Moo
Professor
Jirachi
Taking over this for G80, credit to him
[Overview]
<p>Jirachi is a major threat in Advance thanks to its excellent all-around stats, good defensive typing, and ability to reliably set up Calm Minds and sweep. Depending on the tempo of your team and what you need to cover, Jirachi can act as both a defensive wall and a fast, hard-to-cover offensive Pokemon.</p>
[SET]
name: Calm Mind
move 1: Calm Mind
move 2: Psychic
move 3: Thunder / Thunderbolt / Reflect
move 4: Wish / Substitute
item: Leftovers
nature: Bold
evs: 252 HP / 148 Def / 78 SpA / 32 Spe
[SET COMMENTS]
<p>The standard Jirachi is bulky and can come in on Choice Banded threats like Salamence, Metagross, and Aerodactyl if you are careful to avoid eating an Earthquake. Thanks to Serene Grace, Thunder is very dangerous with its 42% chance to paralyze. This can potentially cripple the common Tyranitar or Metagross that tries to switch in. Use Wish to stay alive and keep your teammates healthy. Both the Wish and Substitute variants destroy Blissey with ease.</p>
<p>This set's only difference from the standard is the replacement of Thunder / Thunderbolt with Reflect. This makes Jirachi a better team player, and even harder to take down with physical attacks. Unfortunately, without Thunder, you are completely useless against Tyranitar and Metagross. Use this set on a defensive team that benefits from Reflect pseudo-passing.</p>
[SET]
name: Calm Mind + Three Attacks
move 1: Calm Mind
move 2: Ice Punch
move 3: Fire Punch / Psychic
move 4: Hidden Power Grass
item: Leftovers
nature: Timid
evs: 4 HP / 252 SpA / 252 Spe
[SET COMMENTS]
<p>A new-school approach to Jirachi that requires a heavily offensive team to back it up. Without a good way to eliminate Blissey, you will have a very hard time sweeping anything. Otherwise, these three moves have fantastic coverage. After a Calm Mind, Swampert dies to Hidden Power Grass and Tyranitar loses a sizable chunk of health (about 50% for bulky versions). Ice Punch handles Dragons and Fire Punch seriously wounds Metagross. Psychic is an option to hit Blissey and Earthquake-less Snorlax harder, but will fail without a Dugtrio to clean up Metagross and other Jirachi.</p>
[Team Options]
<p>Bulky Jirachi sets usually can't do much damage early on but have the tendency to force switches. Jirachi can complement bulky Pokemon like Zapdos, Suicune, Articuno, and Celebi to create a solid defensive core. Add a Pokemon like Skarmory or Cloyster for Spikes, and you can easily take advantage of the many switches your team will cause.</p>
<p>The all-out offense set should always be backed by physical attackers like Tyranitar, Heracross, and Dugtrio.</p>
[Optional Changes]
<p>Thunder Wave is useful for paralysis support. On a similar note, a Jirachi with some Attack EVs can use Body Slam somewhat effectively because it has a 60% chance to paralyze. Doom Desire is strong and has STAB, but is unreliable, and Steel is a generally poor attacking type.</p>
<p>Light Screen can be used in a similar manner to Reflect to provide support.</p>
[Counters]
<p>Tyranitar and Metagross can switch into Psychics and hit hard as you switch out. Snorlax with Earthquake and Curse can handle Reflect-less Jirachi. Swampert, Steelix, and Claydol can switch in on the bulky sets safely but can receive a nasty surprise with Hidden Power Grass / Fire Punch / Ice Punch. Celebi and other Jirachi can you if you don't have Fire Punch.</p>
<p>Dugtrio gets a special mention for trapping Jirachi and killing a weakened one with Earthquake. Jolly Dugtrio does about 70-82% to a Jirachi with 404 HP and 300 Defense.</p>