Originally Posted by kirbysprite
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Though, wouldn't it just be better to get a special attacker, and use Surf, since it has more power than Waterfall, and both have same accuracy.
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A Gyarados with one or two Dragon Dances can easily sweep many Pokémon. You won't find that many physical water sweepers, especially when the trend is going more toward special sweepers lately. Dragon Dance makes Gyarados quite literally an unstoppable force if even one is successfully executed.
Originally Posted by kirbysprite
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Wait. Crunch doesn't have STAB, yet you put Stone Edge. Is it because Stone Edge is stronger than Crunch? And why two Dragon moves?
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Stone Edge for countering most of the other types that may not be covered by the other moves in your moveset. Plus, with the high critical, it's definitely worth trading for in place of Crunch.
Outrage is a move that proceeds for 2-3 turns, which is more than you need in terms of Dragon moves, especially if you are choiced.
Originally Posted by kirbysprite
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Can I have some names with that team? I don't know who the 3rd or 4th Pokemon are... I also noticed, most of your pokemon are Rock or Ground. What do you do when there's a Water Pokemon?
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Originally Posted by Triumph
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Overused:
Tyranitar, Garchomp, Aerodactyl, Gliscor, Flygon, Heatran.
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It's the same, but the ordering I have is a bit off. In order it's Tyranitar, Aerodactyl, Flygon, Heatran, Gliscor, Garchomp.
It's a Sandstorm team. Most of my team can drop any water Pokémon that switches in, with the dubious exception of Kyogre, who counters the initial Sandstorm. As Kyogre isn't seen on the metagaming scene very much, even in the casual tiers, that isn't an issue.
The only remote threat that is Water is Swampert, but with a 4x weakness to Grass, Heatran solves the problem with Hidden Power Grass, if all else fails. In addition, Heatran also counters any Grass combatant that comes in. Most modern water sweepers are special attack based and/or special defense based, such as Vaporeon, which means the physical sweepers of the team will easily take them down for neutral damage.
If you want to know more... Bulbapedia, Serebii.net, and Smogon University are all good sources. Smogon is where most casual gamers get their Pokémon, so I would suggest against following them word for word. However, Smogon University is also the only source that considers Garchomp an uber, as all the others still consider him overused.