User:Avedis1234/sandbox

Charizard From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Charizard Pokémon series character A bidepal orange dragon with a cream underbelly stands facing the viewer. Its wing membranes are colored blue and it has a small fire on the tip of its tail. Its head is turned to the left and it is looking up toward toward the sky. National Pokédex Charmeleon - Charizard (#006) - Squirtle First game	Pocket Monsters Red and Green Designed by	Ken Sugimori Voiced by	Shinichiro Miki - (in both the Japanese and English-language versions of the Pokémon anime.) Charizard, known in Japan as Lizardon (リザードン Rizadon?), is a Pokémon species in Nintendo and Game Freak's Pokémon franchise. Created by Ken Sugimori, Charizard first appeared in the video games Pocket Monsters Red and Green and subsequent sequels. They have later appeared in various merchandise, spinoff titles and animated and printed adaptations of the franchise. Shin-ichiro Miki, the actor who voices James in the original Japanese version of the Pokémon anime, voices Charizard in both the Japanese and English-language versions of the cartoon. Charizard is featured in the Pokémon anime series with the most recurring being from the main character, Ash Ketchum. It is featured in printed adaptations such as Pokémon Adventures, in the possession of Blue, one of the main characters. Red is also shown to have a Charizard, in Pokémon Origins, which he received from Professor Oak as his starter when it was a Charmander. Charizard has received positive reception from the media, with GamesRadar describing it as "hands-down one of the coolest Pokémon out there". Charizard is the version mascot of Pokémon Red and FireRed versions, and makes an appearance on the boxarts of Pokémon Stadium, Pokémon Ranger, Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Red Rescue Team, and Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Sky. Charizard is the evolved form of Charmeleon, which, in turn, is the evolved form of Charmander. Contents [hide] 1 Concept and characteristics 2 Appearances 2.1 In video games 2.2 In anime 2.3 In printed adaptations 3 Reception and legacy 4 References 5 External links Concept and characteristics[edit]

Charizard was one of several different character choices conceived by Game Freak's character development team and finalized by Ken Sugimori for the first generation of Pocket Monsters games Red and Green, which were localized outside of Japan as Pokémon Red and Blue.[1][2] Originally called "Lizardon" in Japanese, Nintendo decided to give the various Pokémon species "clever and descriptive names" related to their appearance or features when translating the game for western audiences as a means to make the characters more relatable to American children.[3] As a result they were renamed "Charizard", a combination of the words "charcoal" or "char" and "lizard".[4] During an interview, Pokémon Company president Tsunekazu Ishihara stated Charizard was expected to be popular with North American audiences because of their preference for strong, powerful characters.[5] Whereas its pre-evolutions Charmander and Charmeleon are ground-bound lizard like creatures, Charizard resembles a large traditional European dragon.[6] Despite the resemblance, Charizard is explicitly a Fire/Flying-type, not a Dragon-type, except in its "Mega Charizard X" form; however, it can learn Dragon-type attacks.[7] Charizard have two wings that are blue, while the back is orange, as with the most of its body. Its belly and soles are cream-colored, while their eyes are light blue in color. The video games describe Charizard as having wings that can carry them close to an altitude of 4,600 feet,[8] flying proudly around the sky and constantly seeking for powerful opponents to quarrel with.[9] They can breathe intense flames that can melt any material, but will never torch a weaker foe.[10] If Charizard become angry, the flame at the tip of their tail can flare up in a whitish-blue color.[11] Because of their reckless behavior, Charizard are known to unintentionally cause wildfires.[12] When Charizard is Mega Evolved, it can take on one of two forms. In its "X" form, it gains the Dragon type, and its color scheme changes from orange and blue to black and blue. In its "Y" form, its appearance gets sharper with pointed horns and wings, and it is able to fly much higher.[13] Appearances[edit]

In video games[edit] Charizard made their video game debut in 1996 with the Japanese release of Pokémon Red and Blue.[14][15] It is available only through Pokémon evolution from the starter Pokémon, Charmander.[16] In Pokémon Gold, Silver, and Crystal, and their remakes, Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver, Charizard is used by Red, who acts as the games' final boss.[17] Charizard is one of several Pokémon in Pokémon X and Y that will able to use the new Mega Evolution mechanic, becoming either Mega Charizard X or Mega Charizard Y.[18] Charizard has made appearances in many other Pokémon games. It appears in Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Blue Rescue Team and Red Rescue Team on a team with an Alakazam and Tyranitar, who play a significant role in the story.[19] In Pokémon Ranger, Charizard is a boss Pokémon who becomes attached to the player's character and assists him or her throughout the game.[20] Charizard returns in Pokémon Ranger: Guardian Signs as another boss character. It is also one of the photographable Pokémon in Pokémon Snap, as well as a non-playable character in PokéPark Wii: Pikachu's Adventure and its sequel, PokéPark 2: Wonders Beyond. Charizard has appeared many times throughout the Super Smash Bros. series. Charizard first appears as a non-playable character in Super Smash Bros. and Super Smash Bros. Melee, as one of the Pokémon which can appear if a player throws a Poké Ball. In Super Smash Bros. Brawl, Charizard is now playable, under the command of the Pokémon Trainer.[21] The Trainer has a Squirtle and an Ivysaur, all three of which can be switched between; unlike the other fighters, these Pokémon become fatigued and consequently weaker, and must be switched out long enough to recover. Charizard's moves include Rock Smash, Flamethrower, and Fly.[21] In anime[edit] In the anime, the most notable Charizard is one Ash Ketchum has had since he was a Charmander abandoned by his former owner.[22] Ash's Charmander evolved into Charmeleon during a battle against an army of Exeggutor, and his personality changed completely,[23] becoming a disobedient Pokémon and fighting when and how he pleased. Charmeleon evolved when Ash summoned him for protection from wild prehistoric Pokémon. Unfortunately, Charmeleon was still disobeyed. When an Aerodactyl attacked him and carried Ash off, Charmeleon evolved only to fight the Aerodactyl more effectively with Ash's rescue a second priority.[24] Charizard still didn't obey Ash, preferring to sleep, and only battled Pokémon that would pose a challenge, but Charizard helped Ash reach his goals, particularly against Gym Leader Blaine.[25] Sadly, Charizard apologize to Ash then led to his loss in one of the Kanto League matches.[26] Charizard became loyal during the Orange Islands arc after Ash battled a trainer with a Poliwrath and Charizard was frozen solid. Because of Ash’s continuous self-sacrificing efforts to save Charizard from certain death, he began to obey Ash and defeated the Poliwrath in a rematch.[27] He remained on Ash's team and contributed to his wins in the Orange League[28] and parts of Johto. He eventually stayed behind in the Charizific Valley, a reserve where wild Charizard battle and train to become stronger. This was likely due to meeting Charla, a female Charizard for whom he developed a fondness.[29] Charizard, like many of Ash's other Pokémon, returns on a temporary basis to battle at Ash’s side, typically when Ash faces a particularly powerful Pokémon.[16] Charizard has saved Ash's life on more than one occasion, as seen in the film Spell of the Unown, where he battled against Entei after arriving in the nick of time to prevent Ash and Pikachu from falling to their deaths, having flown over from the Charizific Valley after originally seeing a live broadcast from Ash running after Entei who had kidnapped Ash's mother, Delia.[16][30] Charizard returned for Ash's first Battle Frontier battle, where he took on Noland's Articuno at the Battle Factory and won thanks to an unorthodox strategy.[16][31] As of the latest Best Wishes series airing in Japan, Charizard has officially or rather temporarily rejoined Ash's team while Ash was exploring the Unova (Isshu) region. Upon meeting Ash again, he gave his trainer a Flamethrower to the face much to everyone's surprise. Charizard also developed a fierce rivalry with Iris's Dragonite so much so that both Ash and Iris agreed to have a battle. During the battle which originally began on the ground but later ascended skywards when both Pokémon took to the skies, it was shown that Charizard had learnt Wing Attack, Slash, and Dragon Tail but despite the two Pokémon having something of a very fierce rivalry with one another, N immediately called the battle off after realizing that Dragonite had injured its right arm.[32] Charizard has its own DVD that contains four episodes featuring it: "Attack of the Prehistoric Pokémon", "Charizard Chills", "Charizard's Burning Ambition" and.[33] This DVD is part of the 10th Anniversary Box Set; in the Box Set's "10 Most Wanted Pokémon" countdown Charizard is listed as the third most wanted, beaten only by Pikachu and Jigglypuff. In the television special Pokémon Origins, Charizard is Red's partner, having evolved from Charmeleon at the beginning of the third segment. He helps Red win the Pokémon League and defeat his rival, Blue. During a battle against Mewtwo in the fourth segment, his bond with Red resonates with Mega Stones given to them by Mr. Fuji of Lavender Town, allowing him to Mega Evolve into Mega Charizard X and defeat Mewtwo. In printed adaptations[edit] In Pokémon: Pikachu Shocks Back which loosely parallels the storyline of the anime, Ash catches a Charmander, and it ultimately becomes a Charizard and battles in the Pokémon League tournament. Despite his catch, he has trouble controlling it.[34] Ash brings Charizard to the Orange Islands and trains it diligently since the near-disaster. He then uses it to battle Dragonite in the final showdown with the Orange Crew Supreme gym leader Drake.[35] In the Pokémon Adventures manga, Blue receives a Charmander from his grandfather Professor Oak. It evolves into a Charmeleon, and when Blue is possessed by a Gastly in the Lavender Tower, so is Charmeleon. Blue's Charmeleon is eventually released from its possession only to be faced down by an Arbok, owned by Koga. Charmeleon tricked Koga by using a zombie Psyduck to deflect Arbok's acid attack before literally slicing the Arbok in half with his tail. Blue later appears with an evolved Charizard and gains access to Saffron City by helping to disable a barrier created by a Mr. Mime.[36] Later, Red and Blue face off against Koga's Articuno and are frozen by its Ice Beam, but they ultimately defeat the Team Rocket Executive with Charizard's Flamethrower.[37] It then teams up with Red's newly evolved Venusaur, Saur, and Green's Blastoise, Blasty, to defeat Sabrina's monster Pokémon. They end Team Rocket's control of Saffron City, splitting apart the three birds in the process.[38] Blue's Charizard re-appeared during the final match of the ninth Pokémon League, against his longtime rival Red. Despite the type advantage, Charizard battles against Saur and is nearly knocked out. As the battle progresses the two trainers send out their first Pokémon to battle again, when Saur binds Charizard from attacking. Suddenly, thunderclouds form from the attacks of Poli and Pika, and Saur submerges a vine into the cloud, shocking Charizard and knocking it out.[39] When the "FireRed and LeafGreen" volume of the manga began the original protagonists – Red, Blue, and Green – return to fight the newly formed Team Rocket and the Deoxys under their power. The three trainers become trapped inside the Trainer Tower in the Sevii Islands, battling the main computer of the building and the Deoxys Divides. After struggling to co-ordinate Blasty, Saur, and Charizard, the three trainers manage to focus the angle of the three powerful attacks – Blast Burn, Hydro Cannon, and Frenzy Plant – to free Mewtwo, who in turn destroys the Trainer Tower.[40] Charizard appeared as the main Pokémon in the short novel, Charizard Go! Adapted by Tracey West, the novelisation retells Ash's journey with his Charmander, and it reaches its climax as Ash and Charizard battle in the Pokémon League at the Indigo Plateau against his good friend Richie. The story covers Ash and his companions finding the abandoned Charmander, the battles in which Charmeleon did not listen to Ash, and Charizard's battle against Blaine's Magmar. Charizard Go! is the sixth novel in the Pokémon Chapter Books series.[41] Another chapter novel, All Fired Up: Pokémon the Johto Journeys, adapted by Jennifer Johnson, covers the portion of Ash's journey near Violet City and the Characific Valley. In the novel, Ash wonders if Charizard should leave his team forever; it covers the capture of Ash's Cyndaquil, his new fire Pokémon.[42] Reception and legacy[edit]

Charizard has been featured in lines of soft toys and action figures in the Pokémon franchise, made by Hasbro, and Tomy.[43] In 2004, the "Charizard Medium Plush" was part of a major recall of 13 plush toys due to a manufacturing fault where tips of needles were being found with the stuffing. This caused Tomy to replace the toys with compensation or replacements.[43] Charizard appears often in the Pokémon Trading Card Game, most notably in the series' initial release. Cards featuring the character have been stated to be the most desired of the series, quickly rising to high prices amongst collectors and retailers.[44][45] These cards overpowered and knocked out opponents in one hit.[46] Described by the media as "a lean, ferocious, fire-breathing dragon [...] sleek, powerful, and utterly destructive", Charizard has been noted as one of the franchise's most popular characters.[47] Retailers have attributed the high sales of merchandise related to the character to the popularity of the character's dragon-like design with children.[44] Interviewed children have stated similar; they attributed its appeal to its "cool looking" appearance and associating the character with the concepts of stubbornness and power.[48][49][50] The book Rebuilding Attachments With Traumatized Children stated psychiatrists utilized the character as an empowered character traumatized children who were fans of the Pokémon series could relate to.[51] The book Pikachu's Global Adventure: The Rise and Fall of Pokémon cited Charizard as popular with older male children who tend to be drawn to "tough or scary" characters,[52] and compared the character's evolution from Charmander into Charizard with the loss of "cuteness" as one leaves childhood.[53] In 2005, search engine Yahoo! reported Charizard as one of the top Pokémon-related web searches.[54] IGN editor "pokemonofthedaychick" called Charizard "certainly the most popular and perhaps the most well-balanced of any of the current starting Pokemon".[55] GamesRadar's Brett Elston described Charizard as "hands-down one of the coolest Pokémon out there", heavily praising its character design and calling it "one of the coolest" designs of the entire series.[56][57] GamesRadar editor Raymond Padilla stated "Charizard was an awesome Pokemon back in the day and still an excellent choice more than a decade after it was introduced."[58] UGO.com described Charizard as a "winged, dragon-like creature" which is "able to breathe fire and smash opponents into red-tinged goo", but states that in Brawl it is "as slow as Bowser" and "lacks the coolness factor of Mario's arch-nemesis."[59] 1UP editor Kat Bailey expressed concern about which Pokémon could follow the player in Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver, stating "allowing popular favorites like Charizard would go over quite well".[60] In a poll by Official Nintendo Magazine, Charizard was voted as the best Fire-type Pokémon. They stated "not only is Charizard your favourite fire Pokémon but it is probably one of the most popular 'mon of all time".[61] The Daily Cardinal editor Kyle Sparks called Charizard "the most dominant Pokémon in the whole universe, a force of sheer strength".[62] Authors Tracey West and Katherine Noll called Charizard the best Fire type Pokémon and the third best Pokémon overall. They wrote that there was nothing else that could better fit that spot and that "it has won our hearts and had us cheering for more"[16] In a poll conducted by IGN, it was voted as the best Pokémon, where the staff commented about remembering being torn between choosing Blastoise and Charizard at the start of the game.[63][64] References[edit]

Jump up ^ Staff. "2. 一新されたポケモンの世界". Nintendo.com (in Japanese). Nintendo. p. 2. Retrieved 2010-09-10. Jump up ^ Stuart Bishop (2003-05-30). "Game Freak on Pokémon!". CVG. Archived from the original on 2008-02-08. Retrieved 2008-02-07. Jump up ^ Chua-Euan, Howard (November 22, 1999). "PokéMania". TIME. Archived from the original on 2008-09-13. Retrieved 2008-09-15. Jump up ^ Staff. "#006: Charizard". IGN. Retrieved 2009-07-14. Jump up ^ Nintendo. "Interview with Tsunekazu Ishihara" (in Japanese). Retrieved 2009-06-07. Jump up ^ DeKirk, Ash; Oberon Zell-Ravenheart (2006). Dragonlore:From the Archives of the Grey School of Wizardry. Career Press. p. 125. ISBN 1-56414-868-8. Jump up ^ "Charizard :: Best Pokémon". makefive.com. Retrieved May 22, 2009. Jump up ^ Game Freak (2004-09-07). Pokémon FireRed. Game Boy Advance. Nintendo. "Its wings can carry this Pokémon close to an altitude of 4,600 feet. It blows out fire at very high temperatures." Jump up ^ Game Freak (2003-03-17). Pokémon Ruby. Game Boy Advance. Nintendo. "Charizard flies around the sky in search of powerful opponents. It breathes fire of such great heat that it melts anything. However, it never turns its fiery breath on any opponent weaker than itself." Jump up ^ Game Freak (2005-05-01). Pokémon Emerald. Game Boy Advance. Nintendo. "A Charizard flies about in search of strong opponents. It breathes intense flames that can melt any material. However, it will never torch a weaker foe." Jump up ^ Game Freak (2000-10-15). Pokémon Gold. Game Boy Color. Nintendo. "If Charizard becomes furious, the flame at the tip of its tail flare up in a whitish-blue color." Jump up ^ Game Freak (1998-09-30). Pokémon Red and Blue. Game Boy. Nintendo. "It spits fire that is hot enough to melt boulders. Known to cause forest fires unintentionally." Jump up ^ "Mega-Evolved Pokémon". PokemonXY. Nintendo. Jump up ^ Sora Ltd. (2008-01-31). Pikachu Trophy Information. Wii. Nintendo. "Appearances: Pokémon Red/Green (1996)" Jump up ^ "Official Japanese Pokémon website". Retrieved 2007-05-24. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e West, Tracy; Noll, Katherine (September 2006). Pokémon Top 10 Handbook. Scholastic Inc. pp. 8, 65, 78. ISBN 0-439-89047-0. Jump up ^ Game Freak (March 14, 2010). Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver. Nintendo DS. Nintendo. Jump up ^ "Mega Pokémon". Pokemonxy.com. Retrieved 2013-10-02. Jump up ^ Chunsoft (November 17, 2005). Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Blue Rescue Team and Red Rescue Team. Game Boy Advance and Nintendo DS. Nintendo. Jump up ^ HAL Laboratory (March 23, 2006). Pokémon Ranger. Nintendo DS. Nintendo. ^ Jump up to: a b "Pokémon Trainer". Smash Bros. DOJO!!. Smashbros.com. Retrieved 2008-02-03. Jump up ^ Junki Takegami (writer) (September 22, 1998). "Charmander – The Stray Pokémon". Pokémon. Season Indigo League. Episode 11. Various. Jump up ^ Hideki Sonoda (writer) (October 30, 1998). "The March of the Exeggutor Squad". Pokémon. Season Indigo League. Episode 43. Various. Jump up ^ Junki Takegami (writer) (February 27, 1999). "Attack of the Prehistoric Pokémon". Pokémon. Season Indigo League. Episode 46. Various. Jump up ^ Junki Takegami (writer) (September 18, 1999). "Volcanic Panic". Pokémon. Season Indigo League. Episode 57. Various. Jump up ^ Hideki Sonoda (writer) (November 27, 1999). "Friend and Foe Alike". Pokémon. Season Indigo League. Episode 79. Various. Jump up ^ Atsuhiro Tomioka (writer) (September 2, 2000). "Charizard Chills". Pokémon. Season Adventures on the Orange Islands. Episode 105. Various. Jump up ^ Atsuhiro Tomioka (writer) (September 23, 2000). "Enter The Dragonite". Pokémon. Season Adventures on the Orange Islands. Episode 112. Various. Jump up ^ Takeshi Shudō (writer) (February 3, 2001). "Charizard's Burning Ambitions". Pokémon. Season The Johto Journeys. Episode 134. Various. Jump up ^ Norman J. Grossfeld, Michael Haigney, Hideki Sonoda, Takeshi Shudo (writers) (April 6, 2001). "Pokémon 3: The Movie". Pokémon. Various. Jump up ^ Masashi Sogo (writer) (April 22, 2006). "The Symbol Life". Pokémon. Season Advanced Battle. Episode 136. Various. Jump up ^ Atsuhiro Tomioka (writer) (June 8, 2013). "The Fires of a Red-Hot Reunion!". Pokémon. Season Black & White: Adventures in Unova. Episode 116. Various. Jump up ^ "Pokémon 10th Anniversary, Vol. 3 - Charizard". Amazon.com. Retrieved 2011-01-12. Jump up ^ Ono, Toshihiro. Pokémon: Electric Pikachu Boogaloo Graphic Novel. VIZ Media LLC, April 5, 2000. ISBN 1-56931-436-5 Jump up ^ Ono, Toshihiro. Pokémon: Surf’s Up, Pikachu Graphic Novel. VIZ Media LLC, June 2000. ISBN 1-56931-494-2 Jump up ^ Kusaka, Hidenori; Mato (August 5, 2001). "Chapter 28". Peace of Mime. Pokémon Adventures. Volume 3: Saffron City Siege. VIZ Media LLC. pp. 5–19. ISBN 1-56931-560-4. Jump up ^ Kusaka, Hidenori; Mato (August 5, 2001). "Chapter 31". The Art of Articuno. Pokémon Adventures. Volume 3: Saffron City Siege. VIZ Media LLC. pp. 47–61. ISBN 1-56931-560-4. Jump up ^ Kusaka, Hidenori; Mato (August 5, 2001). "Chapter 33". The Winged Legends. Pokémon Adventures. Volume 3: Saffron City Siege. VIZ Media LLC. pp. 75–95. ISBN 1-56931-560-4. Jump up ^ Kusaka, Hidenori; Mato (August 5, 2001). "Chapter 40". A Charizard... and a Champion. Pokémon Adventures. Volume 3: Saffron City Siege. VIZ Media LLC. p. 118. ISBN 1-56931-560-4. Jump up ^ Kusaka, Hidenori; Mato (July 11, 2006). "Chapter 24". Mewtwo Joins The Battle. Pokémon Adventures. Volume 24. VIZ Media LLC. ISBN 978-4-09-140318-6. Jump up ^ West, Tracey. Charizard Go!. Scholastic Publishing, April 2000. ISBN 0-439-15421-9. Jump up ^ Johnson, Jennifer. All Fired Up: Pokémon the Johto Journeys. Scholastic Publishing, June 2001. ISBN 0-439-22114-5. ^ Jump up to: a b "Recall of Pokémon plush toys" Cpsc.org'.' Retrieved 12 July 2006. ^ Jump up to: a b Diggs, Agnes (1999-07-25). "Valley Roundup; West Hills; Pokémon Tourney Draws Hundreds of Young Players". Los Angeles Times (Eddy W. Hartenstein). Jump up ^ Kaufield, John; Jeremy Smith (2006). Trading Card Games for Dummies. For Dummies. p. 93. ISBN 0-471-75416-1. Jump up ^ Jack DeVries (February 24, 2009). "Pokémon Report: Playing With a Full Deck - DS Feature at IGN". IGN. Jump up ^ "Pondering Pokémon". The Observer. February 24, 2009. Retrieved 2009-02-28. Jump up ^ Jacobs, Chick (2006-07-05). "Pokémon Turns 10". The Fayetteville Observer (Charles Broadwell). Jump up ^ Jacobs, Chick (2000-11-24). "A Friendly Ear and Some Pokémon Can Ease the Fear". The Fayetteville Observer (Charles Broadwell). Jump up ^ Tobin, Joseph Jay (2004). Pikachu's Global Adventure: The Rise and Fall of Pokémon. Duke University Press. p. 180. ISBN 0-8223-3287-6. Jump up ^ Kagan, Richard (2004). Rebuilding Attachments With Traumatized Children. Haworth Maltreatment and Trauma Press. ISBN 0-7890-1544-7. Jump up ^ Tobin, Joseph Jay (2004). Pikachu's Global Adventure: The Rise and Fall of Pokémon. Duke University Press. p. 283. ISBN 0-8223-3287-6. Jump up ^ Tobin, Joseph Jay (2004). Pikachu's Global Adventure: The Rise and Fall of Pokémon. Duke University Press. p. 178. ISBN 0-8223-3287-6. Jump up ^ "Pokémon Far From Passe". Yahoo!. 2005-06-11. Archived from the original on 2005-06-14. Retrieved 2009-10-15. Jump up ^ pokemonofthedaychick (3/7/03). "Pokemon Crystal Version Pokemon of the Day: Charizard (#6) - IGN FAQs". IGN. Retrieved 2010-08-30. Jump up ^ Elston, Brett (2007-08-24). "The complete Pokémon RBY pokédex, part 1". GamesRadar. Future Publishing. p. 6. Retrieved 2009-10-04. Jump up ^ Elston, Brett (2007-08-24). "The complete Pokémon RBY pokédex, part 1". GamesRadar. Future Publishing. p. 4. Retrieved 2009-10-04. Jump up ^ Raymond Padilla (Dec 20, 2007). "Pokemusings, week 27, Pokemon Diamond/Pearl DS News". GamesRadar. Retrieved 2011-04-11. Jump up ^ "Charizard - Smash Bros. Characters". UGO.com. February 12, 2008. Retrieved 2011-04-09. Jump up ^ Kat Bailey (May 11, 2009). "1UP's RPG Blog : Three Wishes for the Pokemon Gold/Silver Remakes". Retrieved 2011-04-11. Jump up ^ Thomas East (29 Sep 2010). "Nintendo Feature: Best Fire Pokémon". Official Nintendo Magazine. Retrieved 2011-04-11. Jump up ^ Kyle Sparks (March 25, 2011). "If records were Pokémon bands would only improve". The Daily Cardinal. Retrieved 2011-04-11. Jump up ^ "Charizard - #1 Top Pokémon - IGN". IGN. Retrieved 2011-05-25. Jump up ^ Rich. "Blastoise - #3 Top Pokémon - IGN". IGN. Retrieved 2011-05-04. External links[edit]

Look up charizard in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Portal icon	Pokémon portal Charizard on Bulbapedia Charizard at the Internet Movie Database [hide] v t e Pokémon species Generation I (1996) Red, Green, Blue and Yellow MissingNo. (glitch) Bulbasaur Charmander Charizard Squirtle Blastoise Caterpie, Metapod, and Butterfree Ekans and Arbok Pikachu Raichu Vulpix Ninetales Jigglypuff Wigglytuff Zubat and Golbat Oddish, Gloom, and Vileplume Meowth Psyduck Arcanine Abra, Kadabra, and Alakazam Machop, Machoke, and Machamp Ponyta and Rapidash Slowpoke and Slowbro Farfetch'd Grimer and Muk Haunter Gengar Drowzee Hypno Cubone Lickitung Koffing and Weezing Chansey Staryu and Starmie Mr. Mime Scyther Jynx Magmar Magikarp Gyarados Lapras Ditto Eevee Aerodactyl Snorlax Articuno Zapdos Moltres Dragonite Mewtwo Mew Generation II (1999) Gold, Silver and Crystal Chikorita, Bayleef, and Meganium Cyndaquil, Quilava, and Typhlosion Totodile, Croconaw, and Feraligatr Crobat Pichu Togepi Sudowoodo Espeon and Umbreon Unown Girafarig Steelix Scizor Entei Suicune Lugia Celebi Generation III (2002) Ruby, Sapphire and Emerald Treecko Torchic Blaziken Mudkip Nosepass Latias and Latios Rayquaza Deoxys Generation IV (2006) Diamond, Pearl and Platinum Bidoof Lucario Probopass Giratina Arceus Generation V (2010) Black, White, Black 2 and White 2 Victini Oshawott, Dewott, and Samurott Zorua and Zoroark Full species list Generation I (001–051) (052–101) (102–151) Generation II (152–201) (202–251) Generation III (252–319) (320–386) Generation IV (387–440) (441–493) Generation V (494–545) (546–598) (599–649) Generation VI (650–719) This is a good article. Click here for more information. Categories: Dragon characters in video gamesFictional reptiliansPokémon speciesSuper Smash Bros. fightersVideo game characters introduced in 1996Video game characters with fire or heat abilitiesVideo game mascots Navigation menu Avedis12340TalkSandboxPreferencesBetaWatchlistContributionsLog outArticleTalkReadEditView historyWatch

Main page Contents Featured content Current events Random article Donate to Wikipedia Wikimedia Shop Interaction Help About Wikipedia Community portal Recent changes Contact page Tools Print/export Languages Bosanski Català Čeština Dansk Español Français 한국어 Hrvatski Bahasa Indonesia Italiano Bahasa Melayu Nederlands 日本語 Norsk bokmål Polski Português Русский Simple English Slovenčina Suomi ไทย Türkçe 中文 Edit links This page was last modified on 5 February 2014 at 13:37. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.