What Is The Best Zangoose Moveset For OU Play?

2025-08-29 17:49:18
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5 Answers

Bryce
Bryce
Favorite read: Alpha Zane
Honest Reviewer Driver
I like to keep Zangoose simple and aggressive: Toxic Orb + Toxic Boost, Adamant, 252 Atk / 252 Spe, Swords Dance, Facade, Close Combat, Knock Off. This set is built around the Facade + Toxic Boost combo — poison yourself with Toxic Orb, boost Attack, and Facade melts most physical walls after a Swords Dance. Close Combat hits steels and big neutrals; Knock Off is there for item denial and utility. If you prefer immediate power over setup, try Choice Band with Facade and Close Combat but expect less staying power.

A couple of practical notes — Stealth Rock hates Zangoose (it turns one Facade from awesome to just good), and priority moves can ruin your sweep, so include hazard removal and a speed control or pivot for support. When it clicks, Zangoose sweeps teams in a satisfyingly explosive way, but it needs the right team around it.
2025-08-30 01:59:21
14
Plot Detective Veterinarian
Late-night laddering taught me to treat Zangoose as a mid-game cleaner rather than a bulky lead. I usually run Toxic Orb + Toxic Boost, Adamant, 252 Atk / 252 Spe, with Swords Dance, Facade, Close Combat and Knock Off. The order of play matters: scout for hazard setters first, then get poisoned and look for the opening to Swords Dance. Facade is your main wincon after a boost because its power doubles when you're statused, and Toxic Boost makes your Attack absurd; Close Combat handles steels that would otherwise wall you. Knock Off is indispensable for item removal and softening walls.

If you're worried about speed ties or revenge killing, swap Knock Off for Quick Attack or go Choice Band for raw early power at the expense of setup. Teamwise, bring a reliable hazard control and a teammate that can handle Fairy types or bulky waters — Zangoose will thank you when it gets a clean lane to sweep. I usually feel pretty hyped when it works, but it needs planning.
2025-08-31 03:17:00
32
Ian
Ian
Twist Chaser Firefighter
Picture this: Toxic Orb activates on turn one, you set up Swords Dance, and Facade turns into a nightmare. My compact set is Adamant 252/252, Toxic Orb, Toxic Boost, Swords Dance / Facade / Close Combat / Quick Attack or Knock Off. Quick Attack gives a last-ditch KO sometimes, but I personally prefer Knock Off for utility — nothing beats stealing Leftovers from a stall Pokémon. Zangoose's speed tier lets it outrun a lot of threats, but priority and hazards are its kryptonite. So pair it with a hazard clearer and a faster pivot to switch into threats, and you'll get those satisfying sweeps more often.
2025-09-01 00:08:18
14
Emma
Emma
Favorite read: Zutara
Reply Helper Photographer
If you're trying to make Zangoose work in OU, my go-to is the classic Toxic Boost sweeper that lives for that glorious Facade explosion. Item: Toxic Orb. Ability: Toxic Boost. Nature: Adamant. EVs: 252 Atk / 252 Spe / 4 HP. Moves: Swords Dance, Facade, Close Combat, Knock Off. The plan is simple: get yourself poisoned on turn one with Toxic Orb, boost Attack from Toxic Boost, set up one Swords Dance (or two if you get lucky), and then Facade and Close Combat just blow holes in teams. Knock Off gives crucial utility against items and pesky Ghosts/psychic switch-ins.

A couple of play tips — lead with Zangoose when you expect a slow switch or want to scout a potential hazard, and be mindful of Stealth Rock; one hit makes Facade less reliable late-game. If someone brings priority or a fast Choice Scarf user, you either need a teammate to chip them or bait them into switching. If Toxic Boost isn't available or you prefer raw power, a Choice Band / Life Orb variant can work but it loses the sweet Facade synergy.

I love how explosive this set feels: a single Swords Dance into a full-power Facade is one of my favorite ladder moments, even if it occasionally gets messed up by a faster priority move.
2025-09-01 11:38:28
11
Uma
Uma
Favorite read: Zombie's Leveling
Library Roamer Data Analyst
Honestly, when I ladder I treat Zangoose like a glassy cleaner that hates hazards. The tidy set I run is: Toxic Orb + Toxic Boost, Adamant, 252 Atk / 252 Spe, Swords Dance / Facade / Close Combat / Knock Off. Facade is your win condition once poisoned — doubled base power plus the Attack boost from Toxic Boost makes it terrifying. Close Combat handles steels and strong neutrals, while Knock Off removes items and beats Ghosts that would otherwise wall you.

If you need raw, immediate damage instead, swap Swords Dance for Return (or keep CC+Facade and use Choice Band). Choice Band Zangoose is simpler: you forego setup but hit like a truck; Life Orb is another option if you want flexibility. In terms of teammates, bring hazard control (a spinner/defogger) and a faster pivot or a volt-turn partner to handle priority/matter-of-fact checks like priority Bullet Punch users. Also consider a Fairy-weak answer so enemies can't just stall with walls — Zangoose appreciates teammates that can handle bulky Waters, Skarmory, and Steel types that shrug off its hits.
2025-09-03 19:07:56
25
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What counters can reliably stop zangoose in VGC?

5 Answers2025-08-29 10:42:03
There’s a simple core I always fall back on when zoning Zangoose: if it’s a physical hyper-offender, either deny its damage with Intimidate/Protect/support or give it something immune to its main damage types. Zangoose is Normal, and most sets want to hit hard with physical moves and sometimes Fighting coverage, so Ghost-types (pure Ghost or Ghost/typing) are fantastic because they’re immune to both Normal and Fighting. In practice I lean on things like Mimikyu or Aegislash-style bodies in doubles—they force Zangoose to target your partner or waste an attack. Beyond that, two other threads always save my butt: priority and attack control. Priority Fighting (or any priority that outpaces Quick Attack) can clean up weakened Zangoose before it Swords Dances into oblivion, and Intimidate users like a bulky Landorus or Gyarados neuter its KO potential. Finally, beware poison: Zangoose can have Toxic Boost as an ability, so burning or using Intimidate/Protect is safer than trying to poison it. Put those pieces together with Protect support and you’ll reliably blunt its impact.

Which held item boosts zangoose offense most?

5 Answers2025-08-29 06:32:45
I’ve been tinkering with Zangoose sets for ages and, hands down, the held item that boosts its offense the most is the Choice Band. Choice Band multiplies Zangoose’s Attack by 1.5, which outscales damage-boosting items like Life Orb (roughly +30% damage) for a purely physical hitter. If you’re running the classic broomstick-of-death moveset — think high-power STABs and coverage like Close Combat, Return, or Knock Off — that 1.5× Attack spike turns KOs into guaranteed two-shots or one-shots more often than not. The tradeoff is being locked into one move until you switch out, so you either need prediction skill or a teammate that can cover your switch-ins. I’ve also tried Life Orb for a while; it gives consistent extra damage without locking you in and is great on more flexible sets or late-game cleaners, but it costs HP each turn. For raw offensive numbers with standard physical moves, Choice Band is the single best boost — just be ready to play around the locking mechanic and prediction pressure.

What is zangoose base stat total and strengths?

5 Answers2025-08-29 19:42:51
I’ve always liked Zangoose because it feels like the classic glass-cannon normal type you either love or bench. In 'Pokémon' terms, Zangoose’s base stats add up to 458. The full spread is: HP 73 / Attack 115 / Defense 60 / Special Attack 60 / Special Defense 60 / Speed 90. That Attack is the headline — 115 gives it real punch, and Speed at 90 means it can outspeed a decent chunk of the metagame if you give it a nudge with items or support. Where Zangoose shines is clearly physical offense. It’s a strong Swords Dance user, a great punisher with moves like 'Close Combat' or 'Return', and it loves 'Facade' if you're running the hidden ability that turns a poison into extra power. Defensively it’s middling — low defenses make it fragile, and being Normal-type means only Fighting hits it for super effective damage, but it’s immune to Ghost, which can be clutch. In short, treat it as a set-up sweeper or priority bait that can explode through teams if handled correctly.

Has zangoose received any recent buff or nerf?

5 Answers2025-08-29 03:37:41
I’ve been poking around forums and patch notes lately, and honestly I haven’t seen any headline-grabbing buff or nerf to Zangoose in the mainline games or the big online tiers as of mid-2024. Back when I dusted off my old competitive sets, Zangoose was always this niche hit-or-miss physical brawler — glassy but hard-hitting. Its core strengths and weaknesses (movepool leaning on powerful STAB moves, middling bulk, and some quirky ability options) haven’t been rewritten overnight. If you’re talking about the competitive scene, the only “changes” that tend to shift its viability are metagame swings — new threats, new walls, or new teammates that either enable or shut it down. If you meant a specific game like 'Pokémon GO', 'Pokémon Scarlet', or the Smogon ladder, tell me which one and I’ll dig into the latest patch notes and community discussion for that format. For now I’d treat Zangoose as unchanged mechanically and focus on team comp and items to get the most out of it.

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