Boss Pokémon are rare types of Pokémon. They are stronger and larger than normal Pokémon, and fight more aggressively than normal Pokémon when in battle. They can drop several rare items upon defeat. Boss Pokémon cannot be captured.
Contents
Levels
Boss Pokémon do not display levels above their heads, unlike normal Pokémon. Instead, their levels are scaled based on the highest-level Pokémon in the player's party when the boss Pokémon is engaged in battle.
Boss Pokémon have colored text that shows above them, which lacks a level and can be seen from farther away than the overhead text above normal Pokémon. The color of this text indicates the number of levels above the player's highest-level Pokémon that the boss Pokémon will be.
For example, if the player's highest-level Pokémon is level 80, a boss Pokémon with red text will be level 90. However, if the player's highest-level Pokémon is level 60, the same red boss Pokémon will instead be level 70. The moveset of a wild boss Pokémon may change with each battle (if a player escapes from or is defeated by the boss Pokémon); however, growth, Natures, Abilities, and IVs will not change between encounters.
The following table displays the level advantage that each color of boss Pokémon will have over the player's highest-level Pokémon.
Color | Levels Above |
---|---|
Green | 5 |
Yellow | 10 |
Red | 20 |
Orange | 40 |
Types
There are two different types of boss Pokémon, each spawning in different ways.
Mega Evolved boss Pokémon

A naturally spawning Pokémon has a 1400 chance of being a Mega Evolved boss Pokémon. The species of Mega Evolution is randomly selected from all existing Mega Evolutions, and may spawn even in biomes where the base form of the Pokémon would not normally spawn. Mega Evolved boss Pokémon can only be yellow or red bosses, and red Mega Evolved boss Pokémon will always have their Shiny colorations. Yellow bosses spawn 70% of the time, while red bosses spawn the remaining 30% of the time.
Along with the Mega Evolved Pokémon, a few other Pokémon that are pre-evolutions of the Mega Evolved Pokémon will also spawn. For example, a Mega Venusaur will cause a few Ivysaur and Bulbasaur to spawn nearby, regardless of whether Ivysaur or Bulbasaur can normally spawn in the biome.
Colored boss Pokémon
These boss Pokémon can be identified easily as they are tinted one of four different colors (green, yellow, red, and orange). This is not to be confused with a Shiny Pokémon.
Yellow and red colored boss Pokémon can spawn on the roofs of haunted towers, or from manually placed Pixelmon spawners. Like with Mega Evolved boss Pokémon, yellow bosses spawn 70% of the time, while red bosses spawn the remaining 30% of the time.
All colors of boss Pokémon can be spawned with the /pokespawn command with the "boss:[1-4]" argument, with 1 for green, 2 for yellow, 3 for red, and 4 for orange (e.g., a red boss Bulbasaur can be spawned with the command, "/pokespawn bulbasaur boss:3").
Drops
Boss Pokémon can drop several rare items after they are defeated. Different boss Pokémon have different possible drops.
Green/Yellow boss Pokémon
When a green or yellow boss Pokémon is defeated, one item is dropped from the following list.
Amulet Coin
Bright Powder
Destiny Knot
Dragon's Breath
Eviolite
Exp. Share
Flame Orb
Focus Band
Light Clay
Macho Brace
Metronome
Muscle Band
Quick Claw
Rare Candy
Red Card
Rocky Helmet
Safety Goggles
Scope Lens
Shed Shell
Shell Bell
Smoke Ball
Soothe Bell
Toxic Orb
Weakness Policy
Wide Lens
Wise Glasses
Wither Skeleton Skull
Zoom Lens
Red/Orange boss Pokémon
When a red or orange boss Pokémon is defeated, one item is dropped from the following list.
Ability Capsule
Assault Vest
Choice Band
Choice Scarf
Choice Specs
Dragon Egg
Elytra
Exp. All
Expert Belt
Focus Sash
Leftovers
Life Orb
Lucky Egg
Master Ball
Nether Star
Orb
Power Anklet
Power Band
Power Belt
Power Bracer
Power Lens
Power Weight
Mega Evolved boss Pokémon
When a player first defeats a Mega Evolved boss Pokémon, the player will gain access to a Mega Ring, an accessory required to trigger Mega Evolution.
Mega Evolved boss Pokémon can also drop the corresponding Mega Stones required for the boss Pokémon's Mega Evolution. The first defeated Mega Evolved boss Pokémon of each Pokémon species will always drop its Mega Stone, while subsequent boss Pokémon defeats will have a 140 chance of dropping the corresponding Mega Stone again.
For example, a player who has not obtained any Mega Stones or a Mega Ring defeats a boss Mega Venusaur. The Venusaur is guaranteed to yield a Mega Ring and a Venusaurite. If the player finds another boss Mega Venusaur, there is a 140 chance that the boss will drop a second Venusaurite for the player upon defeat. If the player later finds a boss Mega Blastoise, the Blastoise will be guaranteed to drop a Blastoisinite because it is the first Mega Blastoise that the player has defeated.
Other
A green/yellow boss Pokémon has a 33.3% chance of dropping a Rare Candy, while a red/orange boss Pokémon has a 50% chance of dropping a Rare Candy. This Rare Candy may stack with the Rare Candy in the green/red boss Pokémon drop table, making it possible to receive two Rare Candies from these Pokémon.
In addition to the drops listed above, boss Pokémon will also drop same items that are dropped by their non-boss equivalent (e.g., a boss Mega Venusaur can drop vines.
Config settings
- "battleAIBoss": The battle AI mode that boss Pokémon will use when choosing moves in battle.
- "bossSpawnRate": The chance of boss Pokémon spawning.
- "useExternalJSONFiles": Allows boss Pokémon drops to be modified in the "bossdrops.json" external JSON file.