All Pokémon Quiz: Every Single One, #1 to #1025
Every Pokémon ever made, in one quiz
This all Pokémon quiz covers the complete National Dex — all 1025 Pokémon across nine generations, from Bulbasaur to Iron Crown. Identify each one by sprite, including regional forms, mythicals, and every Paldean Tauros breed.
What this all Pokémon quiz actually covers
Most Pokémon quizzes quietly skip the awkward ones. Not this one. The full roster here is 1025 Pokémon spanning nine generations, confirmed through Scarlet and Violet including the Teal Mask and Indigo Disk DLC. That means Sprigatito's line sits alongside Bulbasaur's, and the four Treasures of Ruin — Wo-Chien, Chien-Pao, Ting-Lu, and Chi-Yu — are all in the pool.
Regional forms appear as separate entries where they differ visually. The three Paldean Tauros breeds (Combat, Blaze, and Aqua) are distinct sprites, just as Galarian Slowking and Galarian Articuno are distinct from their Kantonian counterparts. If a form has its own Pokédex entry, it has its own question.
The Pokémon everyone misses on the full Pokédex quiz
Community error-rate data points to the same culprits again and again. Legendary quartets cause the most confusion because every member shares a visual language: the four Tapus all carry 'Tapu' in the name and a hollow-shell body plan, so players who confidently know Tapu Koko blank on Tapu Bulu. The Treasures of Ruin have the same problem — four hyphenated Dark-type names in a script that most Western players haven't encountered.
Mid-stage starters are a second trap. Brionne, Quilladin, and Pignite are routinely missed even by players who know Popplio and Chespin by heart, because the middle stage gets almost no screen time relative to the final evolution. The gear line — Klink, Klang, Klinklang — trips up players who can name the concept but can't separate the stages visually. These are exactly the Pokémon that a quiz without review logic never fixes.
- Wo-Chien: Lowest stat total among the Treasures of Ruin; weakest competitive presence keeps it out of memory.
- Tapu Bulu: Least anime screen time of the four Tapus; Tapu Koko was Ash's island partner.
- Virizion: The Swords of Justice member with no defining Gen 5 promotional moment.
- Vanillish: Players remember 'the ice cream Pokémon' but consistently mis-identify the middle stage.
- Klang: The intermediate gear — one ring added to Klink, one ring removed from Klinklang.
- Brionne: Popplio and Primarina get all the discussion; Brionne disappears between them.
- Quilladin: Widely cited as one of the least distinctive starter mid-stages; Chesnaught overshadows it completely.
- Enamorus: Added to the Forces of Nature in Legends: Arceus, a title that sold roughly half as many copies as Scarlet and Violet.
- Stantler: Existed as an unremarkable single-stage Normal-type for about 23 years before Wyrdeer appeared.
- Lumineon: Consistently named in 'most forgotten Sinnoh Pokémon' threads alongside its pre-evolution Finneon.
How spelling works on this complete Pokémon quiz
Type 'farfetchd' and the quiz accepts it. Type 'wochien' and it accepts that too. The answer engine uses Levenshtein distance tolerance of one character, so a single transposition, missing letter, or dropped accent won't void a correct identification. The goal is testing whether you know the Pokémon, not whether you can reproduce every canonical hyphen and acute accent under pressure.
That said, the quiz does display the correct spelling after each answer, including the canonical punctuation — the apostrophe in Farfetch'd, the hyphen in Ho-Oh, the colon in Type: Null, and the three accents in Flabébé. Learning the right form is part of completing the Pokédex properly.
Nine generations, one unbroken run
Generation I starts with Bulbasaur at #001 and ends with Mew at #151. Generation IX ends at #1025 with the Iron Crown and the Teal Mask's Pecharunt. In between are 156 new Pokémon introduced in Gen V alone, the largest single-generation expansion — which is part of why Gen V consistently produces the most errors on full-dex quizzes. More Pokémon per generation means more look-alike pairs: Throh and Sawk, Tympole and Palpitoad, Foongus and Amoonguss.
The continuous mode in this quiz runs the full 1025 without a hard stop. You can quit after any answer and your session will show which Pokémon you named correctly and which ones you blanked. No account is required and nothing is stored server-side — but if you want your misses to become a personal review queue, the memory trainer on the home rotation does exactly that.
Regional forms included in the all Pokémon quiz
Fifty-four Pokémon currently have regional forms, producing 57 distinct regional variants in total. Meowth has three (Kantonian, Alolan, Galarian) and Tauros has four (Kantonian plus the three Paldean breeds), making them the only species with more than one regional form. Every form that has a unique sprite and its own Pokédex number or form designation appears as a separate question.
Hisuian forms from Legends: Arceus are included — Hisuian Zorua, Hisuian Zoroark, Hisuian Decidueye, and the rest. Because Legends: Arceus reached roughly 14.83 million units sold compared to Scarlet and Violet's 26.79 million, Hisuian forms are among the least-recognized regional variants in quiz pools. If Hisuian Typhlosion or Hisuian Samurott trips you up here, that's the quiz doing its job.
Mythicals, Ultra Beasts, and Paradox Pokémon
Mythical Pokémon — Mew, Celebi, Jirachi, Deoxys, and onwards through Pecharunt — are part of the official National Dex and therefore part of this quiz. Ultra Beasts from Sun and Moon, including Nihilego, Buzzwole, and the rest of the UB roster, are in the pool. So are the Paradox Pokémon from Scarlet and Violet: the ancient forms like Great Tusk and Scream Tail, and the future forms like Iron Treads and Iron Moth.
Alternate formes that share a Pokédex number — Rotom's six appliance forms, Deoxys's four formes, Lycanroc's three forms — are treated as variants of the base entry rather than separate questions, since they share a National Dex number. The quiz focuses on species-level identification, not every possible forme.
What makes this quiz different from a one-a-day game
Daily Pokémon games like Pokedle and PokeDoku are built around scarcity — one puzzle per day, a streak to protect, a result to share. That format rewards casual habit but doesn't help you close the gap on the 200 Pokémon you keep blanking. This quiz has no daily cap. Run through the full 1025 in one session, or drill a single generation repeatedly until the error rate drops.
Wrong answers here become data. The community error-rate leaderboard shows which Pokémon the player base as a whole misses most often, so you can see whether your Wo-Chien blank is universal or personal. That's a different kind of accountability than a daily streak counter.