can someone explain to me how Nihilego is a rock/poison?
>>30264606
It's made of glass which is a superheated rock.
It's poison because it uses a neurotoxin to boost the abilities of the people it controls.
>>30264606
it's clearly glass and it produces neurotoxins
>>30264606
Nothing about it is suppose to make sense for us.
It's made of glass-like substance and uses toxins.
>>30264606
Jellyfish use toxins, so poison.
>>30264644
>>30264639
>>30264658
How did it envelop Lusamine if it's glass?
>>30264756
It's malleable glass
>>30264756
It's magic
>>30264756
Well the official site defines it as a "glass-like substance" and it is a weird alien so...
>>30264606
It's so fucking alien it's a silicon-based life form
>>30264606
crack is whack
Because not every aquatic animal Pokémon is going to be a Water type.
>>30264606
Can you really not think of a real life poisonous rock that is extremely addictive and causes people to become violent sociopaths?
>>30264606
Rock because its body is like glass
Poison because
>UB-01. Code name: “Symbiont.” Properly known as Nihilego. There have been sightings reported of this beast in Alola’s past. Its most distinctive feature is its parasitic capability. When Nihilego latches on to a host, it does not manipulate its actions directly. Rather it awakens the host’s own capabilities and boosts them to an extreme extent in order to protect itself.
>It injects the host with a sort of neurotoxin to achieve this effect. This neurotoxin of Nihilego’s is incredibly stimulating and inspires feelings of extreme excitement and a lack of inhibition in its host. In other words, anything or anyone that a Nihilego latches on to will have its native skills forcibly activated to their fullest extent and will then act as it naturally desires to.
Basically, its toxins are like drugs, and Lusamine was high on them.
Think of it as a glass jellyfish
>>30264756
easily
It comes from a dimension beyond our comprehension, so it does not obey conventional logic.