PoGO – Pokémon Go: The Dragon Week Raid Bosses

PoGO – Pokémon Go: The Dragon Week Raid BossesDragon Week is active in Pokémon Go until August 7, 2020, and this will certainly affect the raid bosses that appear in the raids. We give you an overview of the current raid bosses in Pokémon Go. Among them are coveted pocket monsters like Kaumalat, Brutalanda and Rayquaza.

In Pokémon Go, the dragons are loose until August 7, 2020 at 10:00 p.m., because Dragon Week is still active until then, until Enigma Week starts – the second hyperbonus that Pokémon Go Fest 220 players have unlocked. And in the Raids are therefore currently so some coveted pocket monsters of the type dragon, which meta players do not want to miss.

On Tier 1, of course, there’s Dratini, which can be evolved into Dragoran at the end. In Tier 2, there’s Kaumalat, which all fans who want to get a Knakrack or two will want to have. And in the raids of Tier 4, Brutalanda and Glurak can be found just like Dragoran. And then, of course, there’s Rayquaza in the Tier 5 raids, which you’d better not miss. Matching Rayquaza on Tier 3 is Keifel, among others, up for grabs – its Evolution Mamutel is still a strong counter to Rayquaza these days. By the way, you can find more about the fighters for the battle against Rayquaza as a raid boss in our counter guide.

Here you can find the current raid lineup in Pokémon Go, which is expected to change in the morning hours of August 8, 2020 for Enigma Week. As usual, we have marked the Mon that you can get as Shiny with a *.

Tier 1 Raid

Dratini*, Geckabor*. Wablu*. Serpifeu*.

Tier-2 Raid

ALoLa Kokowei*, Tyracroc, Sniebel*, Kaumalat*.

Tier 3 Raid

Arbok, Seemon, Keifel, Vibrava

Tier-4 Raid

Glurak, Dragoran, Walraisa, Brutalanda

Tier-5 Raid

Rayquaza*

EX-Raid

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Pokémon GO

Pokémon Go is the mobile spin-off of Nintendo’s popular Pokémon game series for Android and iOS. It is a so-called “location-based game”, i.e. a game that uses the player’s immediate surroundings. It is based on the principle of augmented reality.

Pokémon Map: Between landmarks and sights

Pokémon Go uses a Global Positioning System (GPS) to determine the player’s location and displays it on a map that also represents the playing field. The map is based on OpenStreetMap maps. The game is played mostly outdoors and uses landmarks, landmarks and other notable or eye-catching objects in the world to position either PokéStops or arenas there for you to battle for supremacy. Join either Team Intuition (Team Yellow, Zapdos), Team Wisdom (Team Blue, Arktos), or Team Daring (Team Red, Lavados). Under their flag you can then fight for the arenas, which are placed at hotspots like churches or similar. Pokémon can appear anywhere, though.

Pocket monsters visible on the Pokémon Go Map are randomly loaded into the game’s virtual map by the game server. If several players are playing in the same location, each player can see and catch the Pokémon independently of the others.

Pokémon Go Updates, News, Raids and More

The developers at Niantic regularly provide Pokémon Go with new updates or special raids that should only be tackled in a group of several people. The Pokémon Go Raids are therefore very popular, as they also offer the prospect of particularly rare Pokémon. For example, in the past, legendary Pokémon could always be caught on special occasions (Pokémon Go events). For particularly eager mobile or smartphone Pokémon trainers, there is also an external IV calculator, such as the online tool from .gameinfo.io or on Pokefans.net, to check the values of your Pokémon.

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