The most unexpected Pokemon shine here

Hot on the heels of the7-Star Charizard Tera Raid, Cinderace is the second 7-Star challenge introduced inPokemon Scarlet & Violet. If you thought Charizard was hard, you’ve got another thing coming.

Just like before, you may only catch one Cinderace during this event. However, you can farm the encounter as much as you’d like for sky-high drop rates of Tera Shards and other rare items. Cinderace will always have the Fighting Tera-Type and the same movepool, so building a Pokemon to counter it specifically is essential.

Screenshot by Destructoid

Cinderace’s attack pattern

Unlike Charizard,Cinderace will exclusively use Physical Attacks. At the start of the fight, Cinderace will immediately useBulk Upto raise its attack and defense stats. This immediately puts it in range to deal significant damage with its high attack stat, and it will continue to spam this move throughout the fight.

For offensive options, Cinderace will use Pyro Ball, Acrobatics, Iron Head, and High Jump Kick. This means it can deal Fire, Flying, Steel, and Fighting-Type damage, so you’ll want to resist as many of those attacks as possible. Pyro Ball will be especially deadly since Cinderace will get a STAB bonus from its innate Fire-Type. In my testing, High Jump Kick would typically be used at specific moments rather than as a regular attack. This might be influenced by what your Pokemon natively resists, so plan accordingly.

Screenshot by Destructoid

Like any Tera Raid Pokemon, Cinderace will eventually put up a shield to quell your incoming damage. During this time, it can nullify its own debuffs and clear your team of its buffs. Unlike the Charizard Tera Raid, the timing of these moves is not consistent. Factors like its remaining health and the turn count seem to influence it, but it’s hard to pin down its behavior conclusively.

How to counter Cinderace

I cannot stress this enough:do not attack or buff your strength on turn 1. Cinderace’s attack is way, way too high at the start of the encounter. If you use a move like Belly Drum, Cinderace will easily pick you off and potentially set your entire team up for defeat.

Everyone on the battlefield should buff their defense or debuff Cinderace’s attack, regardless of their party role.CharmandFeather Danceare both incredible here, as they reduce Cinderace’s attack by two stages.Reflectalso provides invaluable mitigation of physical damage, and it will even stay up when Cinderace nullifies your party’s buffs. Finally, despite Cinderace’s native Fire-Typing, it is susceptible to Burn. While this does deal damage, Burn more importantly reduces Cinderace’s physical damage by half. This makes moves likeWill-O-Wispespecially potent, though its 85% accuracy can make it a bit risky.

Screenshot by Destructoid

Once Cinderace’s shield goes up, you won’t be able to inflict it with status effects or debuffs anymore. That said, if it manages to Bulk Up and raise its attack stat,Clear Smogcan still be used to bring its stats back to neutral. Clear Smog can also be used Turn 1 to immediately clear off Cinderace’s first Bulk Up, though make sure you don’t overwrite another party member who is already debuffing its stats.

In an ideal scenario, Cinderace’s buffs and your debuffs will be set up well enough that you can charge into its shields before it can neutralize any stats. Get as aggressive as possible if you’re taking the lead on damage, though a dedicated support Pokemon should keep moves like Reflect up to prevent the party from getting nuked once Cinderace undoes any stat gains or losses.

Screenshot by Destructoid

What Pokemon should I use?

Two Pokemon do a remarkable job countering Cinderace, and they might not be the ones you’d expect from the start.

MVP 1: Slowbro

Slowbro is a premier pick if you are trying to solo this encounter. Its typing is practically ideal since it resists Cinderace’s STAB attacks and will only take neutral damage from Acrobatics. The current meta moveset looks like this:

Iron DefenseSlack OffNasty PlotStored Power

On turn 1, you may useIron Defenseto mitigate Cinderace’s incoming damage. Stack this once or twice more, and useSlack Offto heal as necessary.Nasty Plotwill sharply raise Slowbro’s Special Attack, which will makeStored Powerdeal monstrous damage. After all, Stored Power gains power the more stat increases your Pokemon has active, meaning its effective base power will exceed 100 after Iron Defense and three Nasty Plots.

This set isn’t perfect, of course. If Cinderace nullifies your stats before you can get Stored Power off, you’ll have practically wasted all of those previous turns. This is also an innately selfish build, as Iron Defense won’t help your teammates survive. Annecdotally, while Stored Power is so ludicrously powerful that it can potentially one-shot Cinderace, pushing its HP so hard can cause it to use multiple moves in succession and wipe your team. You may preferPsychicfor stable offense orChilling Waterto debuff Cinderace’s attack.

Screenshot by Destructoid

MVP 2: Espathra

While Espathra isn’t quite as reliable as Slowbro, it’s a much better team player. The first thing you’ll notice is that Espathra’s abilityOpportunistis ridiculous for this fight. Every time Cinderace uses Bulk Up, Espathra will recieve buffs in equal measure. What’s more, it can useFeather Danceturn one to sharply decrease Cinderace’s offense to help your team. Play support until the incoming damage is sustainable, and equip it with aShell Bellto give it some HP recovery when it attacks.

Like Slowbro, you’re building up to insane uses of Stored Power.Calm Mindwill give you a needless Special Defense boost on top of a Special Attack boost, but the goal is to pump Espathra so high with stat boosts that Stored Power will do ludicrous damage. It’s signature moveLumina Crashis also valuable here, since it gives Espathra an option to regen HP with Shell Bell out the gate while deflating Cinderace’s Special Defense by two stages.Substitutecan be used here to taste, so find what works well for you in random groups.

Screenshot by Destructoid

Support MVP: Armarouge

Armarouge and Ceruledge both function well here, but Armarouge’s stat distribution makes it a bit better for Cinderace in particular. Armarouge can also be a mixed support and attacker, as it deals super effective damage with moves likeExpanding Force.

I personally prefer Armarouge as a pure support build since it offersso many options. Access toReflectandWill-O-Wispprovide invaluable party mitigation, and both can single-handedly make Cinderace hit like a wet noodle.Clear Smogis a life saver in the shield phase especially, andHelping Handcan be used to power up a partnering Slowbro or Espathra. It can even useAcid Sprayto sharply lower Cinderace’s Special Defense. And that’sjustits support options.

Screenshot by Destructoid

For offense options, Armarouge can theoretically be anotherStored Poweruser like the previous two Pokemon. That said, you may prefer to use Psychic Terrain to buff Expanding Force and use that as an offensive option. Armarouge’s biggest problem is that its movepool is so vast that it’s hard to tell what a fellow Armarouge is running. I personally prefer the previous two as pure attackers with a support Armarouge focusing on keeping Reflect and Burn up as much as possible. If you may coordinate with your team, multiple Armarouges can work well together.

Other picks

Azumarill

An Azumarill you built for Charizard can be deadly if used correctly here. Open the fight by usingCharmand consider bringingRain Dancedepending on your team composition. TimeBelly Drumcarefully and do huge damage withPlay Rough. Unlike other Fairy-Types, Azumarill is not weak to Iron Head. This makes it viable for the fight, even if players who use Belly Drum early tarnish its reputation.

Pelipper

Though not a popular pick in practice, Pelipper is surprisingly great as a support Pokemon. The Drizzle ability starts the battle with rain active, which immediately cuts Cinderace’s damage potential with Pyro Ball.Roostgives it HP recovery, andHelping Handboosts the power of your teammates. The rain also synergizes withHurricane, which gives it a 100% accuracy rating and can potentially confuse Cinderace.

Hatterene

There unfortunately is no good healer option for this fight, but Hatterene is the closest you’ll get to one. It can start the fight withReflectorCharm, though even with a full HP and Defense EV build it will struggle if your teammates don’t also contribute with debuffs. If they do, Hatterene can provide invaluable HP Recover withLife DeworHealing Pulse, which especially helps Belly Drum Azumarill. you may then useHelping Handto help nuke Cinderace, though when all’s said and done, you might prefer a support Armarouge for more consistent clears in multiplayer.

Find what works for you

The biggest issue with this fight is how easy it is to step on a teammate’s toes. If everyone can coordinate a slew of barriers and debuffs, Cinderace can be surprisingly easy. Yet even one cast of Reflect that overlaps one already on the field can be enough to kill your early momentum. I’ve made a habit ofputting my Pokemon’s key moves in its nicknameto signal to other players what I’ll do first. Yet this is incredibly inconsistent, especially when dealing with international teammates.

If you can coordinate with teammates, off-meta picks like Charizard and Mimikyu can shine here. Otherwise, I recommend building at least two or three different Pokemon to serve different roles depending on what your team needs. Regardless of the strategies you use or the Pokemon you raise, best of luck farming. You’ll need it to soak up that sweet loot while you can.

Screenshot by Destructoid

Screenshot by Destructoid

Screenshot by Destructoid