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OU RBY OU Discussion Thread

Not Hipmonlee, but will tell my own opinion about Zam. Alakazam is a decent lead, though it's a little better in the back. Has an even match-up vs Starmie, great vs Gengar, not terrible vs Tauros and has a shot vs Jynx. Only truly bad match-up is Egg, but Egg is the worst lead out of the "common" ones.

Starmie>Jynx>Zam>Tauros>Gengar>Zapdos>Jolteon (yes, based of experience I rate Jolteon as worse lead than Zapdos but better overall Mon) > Egg is the order of leads in my humble opinion. Of these, all except the first 2 are usually better as non leads for me.
Well, I at least agree with your top 3, but I would say Starmie=Jynx and the gap between Starmie=Jynx and Alakazam is very big. I just think thunderwave is really not good in the opening, to the point that you're sometimes just throwing the game away. Sleep or freeze is ideal. Obviously, thunderwaving the right pokes is fine, such as Jynx (cus paralyzed Jynxed is easy to exploit), but you're so often just not thunderwaving the right pokes.
 
I think a lot of people are losing games that they think they are losing in the mid or endgame, but if further analyzed, they are probably losing a lot of these games in the opening. People should reeeallllyy pay more attention to the opening game. It's very consequential.
 
Alakazam is way to passive of a lead, it at least accomplishes a few things though, it is able to be a sleep blocker, and it can thunderwave, and it can chase Gengar away....the problem is, it loses you momentum often, and it's easy to exploit Alakazam because of how many things block it, I usually think it can be beaten often by just straight running opp Alakazam out of all of their pp.
It has me asking, how when you take sleep, how it happened? Alakazam invites in most of every sleep you can find......
| 4 | Chansey | 70.11338%
| Sing 26.149%
| 5 | Exeggutor | 69.52545%
Sleep Powder 93.284%
| 7 | Jynx | 26.97140%
Lovely Kiss 99.732%
| 10 | Gengar | 19.70560%
Hypnosis 97.863%
| 16 | Lapras | 3.81146%
Sing 74.183%
| 20 | Victreebel | 1.17970%
Sleep Powder 93.083%
| 21 | Venusaur | 1.02542%
Sleep Powder 71.328%

So here above we have our usage rates for things used above 1% that can sleep something, and their corresponding sleep moves frequency of usage.
Now we will evaluate each one and see if Alakazam is inviting them in or not.
#1. Yes. Does Alakazam invite in Chansey?
So a number percentage of 26% of 70% is added to "I'll start from behind".
#2. Yes. Does Alakazam invite in Exeggutor?
So a number percentage of 93% of 69% is added to "I'll start from behind".
#3. Yes. Does Alakazam invite in Jynx? So a number percentage of 99% of 26% is added to "I'll start from behind".
#4. No. Does Alakazam invite in Gengar? This is where Alakazam has a momentum advantage is this turn 0 spot, where they can gain an advantage, but instead what happens is Gengar will switch and as for Alakazam; they psychic an exeggutor or Chansey, and lose momentum often instead....it should be the case that Alakazam has the advantage enough to say it takes the lions share of Gengars 19% usage rate, but it will just chase Gengar away instead in practice.
#5. No. Does Alakazam invite any of Lapras, Victreebell, or Venusaur?
For the total sum of the last 3 sleepers combined to 6% usage rate in total. Alakazam mostly chases this away and plays counter play to this stuff very well, but this is by far less important because all 3 of this combined is 6% usage.

Leading Alakazam is like saying I want to start from being asleep first frequently, and then catch up later ...

Edit:
(Rounded %'s)
26% of 70 is 18%
93% of 69 is 64%
99% of 26 is 26%
=108%
In knowing Alakazam is easy to exploit, and that if leading with it, how do I counter that I will be facing a possible 108% of mons that counter me with sleep moves for turn 1. Its too big of an undertaking to say out swapping them can make back the difference, for how often I have to be right would be infeasible.

Actually, come to think of it isn't infeasible to out swap them, but it would be like saying in order to lead Alakazam properly would be to use it as a false lead, where you nearly always like 100% be swapping to Jynx turn 0 unless your facing sleep already anyways. It still has me saying it's passive though. But back Jynx isn't common...that's the only good advantage I can see though.
 
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The specials team... ugh. The fact that many players who use this team do desperate things like put double edge on exeggutor is evidence of the inadequacies of this team.
Just to think out loud, everyone who has used this team understands what I mean. It's like a duct tape solution to the fact that the team lacks physical prowess. It has made me realize something: every time you want to put double edge on Exeggutor, you should probably be asking yourself, "What changes can I make to this team so I don't have to do this?" Double edge on Exeggutor is dumb, and it's always there for a reason you should have fixed. If you want to be wrong, at least put hyper beam. When I topped the ladder last year with Starmie/Chansey/Egg/Snorlax/Tauros/Clefable I used hyper beam on Exeggutor. And yeah, catching Jynx and Alakazam slipping is fun. But even then, c'mon, it's gimmicky. Fun, but gimmicky. Stun spore :heart: Mega drain :heart: Rest :heart: Double Edge:blobsad: Hyper Beam :blobsad:
 
Alakazam is way to passive of a lead, it at least accomplishes a few things though, it is able to be a sleep blocker, and it can thunderwave, and it can chase Gengar away....the problem is, it loses you momentum often, and it's easy to exploit Alakazam because of how many things block it, I usually think it can be beaten often by just straight running opp Alakazam out of all of their pp.
It has me asking, how when you take sleep, how it happened? Alakazam invites in most of every sleep you can find......
| 4 | Chansey | 70.11338%
| Sing 26.149%
| 5 | Exeggutor | 69.52545%
Sleep Powder 93.284%
| 7 | Jynx | 26.97140%
Lovely Kiss 99.732%
| 10 | Gengar | 19.70560%
Hypnosis 97.863%
| 16 | Lapras | 3.81146%
Sing 74.183%
| 20 | Victreebel | 1.17970%
Sleep Powder 93.083%
| 21 | Venusaur | 1.02542%
Sleep Powder 71.328%

So here above we have our usage rates for things used above 1% that can sleep something, and their corresponding sleep moves frequency of usage.
Now we will evaluate each one and see if Alakazam is inviting them in or not.
#1. Yes. Does Alakazam invite in Chansey?
So a number percentage of 26% of 70% is added to "I'll start from behind".
#2. Yes. Does Alakazam invite in Exeggutor?
So a number percentage of 93% of 69% is added to "I'll start from behind".
#3. Yes. Does Alakazam invite in Jynx? So a number percentage of 99% of 26% is added to "I'll start from behind".
#4. No. Does Alakazam invite in Gengar? This is where Alakazam has a momentum advantage is this turn 0 spot, where they can gain an advantage, but instead what happens is Gengar will switch and as for Alakazam; they psychic an exeggutor or Chansey, and lose momentum often instead....it should be the case that Alakazam has the advantage enough to say it takes the lions share of Gengars 19% usage rate, but it will just chase Gengar away instead in practice.
#5. No. Does Alakazam invite any of Lapras, Victreebell, or Venusaur?
For the total sum of the last 3 sleepers combined to 6% usage rate in total. Alakazam mostly chases this away and plays counter play to this stuff very well, but this is by far less important because all 3 of this combined is 6% usage.

Leading Alakazam is like saying I want to start from being asleep first frequently, and then catch up later ...

Edit:
(Rounded %'s)
26% of 70 is 18%
93% of 69 is 64%
99% of 26 is 26%
=108%
In knowing Alakazam is easy to exploit, and that if leading with it, how do I counter that I will be facing a possible 108% of mons that counter me with sleep moves for turn 1. Its too big of an undertaking to say out swapping them can make back the difference, for how often I have to be right would be infeasible.

Actually, come to think of it isn't infeasible to out swap them, but it would be like saying in order to lead Alakazam properly would be to use it as a false lead, where you nearly always like 100% be swapping to Jynx turn 0 unless your facing sleep already anyways. It still has me saying it's passive though. But back Jynx isn't common...that's the only good advantage I can see though.
People are gonna be mad at you for using the numbers again :')
 
People are gonna be mad at you for using the numbers again :')
Idk why... the stupid argument that it's "more complex than that" is infinity. I simplify things and get high tier SPL level relative GXE's.

Idk how to say Alakazam is good to lead with though, it isn't so I'll make my point. Back Alakazam can be good though, I guess. Back Zam is B-Tier and lead Alakazam is like C-Tier imo.

Edit: to further clarify why those numbers are those numbers are what I would personally concern myself with on turn 0 while if choosing to see if Alakazam is a viable lead. My concern is my opponent will get sleep off first, or I'll be making a mistake by paralyzing their Chansey, and blocking myself from getting sleep. But the thing is, opps using Chansey and Exeggutor are every single match, the math of using t-wave and hitting the range of those 2 isn't that favorable for Zam, if I psychic instead, that's nearly the same thing. How do I impose anything on the range of Chansey and Exeggutor specifically if I'm leading with Alakazam? I think the range of those 2 existing is blocking Alakazam from being viable from leading.
 
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Similar in structure to what I’ve referred to as the Big 5 Leads of ADV OU before (Skarmory, Tyranitar, Metagross, Salamence, and Zapdos), I do believe there to be a pretty set-in-stone top tier of leads in RBY OU. It seems to me like what some of you have been discussing is how you’d order these leads in terms of viability. I for one would be all for RBY organizing a separate VR just for leads alongside the main VR the whole metagame, but for now I want to just focus on highlighting the groundwork for a Big 6 or Big 7 (don’t even think about it, I know what you’re getting ready to type) Leads of RBY OU and what that might look like.

At the top of my personal lead rankings you have Starmie and Alakazam, both of which sometimes combine for over 50% of weighted lead usage on the ladder and have more than enough tournament results to prove their excellence. If I had to pick which one I think is better as a lead, it’s really close between the two but currently I’m leaning towards Team Starmie though I have gone back and forth plenty of times. The value of a Turn 1 Thunder Wave combined with high Speed and Psychic typing is invaluable, but the one thing that does worry me about these leads is that I have had plenty of games where the opponent’s Chansey is able to come in a little too easily and absorb paralysis for the sake of preventing it from falling asleep or becoming frozen. Lead Zapdos can also be trouble occasionally if you’re not running Rhydon, but you make up for this with favorable matchups against Gengar and Jynx leads and more even matchups against Exeggutor and Jolteon leads depending on each Pokémon’s set.

Gengar, Jynx, Chansey, and the Electrics make up my second tier, and recently I’ve started discovering Exeggutor to also be viable in the lead slot though I don’t see this as much on ladder as the others. Their matchups with each other are can be more varied and it’s here where we start to see the battle between Paralysis leads and Sleep leads. Shoutouts to Exeggutor who can use both and also Explosion, by the way. Gengar and Jynx are the fastest viable sleepers in the tier and similar to my Top 2, I often go back and forth between them a lot. Both hate being paralyzed and Gengar can outspeed Jynx in a head-to-head so I want to lean Gengar here, but Jynx also has Ice/Psychic typing and the more accurate sleep move of the two. That, and you managed to convince me Jynx is, in fact, not a fraudulent Pokémon in this tier like I thought for years. On the other side of the spectrum, Chansey can often appreciate being paralyzed but is much slower and hates being put to sleep. Chansey has access to both Sing and Thunder Wave and matches up the best into the Top 2, but can struggle with the mid-tier leads. Finally, the Electrics, who have the fastest Thunder Wave in Jolteon and Agility Zapdos as well, and Zapdos also has mixed attacking STAB which is nice, but both can struggle with Chansey, are worse sleep absorbers than the fast Psychic-Types and have the added disadvantage of inviting in Rhydon early. I like Zapdos over Jolteon here. How would you guys rank these seven Pokémon (plus Exeggutor)?
 
Just to think out loud, everyone who has used this team understands what I mean. It's like a duct tape solution to the fact that the team lacks physical prowess. It has made me realize something: every time you want to put double edge on Exeggutor, you should probably be asking yourself, "What changes can I make to this team so I don't have to do this?" Double edge on Exeggutor is dumb, and it's always there for a reason you should have fixed. If you want to be wrong, at least put hyper beam. When I topped the ladder last year with Starmie/Chansey/Egg/Snorlax/Tauros/Clefable I used hyper beam on Exeggutor. And yeah, catching Jynx and Alakazam slipping is fun. But even then, c'mon, it's gimmicky. Fun, but gimmicky. Stun spore :heart: Mega drain :heart: Rest :heart: Double Edge:blobsad: Hyper Beam :blobsad:
I think this is one of your worst takes yet, normal move Exeggutor is THE Jynx killer. Nothing owns the Jynx match up like a sudden Double-Edge. Of course it's an expensive concession to make, but the idea that normal move egg is "replaceable" is really off to me - it's very uniquely good at pushing sleep past a Jynx trying to accept the Sleep Powder from you, and that's gamebreaking vs. structures like the classic Jynx Mie Don.
Hyper Beam is a bit more flexible, can also help you snipe a Chansey with psydrops/fps for example, but the real point of these moves is the Jynx match up above all
 
Regarding zam lead: most of the time I'd rather have mie, but I think if you have double sleep with exeggutor + sing chansey, it makes twave a lot more tenable because you can target the paralyzed pokemon with egg boom later as they try to block sleep. If you're expecting certain matchups, simplifying the gamestate so early can really magnify your advantage (although it can of course backfire as well)

It's also nice because you get the early offensive potential of a para on chansey. If chansey sings mie lead, chansey is incentivized to catch your incoming sleeper with wave because it's going to be slept anyway. But if it's already paralyzed and taken some big hits from zam, it's more likely to heal, which gives lax a more aggressive start. That wouldn't be worth sleep blocking yourself most of the time, but egg gives you an out to remove chansey later on so you can sleep something else. It's a very aggressive and straightforward approach that I think has it's place.

(I know people also like t1 wave with chanseyless stuff because you can maintain pressure on parad chansey, but I've personally felt giving up the sleep game wasn't worth it. Perhaps a skill issue on my part)
 
I think this is one of your worst takes yet, normal move Exeggutor is THE Jynx killer. Nothing owns the Jynx match up like a sudden Double-Edge. Of course it's an expensive concession to make, but the idea that normal move egg is "replaceable" is really off to me - it's very uniquely good at pushing sleep past a Jynx trying to accept the Sleep Powder from you, and that's gamebreaking vs. structures like the classic Jynx Mie Don.
Hyper Beam is a bit more flexible, can also help you snipe a Chansey with psydrops/fps for example, but the real point of these moves is the Jynx match up above all
"Sudden" double edge. You're relying on them being ignorant. That's why I called it gimmicky. The lack of stun spore on Egg is consequential. You really have to think about that tradeoff. And if I know you have hyper beam over stun spore, or I suspect you might, that's not hard to play around. It's usefulness seems to only come from people lazily assuming you don't have it. And the opponent doesn't even pay much of a price for suspecting you have it and playing cautiously. If there was a high price to pay for playing around it, then the conversation would be different, but there really isn't. Just as a thought experiment, if we all got to see a preview of the opponent's team and moveset before every game, would anyone still use normal move exeggutor? I'm not gonna argue with you that it works against many people. I've used it with a lot of success. My lack of respect for it comes more from people trying to use it on me, and me just never biting, and maybe that is because I used it so much myself.

......The last time I used Jynx mie don (Or Jynx mie Golem) was when I solo'd the Cholaski team on the ladder as Chonasty, and I've been trying to play an opening in my head in which this would work on me and I just don't think you'd get me often with it... I can't imagine this working on me with any regularity.
 
I did a test years ago to see how important the lead spot is. So what I did was start by leading with metapod, and couldn't break 1500 ELO.
I can break 1500 ELO by having a back Weezing with no Tauros though.

Edit: so why the lead spot is so important is because of small differences that compound over time.
If sleep can be gotten off first, I can work on freezing and critting first before they can, which sometimes happens, freezing is obviously great, and critting leads to mid-game spots for plans often. If I lead with Alakazam I can't accomplish any of this, but it's still way better than metapod because it accomplishes secondary objectives. Such as: blocking sleep, Alakazam is the best thing to take sleep in the game, so it has an okay chance at waking up, it can also outspeed things and paralyze things, all in all it should be in the back if your going to use it. Starmie although better than Alakazam as a lead I feel also is better in the back. Starmie can at least pressure Exeggutor away, and bluff Gengar from coming in. And also freeze possibilities. Starmie is usually more useful to have.

My actual opinion about leading is like it should be only Gengar and Jynx....with some caveats to that.

And then the only true sleep blocking in the game should be to paralyze your own Chansey, because the only other way to block sleep is through irony, where I block sleep by letting myself take sleep. Letting something else take paralyze early game to block instead also isn't good.

I think if the game were solved it would be something like, people only lead with Jynx and Gar, and always block thunderwave if possible with Chansey. Modern day usage rates have it being hard to overcome that simple strategy.
 
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"Sudden" double edge. You're relying on them being ignorant. That's why I called it gimmicky. The lack of stun spore on Egg is consequential. You really have to think about that tradeoff. And if I know you have hyper beam over stun spore, or I suspect you might, that's not hard to play around. It's usefulness seems to only come from people lazily assuming you don't have it. And the opponent doesn't even pay much of a price for suspecting you have it and playing cautiously. If there was a high price to pay for playing around it, then the conversation would be different, but there really isn't. Just as a thought experiment, if we all got to see a preview of the opponent's team and moveset before every game, would anyone still use normal move exeggutor? I'm not gonna argue with you that it works against many people. I've used it with a lot of success. My lack of respect for it comes more from people trying to use it on me, and me just never biting, and maybe that is because I used it so much myself.

......The last time I used Jynx mie don (Or Jynx mie Golem) was when I solo'd the Cholaski team on the ladder as Chonasty, and I've been trying to play an opening in my head in which this would work on me and I just don't think you'd get me often with it... I can't imagine this working on me with any regularity.
Just wanna add, I'm genuinely surprised at the love for normal move Exeggutor. I didn't even know he had a fan club. I thought the only person who actually thought it was good was GGFan https://www.pokemonperfect.com/forums/index.php?threads/ggfans-2013-ladder-team.3103/.
Here he says: "What separates my Exeggutor from the others, however, is Hyper Beam as the 4th move. I have picked off many, many paralyzed Jynx and wounded Chanseys with it, ostensibly because of its raw power, but moreso because nobody would see it coming unless they've played me before. And if I felt that they might try and predict it, I could simply act accordingly by using Psychic instead. I love Hyper Beam so much that I'll never go back to Mega Drain and Stun Spore."

And again, he says here, "...because nobody would see it coming..." Moves that work mostly for this reason, I categorize as gimmicky.
 
And again, he says here, "...because nobody would see it coming..." Moves that work mostly for this reason, I categorize as gimmicky.
So, if I were to use exeggutor, I...wouldn't but, I think hyper beam is good on it, because what is naturally going to block exeggutor? Starmie, Chansey and Alakazam, and other Exeggutors are the most common things that will block exeggutor. 2 or 3 of the 4; hyper beam does quite a lot to. If they are already switching in to block psychic, that's like +17% dmg for the psychic...if they already had chip damage to begin with, that puts them close to hyper beam range, it's hard to exploit psychic+hyper beam+explosion as a range. Hyper beam egg has a chance at taking out Chansey or Alakazam by surprise, which it's only at the cost of its 4th slot. Especially Chansey is useful to take out, but once the cat is out of the bag, the hyper beam is certainly more lackluster, so I see your point that it's easy to play around once it's known, which leads to exeggutor using explosion. from a psychological perspective because hyper beam was a "secret" now that it's exposed, explosion comes quickly.
 
And again, he says here, "...because nobody would see it coming..." Moves that work mostly for this reason, I categorize as gimmicky.
It's not about "seeing it coming", every top player knows that normal move Egg exists. It's a matter of opportunity cost playing around it. You say it's effortless to scout it, but is it really? Say that you have a paralyzed Jynx and everything else healthy, your Chansey is clicking Soft-Boiled, Exeggutor comes in. Are you willing to stay and risk Sleep Powder, when you have a safe option instead? Obviously Jynx is the safe move, then ok some of the time you will soulread your opponent and do something else covering Double Edge or double switches, but not often at all (or you will lose to all the times I'm *not* bringing Double-Edge.)

In just this RBYPL:
Code:
+ ---- + ----------------------- + ---- + ------- + ------- +
| Rank | Pokemon                 | Use  | Usage % |  Win %  |
+ ---- + ----------------------- + ---- + ------- + ------- +
| 4    | [Exeggutor]             |  715 |  74.48% |  49.23% |
+ ---- + ----------------------- + ---- + ------- + ------- +
| Rank | Moves                   | Use  | Usage % |  Win %  |
+ ---- + ----------------------- + ---- + ------- + ------- +
| 1    | Psychic                 |  527 |  73.71% |  49.43% |
| 2    | Sleep Powder            |  397 |  55.52% |  51.64% |
| 3    | Explosion               |  231 |  32.31% |  55.19% |
| 4    | Stun Spore              |  221 |  30.91% |  47.51% |
| 5    | Mega Drain              |   66 |   9.23% |  51.52% |
| 6    | Rest                    |   62 |   8.67% |  46.77% |
| 7    | Hyper Beam              |   44 |   6.15% |  63.64% |
| 8    | Double-Edge             |   10 |   1.40% |  80.00% |
| 9    | Egg Bomb                |    2 |   0.28% |   0.00% |
Why are we playing around these moves with <10% frequency? It's just not worth it risking the game to play around something that just isn't even there most of the time.

I am sure it's different on ladder, we're not playing the exact same metagame. The scouting element is a big deal: if I don't bring any normal move Eggy 90%+ of the time, people are going to see that while researching my games, and they're not going to worsen their odds vs. my teams to cover a move that isn't there. So then it will just hit, even if everyone obviously knows that these moves are theoretically viable.
This is not rare in tournament play, and I think it's part of optimal RBY OU play. There are many moves that are good only because people not only don't play around them, but outright shouldn't play around them, provided they've scouted you correctly. You can do a similar thing with Counter Chansey for example.
This is a fundamental difference of Ladder play vs. Tournament play. For me it's absolutely obvious that these "bad" moves have a place in the metagame, because if I don't bring them at all, then my opponents will have complete safety with their Jynx, and in turn that will give them an advantage when I bring the "good" moves (because they can just play around those, instead of having to play around everything). In ladder, people still have to respect your "bad" moves, even if you never use them, because they don't know you specifically. So you lose way less by never bringing them.
 
This is a fundamental difference of Ladder play vs. Tournament play. For me it's absolutely obvious that these "bad" moves have a place in the metagame, because if I don't bring them at all, then my opponents will have complete safety with their Jynx, and in turn that will give them an advantage when I bring the "good" moves (because they can just play around those, instead of having to play around everything). In ladder, people still have to respect your "bad" moves, even if you never use them, because they don't know you specifically. So you lose way less by never bringing them.
This is what it should be in theory, that I would need a range of sets for things on my team I thought too, but the games development is still very young, you don't actually need a range of sets for your mons yet to top the ladder. Though, it's understood that for the purpose of not being able to be understood that it a range would be needed, and it's kind of funny I can ascertain that isn't the case, but in more developed games, yes it is.
It's possible to spam single teams without ranges and top the ladder still in 2025.
 
It's not about "seeing it coming", every top player knows that normal move Egg exists. It's a matter of opportunity cost playing around it. You say it's effortless to scout it, but is it really? Say that you have a paralyzed Jynx and everything else healthy, your Chansey is clicking Soft-Boiled, Exeggutor comes in. Are you willing to stay and risk Sleep Powder, when you have a safe option instead? Obviously Jynx is the safe move, then ok some of the time you will soulread your opponent and do something else covering Double Edge or double switches, but not often at all (or you will lose to all the times I'm *not* bringing Double-Edge.)

In just this RBYPL:
Code:
+ ---- + ----------------------- + ---- + ------- + ------- +
| Rank | Pokemon                 | Use  | Usage % |  Win %  |
+ ---- + ----------------------- + ---- + ------- + ------- +
| 4    | [Exeggutor]             |  715 |  74.48% |  49.23% |
+ ---- + ----------------------- + ---- + ------- + ------- +
| Rank | Moves                   | Use  | Usage % |  Win %  |
+ ---- + ----------------------- + ---- + ------- + ------- +
| 1    | Psychic                 |  527 |  73.71% |  49.43% |
| 2    | Sleep Powder            |  397 |  55.52% |  51.64% |
| 3    | Explosion               |  231 |  32.31% |  55.19% |
| 4    | Stun Spore              |  221 |  30.91% |  47.51% |
| 5    | Mega Drain              |   66 |   9.23% |  51.52% |
| 6    | Rest                    |   62 |   8.67% |  46.77% |
| 7    | Hyper Beam              |   44 |   6.15% |  63.64% |
| 8    | Double-Edge             |   10 |   1.40% |  80.00% |
| 9    | Egg Bomb                |    2 |   0.28% |   0.00% |
Why are we playing around these moves with <10% frequency? It's just not worth it risking the game to play around something that just isn't even there most of the time.

I am sure it's different on ladder, we're not playing the exact same metagame. The scouting element is a big deal: if I don't bring any normal move Eggy 90%+ of the time, people are going to see that while researching my games, and they're not going to worsen their odds vs. my teams to cover a move that isn't there. So then it will just hit, even if everyone obviously knows that these moves are theoretically viable.
This is not rare in tournament play, and I think it's part of optimal RBY OU play. There are many moves that are good only because people not only don't play around them, but outright shouldn't play around them, provided they've scouted you correctly. You can do a similar thing with Counter Chansey for example.
This is a fundamental difference of Ladder play vs. Tournament play. For me it's absolutely obvious that these "bad" moves have a place in the metagame, because if I don't bring them at all, then my opponents will have complete safety with their Jynx, and in turn that will give them an advantage when I bring the "good" moves (because they can just play around those, instead of having to play around everything). In ladder, people still have to respect your "bad" moves, even if you never use them, because they don't know you specifically. So you lose way less by never bringing them.
That's such a specific scenario though. You have to hope to para my Jynx and not my Chansey. And then if I'm not even using these pokes, which I often don't, then hyper beam Egg loses even more usefulness. I don't disagee with what you're saying about bringing bad moves. But I just don't think there is anything about double edge or hyper beam that makes them particularly exceptional in the "bad moves" category. I do fundamentally agree with you on the benefits of the element of surprise. The element of surprise will always be useful in pokemon, but... my only point would be, when putting those moves on your team, you should understand that is their value. That this is not the most consistent move. This is not a great move. And if one is under the illusion that, "Oh yeah, this is the primary move that should go here; it's the one that makes the most sense," then one is surely wrong. It goes there only if you think it'll surprise your opponent. Not for any sound structural reason. That was my only point. That double edge and hyper beam are often used not for surprise (GGFan said he'd never using anything else), but to lacklusterly cover for structural weakness in a team, and one would be better served playing a team that didn't have those weaknesses to begin with.
 
GGFan is actually very interesting here. If you look at his history, he loved playing that specials heavy structure. It makes perfect sense that he then fell in love with Hyper Beam Exeggutor and Counter Chansey. They were, to his mind, the missing puzzle pieces. In reality, as I said, he should probably just have used a different structure.
 
Yeah GGFan played in a way older different era of the game, it was not the OU we play today. There's only so much you can glean from looking at stuff that's years out of date, some aspects of the metagame are cyclical but many just get outdated and left in the dust, 0% Stun Egg is one such thing
 
Yeah GGFan played in a way older different era of the game, it was not the OU we play today. There's only so much you can glean from looking at stuff that's years out of date, some aspects of the metagame are cyclical but many just get outdated and left in the dust, 0% Stun Egg is one such thing
I love looking at old stuff. The Clefable team I topped the ladder with is actually from GGFan. That is why it has Hyper Beam Exeggutor on it. That team works surprisingly. It's not great, but it works.

But yeah, it's just so interesting to look back at stuff. For example, GGFan was the first person, according to him, to use lead Jynx as a primary lead, and he said this was such a dominant time for him. And knowing what I know now about the opening game, it's easy to see why. He was going for sleep first. But what's so funny is that he clearly didn't understand why he was winning so much. He didn't understand that his opening is what was winning him all these games. You can tell because he never mentions this advantage, and years later he says outdated things like, "At its worst, RBY is a crapshoot where the person who gets the most fps wins." He is still hyperfocused on paras. All respect to GGFan as a player, I'm just pointing out that it's very interesting to look back at the past.
 
That's such a specific scenario though. You have to hope to para my Jynx and not my Chansey. And then if I'm not even using these pokes, which I often don't, then hyper beam Egg loses even more usefulness. I don't disagee with what you're saying about bringing bad moves. But I just don't think there is anything about double edge or hyper beam that makes them particularly exceptional in the "bad moves" category. I do fundamentally agree with you on the benefits of the element of surprise. The element of surprise will always be useful in pokemon, but... my only point would be, when putting those moves on your team, you should understand that is their value. That this is not the most consistent move. This is not a great move. And if one is under the illusion that, "Oh yeah, this is the primary move that should go here; it's the one that makes the most sense," then one is surely wrong. It goes there only if you think it'll surprise your opponent. Not for any sound structural reason. That was my only point. That double edge and hyper beam are often used not for surprise (GGFan said he'd never using anything else), but to lacklusterly cover for structural weakness in a team, and one would be better served playing a team that didn't have those weaknesses to begin with.
I don't think that hyper beam being reliant on the opponent not scouting it is particularly reliant on the element of surprise. It's not like, for example, Mega Drain Gengar, that hardly ever comes into play, and only ever works in ultra niche situations where people unwittingly sacrifice their Rhydon to it. Dedge/Hyper Beam Exeggutor dominates a paralyzed Jynx(Jynx being paralyzed is Extremely Common), and for the Jynx player to scout around it, like Amaranth said, they have to make huge concessions for a move you're likely not to have. I think you can reasonably treat normal moves on Exeggutor as landing versus Jynx the majority of the time, and it's moreso that your opponent scouting it would be indicative of the element of surprise. This is especially true of Hyper Beam - if your Double Edge gets scouted, so what? Sleep powder is still a huge threat, and now there's no Jynx in your face.
Tldr: I agree that moves that have their value tied to surprise factor are bad, and I like consistent value, but I view normal moves on Exeggutor as consistently landing into Jynx, and it's far and away the outlier for Jynx to tactfully evade a Double Edge.
 
I don't think that hyper beam being reliant on the opponent not scouting it is particularly reliant on the element of surprise. It's not like, for example, Mega Drain Gengar, that hardly ever comes into play, and only ever works in ultra niche situations where people unwittingly sacrifice their Rhydon to it. Dedge/Hyper Beam Exeggutor dominates a paralyzed Jynx(Jynx being paralyzed is Extremely Common), and for the Jynx player to scout around it, like Amaranth said, they have to make huge concessions for a move you're likely not to have. I think you can reasonably treat normal moves on Exeggutor as landing versus Jynx the majority of the time, and it's moreso that your opponent scouting it would be indicative of the element of surprise. This is especially true of Hyper Beam - if your Double Edge gets scouted, so what? Sleep powder is still a huge threat, and now there's no Jynx in your face.
Tldr: I agree that moves that have their value tied to surprise factor are bad, and I like consistent value, but I view normal moves on Exeggutor as consistently landing into Jynx, and it's far and away the outlier for Jynx to tactfully evade a Double Edge.
This is one darn pokemon. Only one. One which your dirty little plan might not even prevail against. Starmie doesn't care about this crap.
 
This is one darn pokemon. Only one. One which your dirty little plan might not even prevail against. Starmie doesn't care about this crap.
It's just a pretty common pokemon, and it's otherwise quite hard to be good into it. People run Gengar lead almost exclusively for the Jynx matchup, despite starting on the back foot versus a lot of other things, because dissuading Jynx is just so valuable. Giving up the moveslot on your Exeggutor when your team would otherwise be quite awful into Jynx is just what you do when you teambuild, in my opinion.
 
I think the only true correct opening is Jynx, because, if you value sleep more than paralysis, and idk why you wouldn't, sleep clause is a thing. Gengar as mentioned is countered by the two most common leads starmie, and Alakazam, and Jynx being psychic type means it's very similar to those two. fast fire types that would ordinarily counter Jynx, can't because of Alakazam and Starmie usage rates. Zapdos isn't ahead of Jynx, Jolteon isn't really ahead either because of how much more it's risking by getting status. There's no way to counter Jynx with sleep without being far worse off against the total range of things you would face. Gengar is forced out often, creating a problem with the range of opponents he faces. Jynx always, unless it's being directly countered by a fast fire type, or Gengar explosion, or otherwise niche outliers, Jynx always will get that sleep off. Over long stretches of time, Jynx being ice type means I will get an extra freeze that an opponent would of got against me if I hadn't used an ice type. I think Jynx is S-Tier, but idk how to sway any opinions that hard. Its just because it facilitates the early game with purpose exceptionally well. Jynx does taper off in value as the game goes on usually. Getting sleep off first, means chances at freezing, critting etc. I think the game should start off with an idea, like "I'm getting sleep off first, because I value getting that part done". Then branch off from, if I'm using Jynx, what else should I use?
 
I think the only true correct opening is Jynx, because, if you value sleep more than paralysis, and idk why you wouldn't, sleep clause is a thing. Gengar as mentioned is countered by the two most common leads starmie, and Alakazam, and Jynx being psychic type means it's very similar to those two. fast fire types that would ordinarily counter Jynx, can't because of Alakazam and Starmie usage rates. Zapdos isn't ahead of Jynx, Jolteon isn't really ahead either because of how much more it's risking by getting status. There's no way to counter Jynx with sleep without being far worse off against the total range of things you would face. Gengar is forced out often, creating a problem with the range of opponents he faces. Jynx always, unless it's being directly countered by a fast fire type, or Gengar explosion, or otherwise niche outliers, Jynx always will get that sleep off. Over long stretches of time, Jynx being ice type means I will get an extra freeze that an opponent would of got against me if I hadn't used an ice type. I think Jynx is S-Tier, but idk how to sway any opinions that hard. Its just because it facilitates the early game with purpose exceptionally well. Jynx does taper off in value as the game goes on usually. Getting sleep off first, means chances at freezing, critting etc. I think the game should start off with an idea, like "I'm getting sleep off first, because I value getting that part done". Then branch off from, if I'm using Jynx, what else should I use?
This is fundamentally flawed thinking.

To paraphrase, you said "Everyone should always use jynx because its counter lead is countered by 2 of the most popular leads."
People stop using Starmie and Gengar and Zam and start using Jynx -> People start using Gengar and Tauros to counter Jynx -> People start using alakazam and starmie to counter gengar and Tauros, and just sleep sack into jynx -> People start running electrics to Anti-Lead Starmie. ("->" represents meta shifts.)

We are QUITE LITERALLY right back where we are started, which is NOT using jynx 100% of the time.

Also not to be like that, but all of your posts are based on the fundamental misunderstanding that ladder is the peak of competition, and that anything you pull from there is completely transelateable to tournaments. Newsflash, its not. Some people are low on lead jynx so you use gengar very little against them, some people are low on lead gengar so you load more jynx, some people are high on gengar so you load more alakazam, etc. You cant just make general rules like this and then post it in our thread and not get backlash from it. We HAVE a ladder thread for a reason. And you also have to understand that people wont stop loading gengar regardless of its place in the ladder metagame, as its ladder. It will always exist so jynx will always have to worry about it.
 
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