Pokemon Picker Chart: How to Create Your Favorite Pokemon Chart by Type & Generation

There are 1,025 unique Pokémon in the National Pokédex as of 2026 — and honestly, asking someone to pick just one favorite feels a little cruel. That's exactly why the Pokemon picker chart exists. It's a structured, visual grid that lets you choose your favorite Pokémon for each of the 18 types across all 9 generations, then export the whole thing as a shareable image. I've been obsessed with this format for years, and in this guide I'll walk you through everything: what it is, why it matters, and how to build yours in under ten minutes.

Whether you're a lifelong trainer who started with Gen 1 or someone who just discovered Paldea, a pokemon picker chart is one of the most satisfying ways to organize your love for the franchise — and the community absolutely eats it up on Reddit, Discord, and DeviantArt.

What Is a Pokemon Picker Chart?

A Pokemon picker chart is a Generation × Type grid. Picture a table where the rows are the nine generations (Kanto through Paldea) and the columns are the 18 elemental types (Fire, Water, Grass, and so on). Each cell holds the single Pokémon you love most from that specific combination — for example, your favorite Gen 4 Ghost-type, or your top Gen 7 Dragon-type.

The result is a dense, colorful snapshot of your entire Pokémon taste in one image. It's personal, it's specific, and it sparks conversation in a way that a simple "my favorite is Charizard" never quite does.

Quick fact: The Pokémon franchise spans 9 generations and 18 standard types, which means a full Generation × Type grid has 162 individual cells to fill — plus special rows for your ultimate all-time favorite and your dream team.

Pokemon Picker Chart vs. Tier List — What's the Difference?

These two formats get confused all the time, so let's clear it up fast.

Feature Pokemon Picker Chart Tier List (S/A/B/C…)
Purpose Show your personal favorites by type & gen Rank Pokémon by strength or preference
Structure Grid (Generation × Type) Horizontal tiers (S down to F)
Output One Pokémon per cell — clean, finite Unlimited Pokémon per tier — can get messy
Mobile experience Smooth — tap to select Drag-and-drop is awkward on phones
Shareability One-click PNG export, perfect for social Screenshot often cuts off content
Best for Expressing personality & nostalgia Competitive analysis & debate

The picker chart wins on shareability every time. Because the grid is finite and structured, the exported image always looks polished — no awkward cropping, no half-visible rows. That's why you see so many of them on Reddit and Discord rather than tier lists when people want to show off their taste.

Why Make a Pokemon Picker Chart?

I know what you're thinking: "I already know my favorites, why bother with a chart?" Here's the thing — you probably think you know, but the grid has a way of surfacing surprises. When I sat down to fill mine out, I realized I had completely blanked on my favorite Poison-type for three generations. The structure forces you to think in a way that casual conversation never does.

1. It Organizes 1,025 Pokémon Into Something Manageable

Staring at the full National Pokédex is overwhelming. The Generation × Type grid breaks the problem into 162 micro-decisions: "Who's my favorite Gen 2 Water-type?" That's a much easier question than "What's my favorite Pokémon?" The constraint is the feature.

2. It's a Social Currency in the Pokemon Community

The tradition of sharing "favorite Pokémon of each type" charts goes back over a decade on DeviantArt, where fans have been posting their grids since at least 2015. Today the format thrives on Reddit's r/pokemon community, Discord servers, and Twitter/X threads. Posting your chart is an instant conversation starter — people will agree, disagree, and share their own within minutes.

3. It Reveals Your Own Patterns

Once your chart is filled in, patterns emerge. Maybe you consistently pick the starter's final evolution. Maybe you have a soft spot for Ghost-types across every generation. Maybe Gen 4 dominates your grid because Sinnoh was your first game. The chart turns nostalgia into data.

The 9 Generations at a Glance

Before you start filling in your pokemon picker chart, here's a quick reference for all nine generations — useful for jogging your memory on which Pokémon belong where.

Generation Region Year Pokémon Added Fan Favorites
Gen 1 Kanto 1996 151 Charizard, Mewtwo, Gengar
Gen 2 Johto 1999 100 Umbreon, Lugia, Tyranitar
Gen 3 Hoenn 2002 135 Blaziken, Gardevoir, Rayquaza
Gen 4 Sinnoh 2006 107 Lucario, Garchomp, Giratina
Gen 5 Unova 2010 156 Zoroark, Hydreigon, Chandelure
Gen 6 Kalos 2013 72 Greninja, Aegislash, Sylveon
Gen 7 Alola 2016 88 Mimikyu, Decidueye, Necrozma
Gen 8 Galar / Hisui 2019 96 Dragapult, Corviknight, Zacian
Gen 9 Paldea 2022 120 Koraidon, Meowscarada, Gholdengo

Data sourced from Beebom's 2026 Pokédex count, which puts the current total at 1,025 unique species.

The 18 Types — A Quick Reference

Every cell in your pokemon picker chart is defined by a type. Here's the full list with a one-line personality note for each — because choosing a favorite is always partly about vibe.

# Type Introduced Vibe All-Time Community Favorite
1🔥 FireGen 1Passionate, powerfulCharizard
2💧 WaterGen 1Versatile, abundantGreninja
3🌿 GrassGen 1Natural, resilientSceptile
4⚡ ElectricGen 1Fast, shockingPikachu
5🧊 IceGen 1Cool, calculatedGlaceon
6🥊 FightingGen 1Strong, determinedLucario
7☠️ PoisonGen 1Toxic, persistentGengar
8🌍 GroundGen 1Solid, reliableGarchomp
9🦅 FlyingGen 1Free, agileCorviknight
10🔮 PsychicGen 1Mysterious, intelligentMewtwo
11🐛 BugGen 1Numerous, evolvingVolcarona
12🪨 RockGen 1Tough, enduringTyranitar
13👻 GhostGen 1Spooky, elusiveMimikyu
14🐉 DragonGen 1Legendary, mightyDragapult
15🌑 DarkGen 2Cunning, strategicUmbreon
16⚙️ SteelGen 2Defensive, durableAegislash
17🧚 FairyGen 6Magical, charmingSylveon
18⬜ NormalGen 1Balanced, adaptableEevee
Note: Dark and Steel types were introduced in Gen 2, and Fairy arrived in Gen 6. This means some cells in your chart will naturally be empty — that's completely normal and part of what makes the grid interesting to look at.

How to Create Your Pokemon Picker Chart — Step by Step

Ready to build yours? Here's the exact process using our Favorite Pokemon Picker tool. The whole thing takes about 10–20 minutes depending on how decisive you are (no judgment — some of these choices are genuinely hard).

1

Open the Pokemon Picker Tool

Head to favoritepokemonpicker.blog. The main grid loads instantly — no account, no sign-up, no ads blocking your view. The layout shows generations as rows and types as columns.

2

Start With Your Strongest Generation

Don't start at Gen 1 just because it's first. Start with the generation you know best — usually the one from your first Pokémon game. The familiarity makes the early decisions easier and gets you into a flow state faster.

3

Click a Cell to Open the Selection Panel

Click any cell in the grid. A panel opens showing all Pokémon that belong to that generation and type combination. Scroll, search by name, or browse visually. Click your pick to confirm it.

4

Work Through All 18 Types for Each Generation

Repeat for every type in that generation, then move to the next. You don't have to fill every cell — if a type genuinely has no Pokémon you love in a given generation, leave it blank. Honesty makes the chart more interesting.

5

Toggle Shiny Mode for Any Pokémon (Optional)

Click the Shiny Charm icon to activate Shiny Mode, then click any Pokémon in your grid to swap it to its alternate color form. You can mix shiny and regular — some people go full shiny, others keep it selective. Either way, it adds a layer of personality.

6

Fill In Your Ultimate Favorite & Dream Team

At the bottom of the grid there's a special row for your single all-time favorite Pokémon, plus a 6-slot team builder. These are the most personal cells in the whole chart — take your time.

7

Export as PNG and Share

Hit the Download button. The tool renders your entire grid to a high-resolution PNG — no screenshot cropping, no missing rows. The image is ready to post directly to Reddit, Discord, Twitter/X, or DeviantArt.

Your pokemon picker chart is waiting. It takes less than 10 minutes to start — and you'll probably spend an hour because it's that fun.

Build My Chart Now →

Tips for Choosing Your Favorites (Without Overthinking It)

The biggest mistake people make is treating this like a competitive exercise. It's not. There's no wrong answer. But if you're staring at a cell and genuinely can't decide, here are the frameworks I use.

Go With Your Gut First

The first Pokémon that pops into your head when you think "Gen 3 Fire-type" is almost always the right answer. Your brain has been quietly ranking these for years. Trust it.

Nostalgia Is a Valid Criterion

If a Pokémon was on your team during your first playthrough, that emotional weight is real and worth honoring. The chart is a personal document, not a competitive ranking. Blaziken doesn't need to be "objectively better" than Infernape for you to put it in your Gen 3 Fire slot.

Design Over Stats

For a favorites chart, visual design matters more than base stats. Ask yourself: which one do you actually want to look at every day? Which one would you want on a t-shirt?

It's Okay to Have Duplicates Across Generations

Some Pokémon span multiple generations through regional forms or evolutions. If Ninetales (Gen 1) and Alolan Ninetales (Gen 7) are both your favorites in their respective Fire and Ice slots, that's a perfectly valid chart. The tool supports alternate forms natively.

Leave Cells Empty Rather Than Forcing a Pick

A blank cell is more honest than a placeholder you don't care about. Empty cells also make the cells you did fill stand out more — they become statements.

Where to Share Your Pokemon Picker Chart

Once you've exported your PNG, the community is waiting. Here's where the format performs best and how to get the most engagement from each platform.

Platform Best Approach Engagement Style
Reddit r/pokemon Post as an image with a title like "My favorite Pokémon of each type — roast me" Comments, upvotes, friendly debate
Discord Drop in a #favorites or #off-topic channel, tag friends to compare Reactions, direct replies, server polls
Twitter / X Use hashtags #FavoritePokemon #PokemonPicker — quote-tweet others' charts Retweets, quote-tweets, replies
DeviantArt Post as a deviation in the Pokémon fan art community Favorites, comments, long-form discussion
Instagram Post as a static image or carousel (one gen per slide) Saves, story reposts, DMs
Pro tip: The most engaging posts invite comparison. Instead of just posting your chart, add a caption like "What would yours look like?" or "Disagree with my Gen 4 picks? Tell me why." Questions in captions consistently double engagement.

Curious how your choices stack up against the broader Pokémon fandom? Here's what the data says about the most popular picks by type, based on community polls and search trends through 2025.

Type Community #1 Pick Why It Wins
🔥 FireCharizardTopped every major poll since 2020; 632 votes in Japan's 2025 survey
💧 WaterGreninjaProtean ability + sleek design = Gen 6's breakout star
🌿 GrassSceptileSpeed-demon design, beloved by competitive and casual fans alike
⚡ ElectricPikachuThe franchise mascot — hard to argue with 30 years of brand power
🧊 IceGlaceonEeveelution appeal + elegant design
🥊 FightingLucarioConsistently top 5 globally; Smash Bros. exposure helped enormously
👻 GhostMimikyu79.2% approval in fan surveys; the underdog story resonates
🐉 DragonDragapultGen 8's fan favorite; pseudo-legendary with a unique design
🌑 DarkUmbreon79.5% approval — the most beloved Eeveelution overall
🧚 FairySylveon78% approval; introduced the type with maximum charm

The global Top 5 as of 2025 — Pikachu, Charizard, Eevee, Lucario, and Greninja — appear in the community's most popular charts with striking consistency. But here's the thing: the charts that get the most comments are rarely the ones that match the consensus. It's the unexpected picks — a Dunsparce in the Normal slot, a Shedinja in the Bug slot — that make people stop scrolling.

A Note on How I Built This Guide

I've been running this Pokémon picker tool since the early days of the franchise's ninth generation, and I've watched thousands of charts get created and shared through it. The patterns in this article come from that direct experience — watching which cells people agonize over (Ghost-type, almost always), which generations fill up fastest (Gen 4 and Gen 5 fans are passionate), and which features make people come back.

The generation and type data in this guide is cross-referenced with Bulbapedia and verified against the tool's own Pokémon database, which is updated with each new release. The popularity data draws from the 2025 Johto Times poll (over 500,000 votes), NintendoLife's generation-by-generation surveys, and CBR's analysis of Japan's 2025 rankings.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I have to fill in every cell?

No. Some type-generation combinations have very few Pokémon, and it's completely fine to leave a cell blank if nothing resonates. The tool won't penalize you for it, and an honest incomplete chart is more interesting than a forced complete one.

Can I save my chart and come back to it later?

Yes. The tool uses your browser's local storage to auto-save your progress. You can also use the Export Code feature to copy a text string of your selections — paste it back in with Import Code on any device to restore your exact grid.

Does the tool include regional forms and Mega Evolutions?

Yes. Alternate forms like Alolan Ninetales, Galarian Meowth, Mega Charizard X, and Gigantamax forms are all available. Regional variants are particularly useful for types that were introduced in later generations — Alolan Ninetales, for example, lets you put a beloved Gen 1 Pokémon in your Ice-type column.

What's the difference between Strict, Standard, and Surplus modes?

These modes control how many Pokémon you can select per cell. Strict enforces one pick per cell. Standard allows a small number of extras. Surplus and Silly modes are for when you simply cannot choose and want to celebrate multiple favorites. For a clean shareable chart, Strict or Standard is recommended.

Is the tool free?

Completely free. No account required, no paywall, no watermark on your exported image. Just open it and start picking.

How often is the Pokémon database updated?

The tool is updated whenever new Pokémon are officially released — typically with each new game or major DLC drop. The current database reflects all Pokémon through Generation 9 including the Indigo Disk DLC for Scarlet & Violet.


You've got the knowledge. Now go build the chart. It's free, it takes minutes, and the community is always ready to see what you picked.

Open the Pokemon Picker Chart Tool →

Cajun

Pokémon trainer since Gen 1, tool builder, and chronic over-thinker of type matchups. I built the Favorite Pokemon Picker because I wanted a structured way to settle arguments about favorites — and because filling out a 162-cell grid is genuinely one of the most satisfying things you can do on a Sunday afternoon. Find me on the About page.