This suspect test was decided on by RBY UU Council, and was approved by the RBY Lower Tiers Leader (me). Lots of the OP was modeled off May's post from last year's Dragonite suspect test. Thanks to them, and all the community members that made this happen!
RBY UU Agility + Partial Trapping (APT) Suspect Test
Hello friends! It's been almost a year since the last RBY UU suspect test, but we're back and better than ever with another one. This time, instead of Dragonite being the subject of the suspect test, the RBY UU Council will be suspecting Agility + Partial Trapping (APT). This was decided on near-unanimously by the RBY UU Council, and approved by the RBY Lower Tiers Leader (me lol). For those without badges, there will be a mirror post in the RBY forum in Ruins of Alph. If you are a qualified voter and don't have Policy Review access, you can request it via this form.
As for how we got here, APT has been the subject of much debate both inside and outside the RBY UU community for a long time. Many people have expressed distaste for the strategy since the revival of the tier a few years ago, calling it broken, uncompetitive, centralizing, or tier-warping. This came to a head last year when, after much debate between community members and tiering leadership, RBY UU was granted its first ever suspect test, with Dragonite. Dragonite, while not the only Pokemon capable of using Agility and a partial trapping move, is certainly the most notorious, so the suspect test seemed to make sense from an outsider's perspective. After all, a Dragonite suspect test instead of an APT suspect test would avoid the dreaded "complex ban" that many fear. However, not everyone in the community saw eye-to-eye on what should have been suspected. Many felt that Dragonite itself could be a healthy presence in the metagame, just without APT; its diverse movepool meant that it didn't necessarily need to run APT in order to be successful. They felt that the strategy of APT itself should be the subject of the suspect test, not Dragonite.
However, the end result after much deliberation was that Dragonite would be suspected, with the promise that if it was banned there would be another suspect test that would put APT as a whole on the table. This never came to be, as the Dragonite suspect test ended in a "no ban" by a close margin (9 votes to ban, 10 votes to not ban, 2 abstains). While this was good news for Dragonite fans, others felt dissatisfied that APT was still a part of the metagame. And over the past almost year, this sentiment has grown stronger and stronger among the playerbase. Something else has happened over the past year too, though: the reorganization of RBY Lower Tiers.
As of a few months ago, RBY now has councils for each of the lower tiers (Ubers, UU, and NU so far). These councils have more autonomy over tiering decisions and are headed by a lower tiers leader, not the overarching RBY Council. With this change in mind, the RBY UU Community now has greater say over how to govern their own tier, and thus an APT suspect test without any other conditions was on the table for the first time. And that's where we are today with this suspect test.
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Now that we've had a bit of a history lesson, let's talk reasoning (with much of the language here borrowed from last year's suspect test post):
Before we begin, while Wrap has consistently been a point of contention in RBY, it has been seen as a positive presence in UU thanks to the pivoting capabilities it provides, creating a chess-like, skill-intensive tier that many players enjoy. Shellnuts provides a class act of a post here that perfectly encapsulates the RBY UU community’s view on the topic of Wrap itself. Because of this and its nature as a metagame fixture in RBY UU, banning Wrap is completely off the table; to ban it would remove the tier’s identity and thus be too drastic a shift to justify.
While not the only Pokemon capable of APT, Dragonite is well-known among RBY enthusiasts for its access to the combination of Agility and Wrap, colloquially referred to as "AgiliWrap". AgiliWrap’s problematic behaviour in the metagame needs no introduction: when a Pokemon has the ability to boost itself and become faster than the whole metagame, partial trapping becomes an extremely oppressive force, leading to up to 32 turns of some of the most one-sided game states in Pokemon history. This gives the victim little to no counterplay outside of either PP stall, praying for a miss to land something like Blizzard, Thunder Wave, Toxic, or lose. The sheer damage that APT can deal to an opposing team while all this is happening is frightening, often making the rest of the game very easy for the APT user and the rest of its team to clean up. All it needs is a single turn of opportunity, and it could well be curtains. While Dragonite is the most-cited example of APT being a menace, it should be noted that Dragonair sees a sliver of viability in the tier as well all thanks to this strategy; while Dragonite has the stats and movepool to be used in other ways, the only thing that keeps Dragonair around really is the opportunity to set up AgiliWrap. Fire-types such as Moltres and Rapidash have access to APT as well in Agility + Fire Spin, but it is less consistent due to Fire Spin's lower PP and accuracy.
That said, the strategy has some holes, which is partly why it wasn't banned years ago, and APT users have never been on the same level as Tentacruel. APT's consistency is mathematically improbable, requiring many hits of Wrap or Fire Spin that could either amount to nothing or everything, making whether it makes an impact during a game a bit of a tossup. A single miss leaves the APT user wide open, which can be fatal: Toxic causes the Wrap user to take more damage than it deals and Dragonite for example can often get OHKOed by Blizzard. Both of these moves have comparable accuracy to Wrap, though, and thus, the odds still aren’t great for the player, and not every Pokemon will have the ability to OHKO the APT user. Ergo, even with these flaws, the strategy is still overwhelmingly powerful and forces a very unbalanced game state should it go off. On the other side, a common rebuttal here is that, especially in the late-game, another Agility sweeper like Articuno or Dodrio could do a comparable amount of damage just as easily or even easier. The argument is that APT just feels worse because it takes more turns to pull off and isn't as exciting from a spectator's point of view.
Regardless of the aforementioned flaws, this has led to the metagame centralizing increasingly around Wrap. For example, Toxic sees use almost strictly due to AgiliWrap Dragonite. On that note, removing APT could allow Toxic users like Persian and Dugtrio to diversify their strategies. This reflects in spectators and players alike showing extreme distaste for the strategy. On the flip side, Toxic adds a good deal of scouting; "Does Dugtrio have Toxic, or is Dragonite safe?", "Does Persian have Bubble Beam, or is Golem safe?", it's just on a much larger scale for an APT user vs. Toxic in particular. There is also cause to believe that it's fine to just accept the Toxic situation as something akin to Hidden Power Grass for a dominant Water/Ground-type like Quagsire or Swampert in later generations.
Overall, while Tentacruel has given the tier the reputation of being “the Wrap tier”, the RBY UU Council believes that Agility + Partial Trapping specifically could be unhealthy. This is because while trying to deny an opposing APT user the opportunity to set up Agility is part of the skillset required in RBY UU, small mistakes or an untimely miss can grant the APT user a disproportionate advantage.
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Now as for who gets to vote in the suspect test, the RBY UU Council has come up with the following pre-requisite requirements:
Through this methodology, here's how the qualification plays out, including duplicates:
This thread will be open until after UUFPL II ends in order to generate discussion among the participants and the community, after which a blind vote will be held to determine APT's future in RBY UU.
---
Thanks for reading, and here's to a good discussion!
RBY UU Agility + Partial Trapping (APT) Suspect Test
Hello friends! It's been almost a year since the last RBY UU suspect test, but we're back and better than ever with another one. This time, instead of Dragonite being the subject of the suspect test, the RBY UU Council will be suspecting Agility + Partial Trapping (APT). This was decided on near-unanimously by the RBY UU Council, and approved by the RBY Lower Tiers Leader (me lol). For those without badges, there will be a mirror post in the RBY forum in Ruins of Alph. If you are a qualified voter and don't have Policy Review access, you can request it via this form.
As for how we got here, APT has been the subject of much debate both inside and outside the RBY UU community for a long time. Many people have expressed distaste for the strategy since the revival of the tier a few years ago, calling it broken, uncompetitive, centralizing, or tier-warping. This came to a head last year when, after much debate between community members and tiering leadership, RBY UU was granted its first ever suspect test, with Dragonite. Dragonite, while not the only Pokemon capable of using Agility and a partial trapping move, is certainly the most notorious, so the suspect test seemed to make sense from an outsider's perspective. After all, a Dragonite suspect test instead of an APT suspect test would avoid the dreaded "complex ban" that many fear. However, not everyone in the community saw eye-to-eye on what should have been suspected. Many felt that Dragonite itself could be a healthy presence in the metagame, just without APT; its diverse movepool meant that it didn't necessarily need to run APT in order to be successful. They felt that the strategy of APT itself should be the subject of the suspect test, not Dragonite.
However, the end result after much deliberation was that Dragonite would be suspected, with the promise that if it was banned there would be another suspect test that would put APT as a whole on the table. This never came to be, as the Dragonite suspect test ended in a "no ban" by a close margin (9 votes to ban, 10 votes to not ban, 2 abstains). While this was good news for Dragonite fans, others felt dissatisfied that APT was still a part of the metagame. And over the past almost year, this sentiment has grown stronger and stronger among the playerbase. Something else has happened over the past year too, though: the reorganization of RBY Lower Tiers.
As of a few months ago, RBY now has councils for each of the lower tiers (Ubers, UU, and NU so far). These councils have more autonomy over tiering decisions and are headed by a lower tiers leader, not the overarching RBY Council. With this change in mind, the RBY UU Community now has greater say over how to govern their own tier, and thus an APT suspect test without any other conditions was on the table for the first time. And that's where we are today with this suspect test.
---
Now that we've had a bit of a history lesson, let's talk reasoning (with much of the language here borrowed from last year's suspect test post):
Before we begin, while Wrap has consistently been a point of contention in RBY, it has been seen as a positive presence in UU thanks to the pivoting capabilities it provides, creating a chess-like, skill-intensive tier that many players enjoy. Shellnuts provides a class act of a post here that perfectly encapsulates the RBY UU community’s view on the topic of Wrap itself. Because of this and its nature as a metagame fixture in RBY UU, banning Wrap is completely off the table; to ban it would remove the tier’s identity and thus be too drastic a shift to justify.
While not the only Pokemon capable of APT, Dragonite is well-known among RBY enthusiasts for its access to the combination of Agility and Wrap, colloquially referred to as "AgiliWrap". AgiliWrap’s problematic behaviour in the metagame needs no introduction: when a Pokemon has the ability to boost itself and become faster than the whole metagame, partial trapping becomes an extremely oppressive force, leading to up to 32 turns of some of the most one-sided game states in Pokemon history. This gives the victim little to no counterplay outside of either PP stall, praying for a miss to land something like Blizzard, Thunder Wave, Toxic, or lose. The sheer damage that APT can deal to an opposing team while all this is happening is frightening, often making the rest of the game very easy for the APT user and the rest of its team to clean up. All it needs is a single turn of opportunity, and it could well be curtains. While Dragonite is the most-cited example of APT being a menace, it should be noted that Dragonair sees a sliver of viability in the tier as well all thanks to this strategy; while Dragonite has the stats and movepool to be used in other ways, the only thing that keeps Dragonair around really is the opportunity to set up AgiliWrap. Fire-types such as Moltres and Rapidash have access to APT as well in Agility + Fire Spin, but it is less consistent due to Fire Spin's lower PP and accuracy.
That said, the strategy has some holes, which is partly why it wasn't banned years ago, and APT users have never been on the same level as Tentacruel. APT's consistency is mathematically improbable, requiring many hits of Wrap or Fire Spin that could either amount to nothing or everything, making whether it makes an impact during a game a bit of a tossup. A single miss leaves the APT user wide open, which can be fatal: Toxic causes the Wrap user to take more damage than it deals and Dragonite for example can often get OHKOed by Blizzard. Both of these moves have comparable accuracy to Wrap, though, and thus, the odds still aren’t great for the player, and not every Pokemon will have the ability to OHKO the APT user. Ergo, even with these flaws, the strategy is still overwhelmingly powerful and forces a very unbalanced game state should it go off. On the other side, a common rebuttal here is that, especially in the late-game, another Agility sweeper like Articuno or Dodrio could do a comparable amount of damage just as easily or even easier. The argument is that APT just feels worse because it takes more turns to pull off and isn't as exciting from a spectator's point of view.
Regardless of the aforementioned flaws, this has led to the metagame centralizing increasingly around Wrap. For example, Toxic sees use almost strictly due to AgiliWrap Dragonite. On that note, removing APT could allow Toxic users like Persian and Dugtrio to diversify their strategies. This reflects in spectators and players alike showing extreme distaste for the strategy. On the flip side, Toxic adds a good deal of scouting; "Does Dugtrio have Toxic, or is Dragonite safe?", "Does Persian have Bubble Beam, or is Golem safe?", it's just on a much larger scale for an APT user vs. Toxic in particular. There is also cause to believe that it's fine to just accept the Toxic situation as something akin to Hidden Power Grass for a dominant Water/Ground-type like Quagsire or Swampert in later generations.
Overall, while Tentacruel has given the tier the reputation of being “the Wrap tier”, the RBY UU Council believes that Agility + Partial Trapping specifically could be unhealthy. This is because while trying to deny an opposing APT user the opportunity to set up Agility is part of the skillset required in RBY UU, small mistakes or an untimely miss can grant the APT user a disproportionate advantage.
---
Now as for who gets to vote in the suspect test, the RBY UU Council has come up with the following pre-requisite requirements:
- Voted in last year's Dragonite suspect test AND/OR
- Played in four games and won at least one of them in RBYPLII AND/OR
- Played in four games and won at least one of them in UUSDII AND/OR
- Played in four games and won at least one of them in UUFPLII AND/OR
- Top 2 from the 2022 RBY UU Spotlight tour AND/OR
- Top 3 from RoA Olympics VI AND/OR
- RBY UU Invitational Last Chance Qualifiers AND/OR
- RBY UU Invitational Top 8
Through this methodology, here's how the qualification plays out, including duplicates:
- Voted in last year's test: AM, FriendOfMrGolem120, iKiQ, Justamente, kjdaas, Thor, Lusch, pac, phoopes, Holly, Sevi 7, Shellnuts, Torchic, Volk, Inmundo, May, Ice Yazu, meloyy, Jyuux, Lily
- RBYPLII: phoopes, Volk, Shellnuts, kjdaas,
- UUSDII: Koalacance, Torchic, Amaranth, pac, phoopes, Drogba In Shenhua, Unowndragon
- UUFPLII: Unowndragon, stunner047, Volk, Cam, Shellnuts, 5Dots, phoopes Koalacance
- 2022 RBY UU Spotlight Tour: Mikon, chuva de perereca
- RoA Olympics VI: FriendOfMrGolem120, Unowndragon, Koalacance
- RBY UU Invitational LCQs: juoean, Sage, pokemonisfun, robjr
- RBY UU Invitational Top 8: Khaetis, juoean, Ice Yazu, robjr, Koalacance, pokemonisfun, Shellnuts, Torchic
This thread will be open until after UUFPL II ends in order to generate discussion among the participants and the community, after which a blind vote will be held to determine APT's future in RBY UU.
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Thanks for reading, and here's to a good discussion!
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