Where Can I Find Oddish Evolution Items In Pokemon Lets Go?

2025-08-28 10:55:35
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Mason
Mason
Favorite read: Conjoined Adventures
Spoiler Watcher Journalist
Man, I love little evolution puzzles like this — Oddish is one of my favorites because it feels like a tiny gardening project in the game. In 'Pokémon: Let’s Go, Pikachu!' and 'Pokémon: Let’s Go, Eevee!', Oddish evolves into Gloom at level 21, and then you can choose how to finish it: use a Leaf Stone to get Vileplume or a Sun Stone to turn Gloom into Bellossom. The real question is where to actually find those stones, since they don’t drop every five steps. From my playthroughs and wandering around Kanto, here’s what I’d recommend checking first and how I personally hunt for them.

The quickest wins come from looking for sparkling items on the overworld. In Let’s Go, evolution stones often show up as the little sparkles on the map, so I make it a habit to run through every route I haven’t fully scoured yet — especially around towns and in caves after big story events. Celadon City is a great hub to revisit; a lot of players report finding stones in and around big towns or in the item-heavy spots like department stores (I’d check all floors if you see items for sale). Another neat trick I used: use Pokémon with the Pick Up ability in your party and grind a little on low-level trainers — Pick Up can occasionally snag evolution stones as a random reward, which saved me a lot of wandering when I just wanted to evolve someone during a short commute.

If you’re the kind of person who likes a methodical checklist, also try NPC trades and revisit NPCs who give items after certain events — Let’s Go sometimes hides goodies behind progress gates. If you’re connected with friends, trading is an easy option too; someone might have an extra Leaf or Sun Stone lying around. I once got lucky by revisiting Mt. Moon and Route areas late-game and finding stones tucked away where I’d missed them earlier. Also, don’t ignore the in-game shops on different visits; stock changes or new items sometimes appear as you advance the story. Finally, if collecting is getting tedious, I’ve found a couple of community swaps (forums and friends) where people will trade stones for low-cost items — fast and friendlier than grinding.

To wrap it up: target Leaf Stones for Vileplume and Sun Stones for Bellossom, comb the world for sparkles, rotate Pokémon with Pick Up, check big city shops like Celadon, and trade if you can. I got my Bellossom by accident after a late-night sweep of a route I’d already beaten — so my tip is to poke around the same areas more than once. Happy evolving, and if you want I can sketch a short route checklist for where I personally found stones on my playthrough (made me feel like a scavenger-hunt champ).
2025-08-29 10:13:44
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How does oddish evolution work in Pokemon GO?

3 Answers2025-08-28 19:27:39
My brain lights up whenever someone asks about Oddish in 'Pokémon GO' because that little blue plant has one of those evolution branches that actually makes you think about choices. Here’s how it works in simple steps: catch or hatch an Oddish, gather candies, and evolve it into Gloom for 25 candies. From there, Gloom is the fork in the road — you can evolve Gloom into Vileplume for 100 candies, or into Bellossom for 100 candies plus a Sun Stone. The key detail that trips people up is that you can’t skip straight from Oddish to Bellossom; the Sun Stone applies when evolving Gloom, not Oddish, so you need the intermediate Gloom first. I personally like to hoard a few Oddish when there’s a grass or community day event, because candies pour in and sometimes new moves drop during events. If you’ve got a shiny Oddish, the shiny coloration cascades through evolution, so a shiny Oddish becomes shiny Gloom and then shiny Vileplume or shiny Bellossom depending on which evolution path you pick — something I always double-check before throwing that Sun Stone on because shiny scarcity makes them special. Also, if you’re deciding which final form to keep, think about what you want: Vileplume brings that grass/poison twist and is useful in certain raid and gym matchups, while Bellossom is pure grass with sometimes more niche utility. Check moves and IVs before burning 100 candies — nothing hurts more than evolving a mon right before you realize it has mediocre moves. Little player tips from my oddball collection: use Pinap Berries when catching Oddish to speed up candy collection, set Oddish as your buddy if you’re trying to build candy slowly for a rainy day, and watch for events that give extra candy or introduced new charged moves (they’ve historically rotated special moves for grass community days). If you want to minimize regret, save evolving until you can appraise IVs and, if possible, wait for a move re-roll window during an event. I usually keep one Vileplume and one Bellossom for variety — it’s a small stash strategy that keeps battling flexible and my Pokédex happy.

Where can oddish evolve quickly in Pokémon GO?

2 Answers2025-08-28 15:12:15
When I'm in full-on candy-hunting mode, my brain goes into siege-planning: where to catch the most Oddish, how to stack candies, and then a rapid-fire evolution session in the Pokémon screen. First off, evolution itself happens right in your Pokémon menu — you don't have to bring Oddish to any special location — but getting the candies fast is the real location-based game. Oddish evolves to Gloom for 25 Oddish Candy, and Gloom can turn into Vileplume for 100 Candy or into Bellossom for 100 Candy plus a Sun Stone. That Sun Stone is the key item if you want Bellossom, so keep an eye on Research rewards, PokéStop gifts, and in-game shops during events. If you want to collect candies fast, hunt where Oddish spawns: parks and grassy neighborhoods are gold mines. I have a favorite city park that basically becomes an Oddish factory during cloudy weather (grass-type weather in 'Pokémon GO' boosts spawns), and evening walks there usually pay off. Events like Spotlight Hour or Community Day can turn a place that usually has one or two into a full-blown swarm — that’s prime time to use Pinap Berries and stockpile candies. Lures and Incense can also help if you’re stuck near a busy square; drop one and sit with a thermos and some headphones while catching everything that pops up. Tactical tips that helped me evolve a bunch in one sitting: always use Pinap Berries when you can (they multiply candy from a catch), catch every Oddish you see (transfer duplicates for +1 candy), use your buddy to earn candy while walking, and save Rare Candies for emergency boosts. If you’re short on a Sun Stone for Bellossom, prioritize spinning PokéStops on your commute and completing small field research tasks — they often give evolution items during themed events. Finally, when you’ve got enough candy, evolve in batches while a Lucky Egg is active if you need EXP too — it doesn’t speed the evolution itself but multiplies the XP return if you’re leveling up. I love doing a mass-evolve session on a rainy afternoon with music and snacks; it feels oddly satisfying to watch a whole pile of Oddish turn into Gloom and beyond.

How does oddish evolution work in main series Pokemon?

5 Answers2025-08-28 02:03:30
I still get a little giddy talking about oddish and that classic branching evolution — it’s one of those simple but charming systems in the series. In the mainline games, Oddish evolves into Gloom when it reaches level 21. That’s pretty consistent from 'Pokémon Red/Blue' through the latest generations. Gloom is the middle stage and won’t change types on its own; it just sits there until you decide which path to take. From Gloom you can evolve into two different Pokémon using evolution items: use a 'Leaf Stone' to get Vileplume (Grass/Poison), or a 'Sun Stone' to get Bellossom (pure Grass) — Bellossom was added in 'Pokémon Gold/Silver'. You can’t directly stone Oddish into either final form in the standard main-series method; the level-up to Gloom comes first, then the stone on Gloom. A couple of practical tips: if you want Gloom to learn a late-level move, hold off on using the stone (or give Gloom an Everstone) until it learns the move. Also, think about team roles — Vileplume often keeps access to more Poison moves and bulky grass support, while Bellossom tends to fit sunny teams and has a different movepool and stat spread. I usually pick based on what my team needs rather than pure nostalgia.

When does oddish evolution occur in Pokemon Sword and Shield?

5 Answers2025-08-28 22:10:47
I still get a little giddy whenever I think about evolving Pokémon, and Oddish in 'Pokemon Sword and Shield' is one of those straightforward but satisfying cases. Oddish evolves into Gloom when it reaches level 21 — that’s the automatic, level-based evolution. Once it’s Gloom, it won’t evolve any further by leveling; instead you choose its final form with an evolution stone. If you want Vileplume, use a Leaf Stone on Gloom. If you prefer Bellossom, use a Sun Stone. The stones can be used at any time after Gloom exists, and if you ever regret evolving, you can always trade for another Oddish or breed one later. Also remember you can cancel evolution by pressing B if you change your mind mid-flash — saved me once when I wanted a specific move set. Small tip from my playthrough: if you’re trying to learn certain moves from leveling, hold off evolving until you get them, then stone-evolve.

What items cause oddish evolution in older Pokemon games?

3 Answers2025-08-28 10:14:54
I've always loved fiddling with evolution stones in the older Pokémon games because they felt like little cheat codes tucked into a bag of items. If you're talking specifically about Oddish and its line, the items that actually trigger evolution are the Leaf Stone and the Sun Stone — but there’s a key detail: Oddish itself doesn't evolve by stone, Gloom does. In the earliest games like 'Red' and 'Blue' you only had the Leaf Stone option for getting to Vileplume; Bellossom didn’t even exist until Gen II, so no Sun Stone path back then. Back when I was playing 'Red' on a scratched-up cartridge, I remember being frantic about where to use the stone so I didn't waste it. The mechanic is simple: Oddish evolves into Gloom by leveling (it hits level 21), and then you can use a Leaf Stone on that Gloom to get Vileplume. From 'Gold'/'Silver' onward, you gained the alternative: use a Sun Stone on Gloom to evolve it into Bellossom. So if you’re playing an older title, check which generation the game belongs to. In Gen I (the oldest) only Leaf Stones are relevant for this family; in Gen II and later, Leaf Stone and Sun Stone are both valid tools for Gloom. A couple of practical tips from my own runs: always save before using a rare evolution stone — especially in older cartridges where losing a save felt like a cliffhanger. If you care about move sets, hold off on stone evolution until Gloom learns its last desirable move by leveling (unless that move can be learned later via a move tutor or TM). Also, if you’re into breeding, remember that the evolution stone step doesn’t change whether you can breed Oddish; it just affects which final form you choose. In Gen II and after, Bellossom vs. Vileplume choices are largely stylistic, but they also change typing strategies and movepools, so make the choice intentionally. So, short checklist for older games: Oddish -> level to Gloom (level 21), then use Leaf Stone to get Vileplume (available in Gen I+), or use Sun Stone to get Bellossom (only from Gen II onward). I usually hoard a Leaf Stone for a Greninja nostalgia run, but for Oddish I like picking based on whether I'm building a physical or special attacker — it’s fun choosing a look and a role at the same time.

Where to find evolution items in Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Seekers of Soul?

1 Answers2026-04-24 13:54:42
Finding evolution items in 'Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Seekers of Soul' can feel like a treasure hunt, and I love how the game makes it rewarding to explore every nook and cranny. One of the most reliable ways to snag these items is by diving into Mystery Dungeons themselves. Certain dungeons have higher drop rates for evolution items, especially the deeper you go. I’ve had the best luck in post-game dungeons or those tied to legendary Pokémon—those floors seem to have a knack for hiding rare goodies. Keep an eye out for sparkling tiles or hidden rooms; they often contain treasure chests or loose items, and evolution stones like the 'Fire Stone' or 'Water Stone' can pop up there. Another method I swear by is completing missions and rescues. Some high-rank missions reward you with evolution items, and it’s a great way to multitask—helping others while stocking up your inventory. The Kecleon Shops sometimes carry these items too, though they’re pricey. If you’re swimming in money (or willing to grind for it), check their stock regularly. And don’t forget about the Wonder Mail system! Certain codes or randomly generated missions can gift you evolution items outright. It’s a bit luck-based, but when it pays off, it feels like hitting the jackpot. Personally, I love the thrill of stumbling upon a 'Thunder Stone' in a dungeon after a tough battle—it’s those little surprises that make the game so addictive.
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