Important notice! Pokemon Carvee is a fictional character of humans.There is only single Creator of everything and anythingAll Pokemon are made up by humans based on real animals or existing objects.The stroies of Pokemon are all fictional and in most cases illogical or nonsense.Games are for only fun time and do never put any spiritual/religional or deity meaning into them!Never pass your necessary jobs and duties due to gameplaying!Moreover, there is no such thing as random evolution. However, there can be evolution programmed by Almighty Creator Allah.
Eevee (Japanese: イーブイ Eievui) is a Normal-type Pokémon introduced in Generation I.
It evolves into one of eight different Pokémon through various methods:
Eevee has a Gigantamax form. Eevee with the Gigantamax Factor cannot evolve.
Eevee is the game mascot and starter Pokémon in Pokémon: Let's Go, Eevee!, as well as for the main characters of Pokémon XD: Gale of Darkness and Pokémon Conquest. It is the starting Pokémon and first Pokémon employee of the player in Pokémon Café Mix. It is also the rival's starter Pokémon in Pokémon Yellow, although Professor Oak originally intended to give it to the player.
Eevee is a mammalian, quadrupedal Pokémon with primarily brown fur. The tip of its bushy tail and its large furry collar are cream-colored. It has short, slender legs with three small toes and a pink paw pad on each foot. Eevee has brown eyes, long pointed ears with dark brown interiors, and a small black nose. Eevee is rarely found in the wild and is mostly only found in cities and towns. However, it is said to have an irregularly shaped genetic structure that is easily influenced by its environment. This allows it to adapt to a variety of habitats by evolving. Eevee is the only known Pokémon capable of using the exclusive Z-Move Extreme Evoboost.
In Pokémon: Let's Go, Eevee!, the player starts with a special Eevee known as a Partner Eevee. The Partner Eevee has purple eyes and a lighter shade of fur. These design elements were likely taken from the anime, which implemented similar traits starting in Pokémon the Series: Ruby and Sapphire. Partner Eevee has higher base stats and access to moves that normal Eevee do not. Partner Eevee is the only Pokémon capable of performing Bouncy Bubble, Buzzy Buzz, Sizzly Slide, Glitzy Glow, Baddy Bad, Sappy Seed, Freezy Frost, Sparkly Swirl, and the Partner Power, Veevee Volley. The marking on the tip of a female Partner Eevee's tail is heart-shaped. Before Pokémon Sword and Shield, this trait was unique and wasn't found on other female Eevee. In Pokémon Sword and Shield and later Pokémon GO updates, the unique tail pattern is present on all female Eevee as a true gender difference.
As Gigantamax Eevee, it has become larger and more fluffy. The fur collar becomes longer with several triangular furs pointing straight up. The right ear has three red clouds surrounding it like a circle. Due to the fur becoming fluffier and luxurious, any enemies caught in it will lose the will to fight due to being enamored by its presence. Due to Gigantamaxing, Eevee becomes even more playful and rambunctious, desiring to play with its opponent and often unintentionally crushing them with its size.[1]
Gigantamax Eevee is the only known Pokémon capable of using the exclusive G-Max Move G-Max Cuddle.
In May's Egg-Cellent Adventure, May received an Egg from a Day-Care Couple. That Egg hatched into an Eevee in Time Warp Heals All Wounds. Eevee eventually evolved into a Glaceon before May met back up with the group in A Full Course Tag Battle!.
Serena caught an Eevee in A Frolicking Find in the Flowers!. She later evolved into a Sylveon in Party Dancecapades!.
A wild Eevee first appeared in a series of shorts titled Where Are You Going, Eevee?. The first episode debuted after Lillier and the Staff!. It made its main series debut in We Know Where You're Going, Eevee!, where it was caught by Lana and given the nickname Sandy.
In The Rivalry Revival, Gary has an Eevee, which defeated Ash's Pikachu in battle. It evolved into an Umbreon sometime before Power Play!.
Sakura owned an Eevee in Trouble's Brewing. By the time Ash and his friends met up with Sakura again in Espeon, Not Included, her Eevee had evolved into an Espeon.
Gladion's Eevee appeared in a flashback in A Glaring Rivalry!. In the present day, it has evolved into an Umbreon.
Chloe owns a female Eevee, which she caught in To Train, or Not to Train!. She is the first Pokémon that Chloe caught, as her only previous Pokémon, Yamper, was adopted under her father's ownership. For unknown reasons, it is incapable of evolving, despite the experiments done to it by Pinery and her assistants at the Eevee Evolution Lab.
In The Battling Eevee Brothers, Mikey was hiding his Eevee from his three older brothers because they wanted him to evolve it just like they did to their own Eevee. However, when Mikey's Eevee single-handedly defeated Team Rocket, Sparky, Rainer, and Pyro accepted the fact that Mikey wanted to keep his Eevee just the way it is.
In Last Call — First Round!, Ursula evolved two Eevee into a Flareon and a Vaporeon for the Performance Stage of the Sinnoh Grand Festival.
Starting in Team Eevee and the Pokémon Rescue Squad!, Virgil's female Eevee leads a team that included all of its evolutions at the time. A flashback featured a male Eevee that would evolve into his Umbreon after getting lost with Virgil in a forest and spending the night there.
In Eevee & Friends, a playful and friendly Eevee was seen alongside its evolutions, including the newly introduced Sylveon.
In Mystery on a Deserted Island!, three Eevee befriended Ash, his friends, Alexa, and their Pokémon after Pikachu rescued them from a Nidoking. They eventually evolved into Vaporeon, Jolteon, and Flareon.
In a flashback in Bonnie for the Defense!, an Eevee was taken away from Heidi, Kye, and Jay by their teacher, who told them they were too young to have a Pokémon. This caused them to develop a strong distrust of adults. Eventually, they learned that Eevee had actually been returned to its true owner after being delivered to Nurse Joy.
In Turning Heads and Training Hard!, Ilima's Eevee helped him earn the Eevium Z, which was eventually crucial to the defeat of Team Skull. It has since made further appearances in Pokémon the Series: Sun & Moon.
In The Power of Us, Ash helped Risa catch her Eevee, which her ill brother Rick had requested she get.
In Pikachu's Vacation, an Eevee was at the Pokémon Theme Park.
In The Power of One, an Eevee sensed the disturbance caused by Lawrence III.
A wild Eevee appeared in Pikachu's Rescue Adventure.
An Eevee briefly appeared in Hour of the Houndour.
An Eevee appeared in a fantasy in the Fortune Teller book in The Fortune Hunters.
An Eevee appeared in Will the Real Oak Please Stand Up?, under the ownership of a child.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in You're a Star, Larvitar!.
In Johto Photo Finish, Gary's demonstration featured an Eevee evolving into its five Eeveelutions at the time.
In A Bite to Remember, Brock's demonstration featured an Eevee evolving into its five Eeveelutions at the time.
In Gonna Rule The School!, the Pokémon Trainers' School lent an Eevee to the school's underage students for use in lessons.
Multiple Eevee appeared in the opening sequence of Destiny Deoxys.
A Coordinator's Eevee appeared in Hi Ho Silver Wind!.
In the opening sequence of Giratina and the Sky Warrior, an Eevee was together with its seven Eeveelutions at the time.
An Eevee appeared in A Rivalry to Gible On!.
An Eevee appeared in Genesect and the Legend Awakened.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in A Battle of Aerial Mobility!.
In Diancie and the Cocoon of Destruction, an Eevee was living in Allearth Forest.
An Eevee appeared during the Mega Audino journal in A Race for Home!.
An Eevee appeared as an image in A Performance Pop Quiz!.
Two Trainers' Eevee appeared in Alola to New Adventure!.
A student's Eevee appeared in The Guardian's Challenge!. It reappeared in the banned episode SM064.
Five Trainers' Eevee appeared in A Shocking Grocery Run!.
Three Trainers' Eevee appeared in Crystal-Clear Sleuthing!.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in One Journey Ends, Another Begins....
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in Getting the Band Back Together!.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in A Glaring Rivalry!. It reappeared in a flashback in A Masked Warning!.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in I Choose You!.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in Alola, Kanto!.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in Faba's Revenge!.
In Turning Heads and Training Hard!, Kagetora's Eevee was defeated in a battle by Ilima and his own Eevee.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in Twirling with a Bang!.
Two Trainers' Eevee appeared in A Young Royal Flame Ignites!.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in Dummy, You Shrunk the Kids!.
In Securing the Future!, a Trainer's Eevee joined the rest of Alola in showering Necrozma with light so it could return to its true form.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in Turning the Other Mask!.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in Heart of Fire! Heart of Stone!.
In Drawn with the Wind!, four Eevee were seen at Malie Garden.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in League Offenders and Defenders!.
In The Final Four!, a Trainer's Eevee was near Team Rocket's food truck.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in Z-Move Showdown!.
An Eevee appeared in the ending credits of Mewtwo Strikes Back—Evolution, under the ownership of a mother and daughter.
Two Eevee appeared in The Sinnoh Iceberg Race!, each under the ownership of a different Trainer.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in Ash's fantasy in The Climb to Be the Very Best!.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in Raid Battle in The Ruins!.
In A Talent for Imitation!, Team Rocket attempted to steal a Trainer's Eevee with the help of a Ditto, but they failed after Ditto's Transform didn't work completely.
In A Little Rocket R & R!, a Trainer's Eevee was captured by the Matori Matrix but later freed by Ash and his friends.
In Splash, Dash, and Smash for the Crown!, a Trainer's Eevee was watching the Magikarp High Jump Competition.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in Sword and Shield, Slumbering Weald!.
An Eevee appeared in a fantasy in JN061.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in a fantasy in JN067.
Using a Fire Stone will yield Flareon, the Flame Pokémon. A Water Stone yields Vaporeon, the Bubble Jet Pokémon. A Thunder Stone yields Jolteon, the Lightning Pokémon.
In File 1: Red, an Eevee was with Professor Oak.
In File 3: Giovanni, an Eevee was seen at Silph Co., trapped with multiple other Pokémon. They were later freed by Red.
An Eevee appeared in Buddy, under the ownership of a Lass.
An Eevee appeared in GOTCHA!, under the ownership of a girl.
Like in the anime, Mikey owns an Eevee in The Electric Tale of Pikachu. Mikey and his Eevee appear in the chapter To Evolve or Not to Evolve, That is the Question!.
Coconut owns a smart, loyal Eevee in Magical Pokémon Journey.
Later, another Eevee nicknamed Lu appears. Coconut's Eevee falls in love with Lu, who confesses her own love to Eevee before moving away.
In Blame it on Eevee, an Eevee was subjected to experiments by Team Rocket, which attempted to merge Articuno, Zapdos, and Moltres into a single Pokémon. The experiments gave Eevee the characteristic of being able to mutate into three of his evolved forms, namely Vaporeon, Jolteon, and Flareon and revert, though he still requires the energies of an Evolution stone. Red eventually catches this Eevee as a prerequisite for challenging Erika and gave him the nickname of Vee.
An Eevee appeared in The Kindest Tentacruel as one of the Pokémon in Yellow's fantasy about evolution via Evolution stone.
Vee evolved into Espeon and lost his mutation ability, becoming unable to revert to his base form.
An Eevee appeared in The Escape, under the ownership of Karen during her childhood. It was one of the children captured by the Masked Man. It is presumed that this Eevee eventually evolves into her Umbreon, which she used to fight Green.
Sometime off-panel prior to PS553, Y caught an Eevee, which she named Veevee. When she used her in a battle against Team Flare, she evolved into a Sylveon.
Mitsumi has an Eevee as seen in Clash! Hareta vs. Mitsumi!!.
An Eevee appeared in a background collage in Catch the Poliwag!.
An Eevee appeared in The Terrible Twins, Rin & Ran, under the ownership of Rin.
An Eevee appeared in a fantasy in Journey to a New Horizon.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in The Power of Teamwork.
The Hero and Heroine both have an Eevee in Pokémon + Nobunaga's Ambition ~ Ranse's Color Picture Scroll ~.
An Eevee appeared in Curry Showdown! Which is the Most Delicious? as one of the participants of a curry cooking competition.
An Eevee appeared in Pikachu's Birthday Party.
An Eevee appeared in a fantasy in PZ04.
As in the games and anime, Eevee is notable in the TCG for being able to evolve into the most differently-named Pokémon cards, with its eight normal evolutions, as well as Dark forms of the Generation I evolutions and Espeon, and Light forms of the Generation I evolutions.
One Eevee figure has been released.
Eevee only appears as a random trophy.
As adaptable a Pokémon as any yet discovered, Eevee's evolutionary progress changes to meet the conditions of its environment. So far, five evolutionary forms have been discovered and then catalogued for this unique Pokémon; Vaporeon, Jolteon, Flareon, Espeon, and Umbreon. All evolutions have special benefits.
Eevee appears as a Poké Ball Pokémon. It uses Take Down to hit opponents. It also appears as a trophy in both versions of the game.
NA: This Normal-type Pokémon is as adaptable to evolution as they come, with eight evolutions discovered thus far. If you pair that potential with its adorable features, it's no wonder Eevee is so popular! In Smash Bros., Eevee will attack a nearby opponent with Take Down. Sadly, this attack isn't incredibly powerful.
PAL: This adorable Normal-type Pokémon's ability to evolve in so many different ways makes it a popular choice with trainers. When brought out in battle, Eevee uses Take Down on the first opponent it sees, but...it's not very effective. Never mind. Eevee may not be the toughest Pokémon, but it'll always be one of the cutest.
Eevee returns as a Poké Ball Pokémon. It uses Take Down to attack foes, moving from left to right and vice-versa up to five times. It also appears as two Spirits, Eevee and Partner Eevee.
An Eevee briefly appeared in Detective Pikachu, under the ownership of Howard Clifford. It evolved into a Flareon.
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25 → (random) 25 + 10 km + → 25 + 10 km + → 25 + → 25 + → 25 + + 70 →
In Pokémon GO, Eevee can be obtained by completing 3/8 and 4/8 of the Special Research, A Ripple in Time. Eevee’s Shiny variant could also be obtained by completing 4/6 of the time-limited Special Research set, Jump-Start Research. If Eevee has a particular nickname, then once per nickname, it is guaranteed to evolve into the following, regardless of other conditions:
Dynamax Band ↔
In the 2018 artbook, EVs, Motofumi Fujiwara revealed that Eevee was inspired by vague childhood memories of an unknown creature he encountered in the forest. Though it wasn't based on any distinct animal, Fujiwara mentioned that Eevee reminded him of a fluffy cat or dog-like creature.[3]
Eevee and Eievui are the pronunciations of E-V, the first two letters in the word evolution.
Carbink (Japanese: メレシー Melecie) is a dual-type Rock/Fairy Pokémon introduced in Generation VI.
It is not known to evolve into or from any other Pokémon.
Carbink is a gray, rock-like Pokémon with a conical body. Its body has light blue crystals of various shapes and sizes embedded in it. A white, fluffy collar surrounds its small head. It uses this soft mane to polish the gems of other Carbink. It has bright blue eyes, a light blue crystal on top of its head, and flat diamond-shaped ears. Due to its small stature, it ties with Minior and Dwebble as the shortest Rock-type.
Carbink loves high temperatures and pressures underground and is occasionally found during cave excavations. Following birth, it can sleep for millions of years. It is preyed upon by Sableye, and Gabite also likes to capture it. Carbink defends itself by shooting high-energy beams from the gem on its head. Rarely, Carbink will undergo a strange mutation and transform into Diancie. It is said that a pack of Carbink lives deep underground with their queen in a jeweled kingdom.
Three Carbink named Bort, Merrick, and Allotrope appeared in Diancie — Princess of the Diamond Domain. Bort, Merrick, and Allotrope reappeared in Diancie and the Cocoon of Destruction, accompanied by a fourth Carbink named Dace, who appeared to be their leader.
Four Carbink appeared in the Hoopa's Surprise Ring Adventures short In the Dark, where they were among the Pokémon rudely awakened by Hoopa's summoning of multiple Litwick.
Multiple Carbink made their main series debut in A Diamond in the Rough!, with one of them causing trouble in Ash's Goodra's homeland. One of them reappeared in Down to the Fiery Finish!, where it was watching Goodra's battle against Alain on TV.
Multiple Carbink appeared in Diancie and the Cocoon of Destruction, where they resided in the Diamond Domain.
The Carbink servants appear in Diancie and the Cocoon of Destruction.
In PS569, a group of Carbink lived in a cave near where Korrina, Gurkinn, and Diantha camped as fugitives. A thief knocked out several of the Carbink inside the cave in order to steal the prized Diancie, but just as he made it out of the cave, he was stopped by the fugitive trio and eventually defeated by Diancie.
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Carbink could be based on the carbuncle, a fake fairy-like creature that was rumored to have gemstones growing out of it, and referring to its power to shoot rays or beams of light from the gem on its head. Its appearance is likely based on an ore, a type of rock that contains minerals with important elements that are valued for a high price.
Carbink may be a combination of carbuncle, carbon (element diamonds are composed of), carat, and tink (to tinkle).
Melecie may be a combination of melée (small cut diamonds), 珍しい mezurashii (rare), and 石 ishi (stone).