Ad Space

Vote for Your Favorite Pokemon

Two Pokemon face off — click the one you like more. After 10 votes, we'll show you a tally of your picks. Every vote counts toward the community Pokemon rankings.

We show you two Pokemon. Pick the one you like more. After 10 votes, see how your picks compare to the community.

Ad Space
How This Pokemon Vote Works

Our Pokemon vote puts two random Pokemon head to head. You pick your favorite of the pair. Here's the breakdown:

  1. We randomly select two Pokemon from all 1,025 entries (Gen 1 through Gen 9).
  2. You click the one you prefer — that counts as one vote.
  3. A new pair appears immediately. No waiting, no loading screens.
  4. After 10 votes, we tally up your wins and losses to show which Pokemon you voted for most.
  5. Your votes feed into the overall community Pokemon rankings on our rankings page.

This is different from the favorite Pokemon picker on our homepage — the picker uses a tournament bracket to find your single #1 favorite, while voting is faster and lets you cast quick opinions on many pairs.

Pokemon Vote — Frequently Asked Questions

How is this Pokemon vote different from the picker?

The favorite Pokemon picker on our homepage runs a full tournament bracket — it eliminates Pokemon round by round until only your #1 remains. Voting is quicker: you get random pairs and pick your favorite each time. No elimination, no bracket — just fast votes.

Do my votes affect the Pokemon rankings?

Yes. Every head-to-head vote contributes to the community data that powers our top 50 most popular Pokemon rankings. The more people vote, the more accurate the rankings become.

Can I vote more than once?

Absolutely. Hit 'Vote Again' after your session ends to cast another 10 votes. There's no limit — vote as many times as you want.

Are all 1,025 Pokemon included in the vote?

Yes. Every Pokemon from Generation 1 through Generation 9 can appear in a vote matchup. That includes starters, legendaries, mythicals, and regional forms.

Why do some matchups feel unfair?

Because pairs are completely random, you might see Pikachu versus a less-known Pokemon. That's by design — it's how underdogs get discovered and how true popularity emerges across thousands of votes.