5 Answers2025-08-27 03:36:33
I'm a total night-owl when it comes to the old Pokémon games, so I chased Raikou across Johto in several late-night sessions and learned a few reliable tricks. First thing I always do: save before you step into the area where it might be. If you run into Raikou, that save is priceless—roamers can be slippery and you want the option to reset and try different tactics.
When you actually meet it, try to get it to a status condition right away. Sleep or paralysis makes the catch much more forgiving, and sleep is my personal favorite because it really slows down the panic. I usually lead with a Pokémon that knows a sleep move or 'Thunder Wave', then switch to something that can lower HP without fainting it. If you have 'False Swipe', that’s ideal for leaving it at 1 HP. Also bring lots of 'Ultra Ball's and high-PP status moves.
One last practical thing: trapping moves such as 'Mean Look' or 'Wrap' can stop it from running away, which makes the encounter feel way less frantic. If you’re done chasing, don’t be shy about using the 'Master Ball' if you have it; I used one on my first Raikou just because the roaming count felt exhausting. Good luck—there’s a real joy in finally seeing that Poké Ball shake and click.
3 Answers2025-08-27 00:14:04
I still get a little buzz when I see a Raikou raid pop up on my Nearby screen — it feels like chasing a stormy VIP. If you’re hunting Raikou in 'Pokémon Go', the most reliable place to find it is in raids: historically Raikou has appeared as a Legendary raid boss during special events, raid rotations, and limited-time windows. That usually means 5-star/Legendary raids at gyms around the world whenever Niantic decides to rotate Johto legendaries back into the game. Raikou isn’t region-locked, so unlike some exclusives it can show up globally during these raid windows. Also keep an eye on event announcements — Raikou often turns up during Community Day-style celebrations, regional events, or as part of special research stories where you might get an encounter as a reward.
Finding a live Raikou raid is easier if you use a few practical tools. I check my Nearby raids, but the real trick is joining local raid groups on Discord, Telegram, or Facebook where people post raid timers and invite codes. Remote Raid Passes have been a game-changer — you can join Raikou raids from anywhere (as long as the raid is public and you can pay the pass), so even if your town’s gyms are quiet, you can still join city players. If you’re short on raids, look for raid hours and raid weekends that Niantic runs; those concentrate legendaries into predictable slots. And sometimes Niantic has given Raikou as a guaranteed encounter in special research tasks or as a Field Research breakthrough — keep your research tasks checked during Johto-themed events.
When you actually fight Raikou, be prepared: use Ground-type attackers to exploit its Electric typing (Groudon, Rhyperior, Garchomp, Excadrill, Landorus are staples depending on moves), bring a full party of high-level counters, and coordinate with friends so you don’t waste passes. For catching, treat it like any Legendary: Golden Razz berries, curveballs, aiming for Great/Excellent throws, and stacking Friendship bonuses if you can get someone to help. Raikou has a shiny available from past raids, so if you haven’t hunted for it yet, definitely prioritize multiple raid attempts. Personally, I like to line up a few remote passes, hop into a social raid, and celebrate with a coffee when a shiny pops — it’s one of those small, satisfying wins in 'Pokémon Go' that keeps me logging in.