

The aroma can soothe both itself and its allies. It has a habit of giving these flower rings to those it’s fond of.

It makes a ring of blossoms and spreads oil from its body on it, which changes the flowers so they emit a soothing fragrance. It loves to give crushing bear hugs-a tight hug from this Pokémon’s arms will split anything at all in two!Ĭomfey picks flowers and always carries them around. Its powerful spine enables it to lift objects weighing a ton or more. Apparently the Pokémon learn these moves by watching Black Belts practicing when they go out to train in the woods.īewear’s arms and legs are strong and highly developed. Some wild Bewear use amazing martial-arts moves. The Fluffy Ability halves the damage taken from attacks that make direct contact, but in return it also doubles the damage taken from Fire-type moves. When Bewear grows fond of its Trainer, it may show that feeling in a fond embrace-but the force of that hug is tremendous! Trainers must teach these Pokémon how to restrain their strength when showing affection.īewear may have the Fluffy Ability, a new Ability that no Pokémon has ever possessed before. You may see warning signs posted near places it resides. It is acknowledged to be a dangerous Pokémon, even within the Alola region. When Bewear is acting in a friendly fashion, just swinging its arms around, you must never dare to approach it carelessly. The downside is how dizzy it gets afterward!

When attacked by enemies, it drives them off by rotating the calyx on its head. Since its bouncy movements don’t convey to others that it’s actually in desperate flight, no one ever comes to its aid. When running away from other Pokémon, Bounsweet flees danger by skipping along the ground. Unfortunately, it’s sometimes swallowed whole by Pokémon drawn to its aroma. Bounsweet’s scent has a calming effect on humans, so many people let them live inside their homes as a sort of air freshener. Because it exudes a delicious smell from its entire body, Bounsweet is popular with Pokémon and people of the Alola region.
