Jolteon

Limewire

PRESS R TO WIN
is a Contributor Alumnus

BA-ZAP!


[Overview]

<p>Jolteon's fate is a sad one. At first, Jolteon's respectable base 110 Special Attack and base 130 Speed appear to make it a deadly powerhouse that all teams should prepare for. However, Jolteon is overshadowed by Raikou, which is stronger, bulkier thanks to Volt Absorb, and boasts superb coverage. In addition, Jolteon is a favorite target for Ground-type Pokemon, as well as priority users and Choice Scarf revenge killers. Luckily, Jolteon's saving grace is Baton Pass. With access to boosting moves such as Work Up and Charge Beam, Jolteon can easily beef up a teammate and win back momentum. In addition, Jolteon's Speed makes it one of the fastest Baton Passers in existence, and despite being outshined by Raikou, it can still deliver lethal damage. While Jolteon's role in Dream World is vastly different from its niche in OU, it is still a stellar Pokemon to use.</p>


[SET]

name: Baton Pass
move 1: Baton Pass
move 2: Work Up / Charge Beam
move 3: Thunderbolt
move 4: Hidden Power Ice / Substitute
item: Leftovers / Air Balloon
ability: Volt Absorb
evs: 4 HP / 252 SpA / 252 Spe

[SET COMMENTS]


<p>The purpose of this set is to switch Jolteon into a Pokemon it can threaten, such as Politoed. Once the foe switches out, Jolteon can use a boosting move and then quickly Baton Pass it before the switch-in can attack. The two boosting moves in question are Work Up and Charge Beam. Work Up is the recommended choice because it boosts both Attack and Special Attack; unlike moves that boost only a single offensive stat, Work Up allows you to choose your receivers with more freedom. Charge Beam only boosts Special Attack, which restricts which Pokemon it can pass the boost to. However, it does deal a modest amount of damage, which can be just enough to finish off a weakened Pokemon. Using Charge Beam can also trick opponents
into thinking that Jolteon is running an offensive set, which allows it to use Baton Pass when they least expect it. Jolteon can also opt to stay in and use its boosts, as it boasts excellent coverage and power with Thunderbolt and Hidden Power Ice off its base 110 Special Attack stat. If you want to trade power for longevity, consider using Substitute over Hidden Power Ice. This gives Jolteon and its receiver a cushion against status effects, as well as more leeway for mistakes. However, using Substitute has a nasty drawback: Jolteon becomes a sitting duck against Ground-types and other Pokemon immune to Electric-type attacks.

[ADDITIONAL COMMENTS]


<p>The EV spread for this set is simple: 252 EVs in Special Attack
give Jolteon maximum power, and 252 EVs in Speed along with a Timid nature allow it to outspeed almost every single non-boosted Pokemon in existence. Life Orb complements Jolteon's power by giving it a nice boost; however, Air Balloon is useful for evading Earthquake, which usually OHKOes Jolteon. As for alternative attacks, Jolteon can use Hidden Power Grass to nail Quagsire and Gastrodon. Even though these two Pokemon are a bit uncommon in Dream World, they are still a pain for Jolteon to handle. The downside to using Hidden Power Grass, though, is that Jolteon loses a great deal of coverage. Because of this, Jolteon appreciates having powerful Grass-type teammates to pass to such as Breloom or Venusaur; these two appreciate not having to set up and waste a turn, and do a fine job at scaring Quagsire and Gastrodon.</p>

<p>One particular strategy that works well with Jolteon is rain. Jolteon is an excellent addition to a rain team because it can soak up Electric-type attacks with Volt Absorb and fire off a perfectly accurate Thunder. In addition, Jolteon can pass boosts to rain sweepers such as Rotom-W and Keldeo, which then become even more devastating. Aside from Politoed, which is a must-have, two great teammates that also benefit from Drizzle are Vaporeon and Ferrothorn. Vaporeon can heal Jolteon with Wish and attract Electric-type attacks
for Jolteon to switch into, while Ferrothorn can provide support with Spikes and Stealth Rock. Although a bit unorthodox, Vaporeon can also continue the Baton Pass chain with Acid Armor.</p>

<p>Although Jolteon can use Baton Pass to escape from trouble, Choice Scarf-wielding Pokemon can outspeed and KO it. Two particular examples are Choice Scarf Landorus and Garchomp; these two can come in on Thunderbolt or a boosting move, and threaten to OHKO Jolteon if it uses Life Orb. Landorus falls quickly to a powerful Ice- or Water-type attacks from Pokemon such as Starmie and
Gyarados, which have excellent synergy with Jolteon as they attract Electric-type attacks. Garchomp is trickier to handle; try using priority attacks such as Mamoswine's Ice Shard or your own Choice Scarf revenge-killer. Jolteon is also troubled by specially defensive Pokemon such as Blissey, Ferrothorn, and Latias. Latias is especially threatening, as it can also use Roar to phaze Jolteon and destroy the Baton Pass chain. Powerful physical attackers can deal with these threats. Scizor is a good example; it destroys Blissey and Ferrothorn with Superpower, traps Latias with Pursuit,and also can learn Baton Pass to continue the chain if necessary.</p>

[Other Options]


<p>Jolteon's shallow movepool means that it does not have a lot of other options. One thing Jolteon can do is to run a special attacker set with Thunderbolt, Hidden Power Ice, Volt Switch, and Shadow Ball with either Life Orb or Choice Specs. This set's advantage over Raikou, Jolteon's biggest rival, is that Jolteon's base 130 Speed allows it to outspeed threats that Raikou cannot
, such as Starmie, Weavile, and Modest Choice Scarf Chandelure. If you prefer the Baton Pass set more, one additional move Jolteon can pass is Agility; this allows Jolteon to help out powerful but slow teammates. The problem is that your opponent will rarely give you enough time to Baton Pass both Agility and Work Up / Charge Beam simultaneously. Fake Tears is an interesting option as it allows Jolteon to electrocute special walls more easily. Fake Tears can also be used to phaze, which gives Jolteon an easier time to set up. Yawn is another great phazing move, particularly against faster, offensive Pokemon that do not mind Fake Tears's Special Defense drop.</p>

[Checks and Counters]


<p>In order to shut down Jolteon, you need to either KO it or force it out before it Baton Passes a boosting move. Ground-type Pokemon are fantastic at scaring non-Air Balloon Jolteon; Gliscor, Landorus, Garchomp, and Excadrill can safely switch into a Thunderbolt and threaten it with Earthquake. However, Hidden Power Ice can OHKO the former three, so switch smartly. On the defensive side, Gastodon's special bulk allows it to sponge anything Jolteon throws at it. Gastrodon's cousin Quagsire might not be as bulky, but its Unaware ability renders Jolteon's boosts useless. In addition to Ground-types, special walls such as Blissey and specially defensive Tyranitar can soak up anything Jolteon throws at them; Tyranitar can then KO Jolteon with Crunch. Pokemon with the
Lightningrod or Volt Absorb abilities, particularly Zapdos and Raikou, can switch safely into Thunderbolt and fry Jolteon's Baton Pass recipient. Finally, you can try priority attacks, such as Dragonite's ExtremeSpeed or Breloom's Mach Punch. These attacks bypass Jolteon's speed and can quickly knock it out before it uses Baton Pass. Choice Scarf users such as Terrakion can also outspeed Jolteon and KO it.</p>
 

Jukain

!_!
is a Site Content Manager Alumnusis a Forum Moderator Alumnusis a Tiering Contributor Alumnusis a Top Contributor Alumnusis a Smogon Media Contributor Alumnus
Is Charge Beam actually any good in DW? Does it get Agility though? It might be able to do decently for a passer if it does, but IMO Zapdos outclasses it in that role. Cheers!
 

Limewire

PRESS R TO WIN
is a Contributor Alumnus
Is Charge Beam actually any good in DW? Does it get Agility though? It might be able to do decently for a passer if it does, but IMO Zapdos outclasses it in that role. Cheers!
I think Charge Beam is pretty viable in DW. It might have a tough time finding an opportunity to use it, but Jolteon forces quite a lot of switches!

mention Gastrodon and Raikou as counters
Mentioned :D
 
Rejecting these sets. Baton Pass is really all Jolteon has going on for it in comparison to Raikou, so any on-site set needs to reflect this. Something like

name: Baton Pass
move 1: Baton Pass
move 2: Work Up / Charge Beam
move 3: Thunderbolt / Thunder
move 4: Hidden Power Ice / Substitute
item: Leftovers / Air Balloon
ability: Volt Absorb
evs: 4 HP / 252 SpA / 252 Spe
 
Overview
  • Specify Volt Absorb Raikou and use in Dream World
  • 110 is not massive. Good, respectable, etc. are more appropriate adjectives.
Baton Pass Jolteon
  • Jolteon will not always force a switch. You need to specify that it is aiming to force the likes of Politoed out in order to net a stat boost.
  • Specify that Charge Beam is meant to bluff an offensive standalone set and pass when the opponent is not expecting it.
  • Mention the drawback of using Substitute is that Jolteon becomes completely incapable of touching Pokemon immune to Electric-type attacks.
  • AC: Don't mention Swampert.
Other Options
  • HP Grass should not be listed here since it is already in the Additional Comments of the only set.
  • Offensive sets should be the first option.
  • Hidden Power Fire / Fighting
  • Agility
  • Yawn
  • Fake Tears
  • Signal Beam (note that Celebi is not at all prevalent)
Checks and Counters
  • Specially defensive Tyranitar is not threatened by it.
  • Raikou has Volt Absorb, not Lightningrod.
Once these changes are made:
APPROVED
 

Celestavian

Smooth
is a Community Contributor Alumnusis a Tiering Contributor Alumnusis a Contributor Alumnusis a Past SPL Champion
Amateur checking

Red = Remove
Blue = Add


BA-ZAP!

[Overview]

<p>Jolteon's fate is a sad one. At first, Jolteon's respectable base 110 Special Attack and base 130 Speed appear to make it a deadly powerhouse that all teams should prepare for. However, Jolteon was quickly overshadowed by Raikou, which is stronger, bulkier thanks to Volt Absorb, and boasts suburb superb coverage. In addition, Jolteon is a favorite target for Ground-type Pokemon, as well as priority users and Choice Scarf revenge killers. Luckily, Jolteon's saving grace is Baton Pass. With access to boosting moves such as Work Up and Charge Beam, Jolteon can easily beef up a teammate and win back momentum. In addition, Jolteon's Speed makes it one of the fastest Baton Passer Passers in existence, and despite being outshined by Raikou, it can still deliver lethal damage. While Jolteon's role in Dream World is vastly different from OU, it is still a stellar Pokemon to use.</p>

name: Baton Pass
move 1: Baton Pass
move 2: Work Up / Charge Beam
move 3: Thunderbolt
move 4: Hidden Power Ice / Substitute
item: Leftovers / Air Balloon
ability: Volt Absorb
evs: 4 HP / 252 SpA / 252 Spe

[SET COMMENTS]

<p>The purpose of this set is to switch Jolteon onto into a Pokemon it can threaten, such as Politoed. Once the foe switches out, Jolteon can use a boosting move and then quickly Baton Pass it before the switch-in can attack. The two boosting moves in question are Work Up and Charge Beam. Work Up is the recommended choice because it boosts both Attack and Special Attack; unlike moves that boost only a single stat, Work Up allows you choose your receivers with more freedom. Charge Beam only boosts Special Attack, which restricts which Pokemon it can pass the boost to. However, it does deal a modest amount of damage, which can be just enough to finish off a weakened Pokemon. Using Charge Beam can also trick opponents into thinking that Jolteon is running an offensive set, which allows it to use Baton Pass when they least expect it. Jolteon can also opt to stay in and attack, since it can seriously hurt many Pokemon use its boosts, since it boasts excellent coverage and power with Thunderbolt and Hidden Power Ice and its base 110 Special Attack stat. If you want to trade power for longevity, consider using Substitute over Hidden Power Ice. This gives Jolteon and its receiver a cushion against status effects, as well as more leeway for mistakes. However, using Substitute has a nasty drawback: Jolteon becomes a sitting duck against Ground-types and other Pokemon immune to Electric-type attacks.

[ADDITIONAL COMMENTS]

<p>The EV spread for this set is simple: 252 EVs in Special Attack gives give Jolteon maximum power, and 252 EVs in Speed along with a Timid nature allows allow it to outspeed almost every single non-boosted Pokemon (there is a double space here, remove it please) in existence. Life Orb compliments Jolteon's power by giving it a nice boost; however, Air Balloon is useful for evading Earthquake, which usually OHKOs Jolteon. As for alternative attacks, Jolteon can use Hidden Power Grass to nail Quagsire and Gastrodon. Even though these three two Pokemon are a bit uncommon in Dream World, they are still a pain for Jolteon to handle. The downside to using Hidden Power Grass, though, is that Jolteon loses a great deal of coverage. To counter these counters, you should have powerful Grass-type teammates which Jolteon can Baton Pass to. Because of this, Jolteon appreciates having powerful Grass-type teammates to pass to.</p>

<p>One particular strategy that works well with Jolteon is rain. Jolteon is an excellent addition to a rain team because it can soak up Electric-type attacks with Volt Absorb and fire off a perfectly accurate Thunder. In addition, Jolteon can pass boosts to rain sweepers such as Rotom-W and Keldeo, which then become even more devastating. Aside from Politoed, which is a must-have, two great teammates that also benefit from Drizzle are Vaporeon and Ferrothorn. Vaporeon can heal Jolteon with Wish and attract Electric-type attacks for Jolteon to switch into, while Ferrothorn can provide support with Spikes and Stealth Rock. Although a bit unorthodox, Vaporeon can also continue the Baton Pass chain with Acid Armor.</p>

<p>Although Jolteon can use Baton Pass to escape from trouble, Choice Scarf-wielding Pokemon can outspeed and KO it. Two particular examples are Choice Scarf Landorus and Garchomp; these two can come in on Thunderbolt or a boosting move, and threaten to OHKO Jolteon if it uses Life Orb. Landorus falls quickly to a powerful Ice- or Water-type attack from Pokemon such as Starmie and Gyrados Gyarados, which have excellent synergy with Jolteon since they attract Electric-type attacks. Garchomp is trickier to handle:; try using priority attacks (such as an Ice Shard from Mamoswine) or your own Choice Scarf revenge-killer. Jolteon is also troubled by (specially) defensive Pokemon such as Blissey, Ferrothorn, and Latias,. Latias is especially threatening, since it which can also use Roar to phaze Jolteon and destroy the Baton Pass chain. Powerful physical attackers can deal with these threats. Scizor is a good example:; it destroys Blissey and Ferrothorn with Superpower, and traps Latias with Pursuit., and also can learn Baton Pass to continue the chain if necessary.</p>

[Other Options]

<p>Jolteon's shallow movepool means that it does not have a lot of other options. One thing Jolteon can do is to run a special attacker set with Thunderbolt / Hidden Power Ice / Volt Switch / Shadow Ball with either Life Orb or Choice Specs. This set's advantage over Raikou, Jolteon's biggest rival, is that Jolteon's base 130 Speed allows it to outspeed threats that Raikou cannot., such as Starmie, Weavile, and Modest Choice Scarf Chandelure. If you prefer the Baton Pass set more, one additional attack move Jolteon can use pass is Agility; this allows Jolteon to help out powerful but slow teammates. The problem is that your opponent will rarely give you enough time to use Baton Pass both Agility and Work Up / Charge Beam simultaneously. Fake Tears is an interesting option, as it allows Jolteon to electrocute special walls more easily. Fake Tears can also be used to phaze, giving Jolteon an easier time to set-up. Yawn is another great phazing move, particularly against faster, offensive Pokemon that do not mind Fake Tear's Special Defense drop.</p>

[Checks and Counters]

<p>In order to shut down Jolteon, you need to either KO it or force it out before it Baton Passes a boosting move. Ground-type Pokemon are fantastic at scaring non-Air Balloon Jolteon; Gliscor, Landorus, Garchomp, and Excadrill can safely switch into a Thunderbolt and threaten it with Earthquake. However, Hidden Power Ice can OHKO the former three, so switch smartly. On the defensive side, Gastodon's special bulk allows it to sponge anything Jolteon throws at it. Gastrodon's cousin Quagsire might not be as bulky, but its Unaware ability renders Jolteon's boosts useless. In addition to Ground-types, special walls such as Blissey and specially defensive Tyranitar can soak up anything Jolteon throws at them; Tyranitar can then KO Jolteon with Crunch. Pokemon with the Lightingrod Lightningrod or Volt Absorb ability, particularly Zapdos and Raikou, can switch safely into Thunderbolt and fry whatever Jolteon Baton Passes to. Finally, you can try priority attacks, such as an Extremespeed ExtremeSpeed from Dragonite or a Mach Punch from Breloom. These attacks bypass Jolteon's speed and can quickly knock it out before it uses Baton Pass. Choice Scarf users, such as Terrakion, can also outspeed Jolteon and KO it.</p>
 
stamping Hawkstar's check with the following additions

overview said:
However, Jolteon was quickly is overshadowed by Raikou

While Jolteon's role in Dream World is vastly different from its niche in OU

set said:
[SET]
name: Baton Pass
move 1: Baton Pass
move 2: Work Up / Charge Beam
etc

set comments said:
unlike moves that boost only a single offensive stat, Work Up allows you to choose your receivers with more freedom

Jolteon can also opt to stay in and attack use its boosts (optional change imo), since as it boasts excellent coverage and power with Thunderbolt and Hidden Power Ice and off of its base 110 Special Attack stat (or omit this last bit altogether)

additional comments said:
Life Orb compliments complements Jolteon's power

Air Balloon is useful for evading Earthquake, which usually OHKOs OHKOes Jolteon

Because of this, Jolteon appreciates having powerful Grass-type teammates to pass to (suggest some)

which have excellent synergy with Jolteon since as they attract Electric-type attacks

try using priority attacks (such as an Ice Shard from Mamoswine) such as Mamoswine's Ice Shard

other options said:
a special attacker set with Thunderbolt / Hidden Power Ice / Volt Switch / Shadow Ball Thunderbolt, Hidden Power Ice, Volt Switch, and Shadow Ball

Fake Tears is an interesting option, (remove comma) as it allows Jolteon to electrocute special walls more easily.

Fake Tears can also be used to phaze, giving which gives Jolteon an easier time to set-up set up.

Fake Tear's Fake Tears's Special Defense drop

checks and counters said:
Lightningrod or Volt Absorb ability abilities

switch safely into Thunderbolt and fry whatever Jolteon Baton Passes to the Baton Pass recipient (kinda optional though)

Finally, you can try look to priority attacks, such as an ExtremeSpeed from Dragonite or a Mach Punch from Breloom Dragonite's ExtremeSpeed and Breloom's Mach Punch

bypass Jolteon's Speed

Choice Scarf users, such as Terrakion, can also outspeed Jolteon and KO it (remove both commas)

 
[Overview]

<p>Jolteon's fate is a sad one. At first, Jolteon's respectable base 110 Special Attack and base 130 Speed appear to make it a deadly powerhouse that all teams should prepare for. However, Jolteon is overshadowed by Raikou, which is stronger, bulkier thanks to Volt Absorb, and boasts superb coverage. In addition, Jolteon is a favorite target for Ground-type Pokemon, as well as priority users and Choice Scarf revenge killers. Luckily, Jolteon's saving grace is Baton Pass. With access to boosting moves such as Work Up and Charge Beam, Jolteon can easily beef up a teammate and win back momentum. In addition, Jolteon's Speed makes it one of the fastest Baton Passers in existence, and despite being outshined by Raikou, it can still deliver lethal damage. While Jolteon's role in Dream World is vastly different from its niche in OU, it is still a stellar Pokemon to use.</p>


[SET]

name: Baton Pass
move 1: Baton Pass
move 2: Work Up / Charge Beam
move 3: Thunderbolt
move 4: Hidden Power Ice / Substitute
item: Leftovers / Air Balloon
ability: Volt Absorb
evs: 4 HP / 252 SpA / 252 Spe

[SET COMMENTS]


<p>The purpose of this set is to switch Jolteon into a Pokemon it can threaten, such as Politoed. Once the foe switches out, Jolteon can use a boosting move and then quickly Baton Pass it before the switch-in can attack. The two boosting moves in question are Work Up and Charge Beam. Work Up is the recommended choice because it boosts both Attack and Special Attack; unlike moves that boost only a single offensive stat, Work Up allows you to choose your receivers with more freedom. Charge Beam only boosts Special Attack, which restricts which Pokemon it can pass the boost to. However, it does deal a modest amount of damage, which can be just enough to finish off a weakened Pokemon. Using Charge Beam can also trick opponents
into thinking that Jolteon is running an offensive set, which allows it to use Baton Pass when they least expect it. Jolteon can also opt to stay in and use its boosts, as it boasts excellent coverage and power with Thunderbolt and Hidden Power Ice off its base 110 Special Attack stat. If you want to trade power for longevity, consider using Substitute over Hidden Power Ice. This gives Jolteon and its receiver a cushion against status effects, as well as more leeway for mistakes. However, using Substitute has a nasty drawback: Jolteon becomes a sitting duck against Ground-types and other Pokemon immune to Electric-type attacks.

[ADDITIONAL COMMENTS]


<p>The EV spread for this set is simple: 252 EVs in Special Attack
give Jolteon maximum power, and 252 EVs in Speed along with a Timid nature allow it to outspeed almost every single non-boosted Pokemon in existence. Life Orb complements Jolteon's power by giving it a nice boost; however, Air Balloon is useful for evading Earthquake, which usually OHKOes Jolteon. As for alternative attacks, Jolteon can use Hidden Power Grass to nail Quagsire and Gastrodon. Even though these two Pokemon are a bit uncommon in Dream World, they are still a pain for Jolteon to handle. The downside to using Hidden Power Grass, though, is that Jolteon loses a great deal of coverage. Because of this, Jolteon appreciates having powerful Grass-type teammates to pass to such as Breloom or Venusaur; these two appreciate not having to set up and waste a turn, and do a fine job at scaring Quagsire and Gastrodon.</p>

<p>One particular strategy that works well with Jolteon is rain. Jolteon is an excellent addition to a rain team because it can soak up Electric-type attacks with Volt Absorb and fire off a perfectly accurate Thunder. In addition, Jolteon can pass boosts to rain sweepers such as Rotom-W and Keldeo, which then become even more devastating. Aside from Politoed, which is a must-have, two great teammates that also benefit from Drizzle are Vaporeon and Ferrothorn. Vaporeon can heal Jolteon with Wish and attract Electric-type attacks
for Jolteon to switch into, while Ferrothorn can provide support with Spikes and Stealth Rock. Although a bit unorthodox, Vaporeon can also continue the Baton Pass chain with Acid Armor.</p>

<p>Although Jolteon can use Baton Pass to escape from trouble, Choice Scarf-wielding Pokemon can outspeed and KO it. Two particular examples are Choice Scarf Landorus and Garchomp; these two can come in on Thunderbolt or a boosting move, and threaten to OHKO Jolteon if it uses Life Orb. Landorus falls quickly to a powerful Ice- or Water-type attacks from Pokemon such as Starmie and
Gyarados, which have excellent synergy with Jolteon as they attract Electric-type attacks. Garchomp is trickier to handle; try using priority attacks such as Mamoswine's Ice Shard or your own Choice Scarf revenge-killer. Jolteon is also troubled by specially defensive Pokemon such as Blissey, Ferrothorn, and Latias. Latias is especially threatening, since as it can also use Roar to phaze Jolteon and destroy the Baton Pass chain. Powerful physical attackers can deal with these threats. Scizor is a good example; it destroys Blissey and Ferrothorn with Superpower, traps Latias with Pursuit,and also can learn Baton Pass to continue the chain if necessary.</p>

[Other Options]


<p>Jolteon's shallow movepool means that it does not have a lot of other options. One thing Jolteon can do is to run a special attacker set with Thunderbolt, Hidden Power Ice, Volt Switch, and Shadow Ball with either Life Orb or Choice Specs. This set's advantage over Raikou, Jolteon's biggest rival, is that Jolteon's base 130 Speed allows it to outspeed threats that Raikou cannot
, such as Starmie, Weavile, and Modest Choice Scarf Chandelure. If you prefer the Baton Pass set more, one additional move Jolteon can pass is Agility; this allows Jolteon to help out powerful but slow teammates. The problem is that your opponent will rarely give you enough time to Baton Pass both Agility and Work Up / Charge Beam simultaneously. Fake Tears is an interesting option as it allows Jolteon to electrocute special walls more easily. Fake Tears can also be used to phaze, which gives Jolteon an easier time to set up. Yawn is another great phazing move, particularly against faster, offensive Pokemon that do not mind Fake Tears's Special Defense drop.</p>

[Checks and Counters]


<p>In order to shut down Jolteon, you need to either KO it or force it out before it Baton Passes a boosting move. Ground-type Pokemon are fantastic at scaring non-Air Balloon Jolteon; Gliscor, Landorus, Garchomp, and Excadrill can safely switch into a Thunderbolt and threaten it with Earthquake. However, Hidden Power Ice can OHKO the former three, so switch smartly. On the defensive side, Gastodon's special bulk allows it to sponge anything Jolteon throws at it. Gastrodon's cousin Quagsire might not be as bulky, but its Unaware ability renders Jolteon's boosts useless. In addition to Ground-types, special walls such as Blissey and specially defensive Tyranitar can soak up anything Jolteon throws at them; Tyranitar can then KO Jolteon with Crunch. Pokemon with the
Lightningrod or Volt Absorb abilities, particularly Zapdos and Raikou, can switch safely into Thunderbolt and fry Jolteon's Baton Pass recipient. Finally, you can try priority attacks, such as Dragonite's ExtremeSpeed or Breloom's Mach Punch. These attacks bypass Jolteon's speed and can quickly knock it out before it uses Baton Pass. Choice Scarf users such as Terrakion can also outspeed Jolteon and KO it.</p>

Even though there only appears to be 2 changes, there were a few spacing and bolding errors that I patched up as well, so make sure you actually C/P this. Great work, there really wasn't much wrong with it at all ^.^

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