PoGO – Pokémon GO: These are the Pokémon you should evolve first with the Sinnoh Stone

Sinnoh Stones are rare at the moment, as you can only get one every seven days. The choice of the first Pokémon, which you develop with the Sinnoh stone, is therefore not easy. We’ll you which of the eleven Pokémon are most worthwhile under certain circumstances.

Now that the Sinnoh Stone has arrived in Pokémon Go and players are gradually getting it through the 7-Day Field Research Breakthrough, the question is: “Which Pokémon do I use the Sinnoh Stone for first?” We answer this question in our guide.

Depending on whether you already own a few Legendary Pokémon or Pokémon with special community attacks, long-awaited monsters like Rihornior or Elevoltek don’t perform particularly well in the metagame, but they are a good alternative compared to the Legendary Pokémon. We compare the currently 11 available Pokémon that can be evolved with the Sinnoh Stone with other Pokémon of the same type and show how high your priority should be to use your Sinnoh Stones for them.

High priority

Snibunna and Roserade

Snibunna is a good alternative to Despotar as an unlight attacker. Snibunna is less durable, but his attack value and possible attacks are very good. With two ice attacks he is only slightly behind Mewtwo with ice beam, but as soon as Mamutel comes into play, Snibunna becomes much less attractive as an ice attacker.

Roserade

… Is currently the best Poison attacker in the game and easily dismantles the Fairy Pokémon that are in and Arenas. However, if you have a few good Metagross with Star Slash (community day attack), you’re in a much better position with the Steel Pokémon. As a plant attacker, Roserade is also fine, coming in just behind Bisaflor among the plant attackers.

Solid Options

Rihornior, Elevoltek and Kramshef

Rihornior

If you have Despotar with Catapult (community day attack) and Stone Edge, you can ignore Rihornior as a stone attacker. If not, you have a very good alternative to Despotar that also holds up better against Electric Pokémon like Zapdos thanks to its type (Stone and Ground). As a ground attacker, Rihornior is a very good choice, but of course doesn’t come close to Groudon.

Kramshef

… Is a good alternative to Snibunna (less attack, but more defense). Also, Snibunna has a mini-advantage due to its second type (ice) as an unlight attacker. If you don’t have an army of Despotars and/or Snibunna, Kramshef is not a bad choice against Pyscho Pokémon.

Elevoltek

With Thunder Shock and Surge, Elevoltek has the best Electric attacks currently available. If you don’t have Zapdos with Thunder Shock (Legacy Attack) or an army of Raikous, Elevoltek is a good choice as an Electro attacker.

Later develop

Magbrant, Porygon-Z, Traumagil, Togekiss,Skorgro and Zwirrfinst

Togekiss

Similar to many other Fairy Pokémon in Pokémon Go, Togekiss does not have a Fairy instant attack. Due to its Air Instant Attack, Togekiss is a good counter against Battle Pokémon, however, the investment in Togepi Candies is quite high and with Espeon and other Pokémon, there are already good alternatives against Battle Pokémon. As an arena defender, Togekiss is quite useful, but far from tanks like Heiteira or Relaxo, which also quickly sweep most players out of the arena.

Magbrant

Magbrant could be a good fire attacker if his arsenal of instant attacks weren’t so bad. Currently, you’re much better off with Flamara and of course Lavados and Entei.

Traumagil

Traumagil is a significantly worse version of Gengar (even without Legacy attacks). Since most players have some Gengar ( especially since the last event), you should not focus on Traumagil.

Skorgro

Bad stats, bad type combination, bad attacks. That’s all you need to know about Skorgro and how to choose your first Sinnoh pieces.

Zwirrfinst

S. Traumagil

Porygon-Z

The normal-type Pokémon has very strong stats overall, but there are no notable tasks for this type that other Pokémon couldn’t do better. In view of the Pokémon Go metagame, you should hold off on developing Porygon-Z for the time being.

Pokémon GO

Pokémon Go is the mobile spin-off of Nintendo’s popular Pokémon game 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 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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