’t something we see other Poipole do in the anime, and their nest isn’t decorated as we might expect it to be if they naturally used drawings to express their feelings, but then again, it also isn’t something that Ash’s Poipole needed to be taught to do; it just started spontaneously. Maybe all the Poipole back on the homeworld simply have no inspiration. Their world is dark, and slowly dying, without Necrozma’s light (the Ultra Recon Squad are absent from the anime, so some of their story and exposition is transferred to the Poipole colony); we eventually learn that Ash’s Poipole was sent to Alola specifically to find a way to get the light back. Poipole’s first drawings are of Pikachu, whose brilliant Thunderbolts it seems to find inspirational.

Ash’s Poipole draws its “Alolan family”

I think Naganadel has a… throne?

In battle, Naganadel is a mercifully straightforward Pokémon: it’s extremely fast, with lots of special attack power and passable defences. The Beast Boost ability can continue to raise either its special attack or its speed (depending on its nature) with every knockout it gets – and it even gets Nasty Plot, so you can have your cake and eat it, if you want. With luck (and a bit of strategic planning) it’s possible for Naganadel to just blow through an entire team, getting more and more dangerous as it goes, in much the same way as Nihilego, Kartana and Pheromosa can. Outside of really ridiculous legendary Pokémon, there’s not a lot that can reliably stop Naganadel once it gets going. Even Blissey, who basically exists to stall out special attackers, can’t beat a Nasty Plot Naganadel one-on-one without Ice Beam or Psychic, since it’s immune to Toxic and Blissey doesn’t really have a lot of other ways to cause actual harm. Normally, facing the prospect of getting nuked by Draco Meteor, the safe thing to do is switch in a Fairy-type, but against Naganadel this doesn’t really work since you risk being hit with a nasty Sludge Bomb or Sludge Wave instead. Steel Pokémon resist Draco Meteor and are immune to Poison attacks, but Naganadel can deal with most of them too, using Flamethrower or Fire Blast. It can learn Thunderbolt, Dark Pulse, Air Slash or Signal Beam as well, but honestly, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it – one of Naganadel’s three core attacks will work better against almost anything. Thunderbolt wrecks Empoleon, one of the few Steel-types who won’t instantly fold to Fire Blast, and Dark Pulse can occasionally be punishing to Psychic-type switch-ins seeking to exploit Naganadel’s weakness, but that’s about it. Taking one of those moves is probably only worth considering if you’re building Naganadel to use a Choice Scarf or Choice Specs, and even then, U-Turn or even Dragon Pulse (as a more consistent alternative to Draco Meteor) is more likely to be useful.

Naganadel

That’s… honestly about all there is to say; I know this section is normally longer, but Naganadel really does have a pretty clear optimal strategy (Nasty Plot, and make it fast enough that Beast Boost will trigger on its speed) with relatively few decent variations. You can choose to focus more heavily on its special attack, or give it a Choice item, or a Z-Crystal, but the broad strokes are going to be the same. Actually using it takes a bit of finesse, since Naganadel needs to accumulate stacks of Beast Boost to reach its true destructive potential; also, because it’s a snowball Pokémon, you should ideally try to eliminate anything on your opponent’s team that can stop it before you commit. Assuming you can do that, though, it’s one of the strongest Ultra Beasts, and a lot of fun to play with.

Poipole and Naganadel are… well, they’re really making me work, put it that way. There’s a lot of different elements going into the design, and although the Pokémon do look pretty cool, and everything seems like it relates to something else, I struggle a bit on what the overarching themes that tie it all together are supposed to be. I find myself, more than for any of the other Ultra Beasts so far, repeatedly asking “well, that’s neat, but why?” Maybe there’s something incredibly clever about it that I’m missing, but there’s a moment of comprehension, of suddenly being “in on the joke,” that most of the other Pokémon of generation VII have given me, and that Naganadel just hasn’t. This is, perhaps, a facet of the enjoyment of a Pokémon’s design that is peculiar to me and me alone, but it nonetheless leaves me strangely dissatisfied about this otherwise very fun Ultra Beast.