Difference between revisions of "Roark"

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=Background=
 
=Background=
  
Being the son of Steel-type gym leader [[Byron]], Roark followed in his father's footsteps. He trained hard and liked to measure the toughness of in battle. However, his father still looked down at him as a child and originally offered a Gym Leader position to [[Riley]] instead. Riley declined in order to give Roark his chance. Thus, Roark became the gym leader of the Oreburgh City Gym, as well as the safety supervisor of the Oreburgh Mines. Despite his youth, he was able to safely maintain the mine while also allowing trainers to practice in the mine as well.
+
Being the son of Steel-type gym leader [[Byron]], Roark followed in his father's footsteps by aspiring to become another gym leader. He trained hard and liked to measure the toughness of his Pokémon in battle. However, his father still looked down at him as a child and originally offered a Gym Leader position to [[Riley]] instead. Riley declined in order to give Roark his chance. Thus, Roark became the gym leader of the Oreburgh City Gym, as well as the safety supervisor of the Oreburgh Mines. Despite his youth, he was able to safely maintain the mine while also allowing trainers to use the area to practice with their Pokémon.
  
 
In ''Diamond'', ''Pearl'' and ''Platinum'', Roark was first encountered within the Oreburgh Mines, where he demonstrated the Rock Smash move and then returned to his gym after meeting [[Lucas (Pokemon)|Lucas]]/[[Dawn]]. After being defeated, Roark was ashamed to lose to a badgeless trainer but admitted that the victor was strong while he was weak, and he surrendered the Coal Badge along with TM 76: Stealth Rock. He also left Lucas/Dawn with the warning that the other seven gym leaders were tougher than him.
 
In ''Diamond'', ''Pearl'' and ''Platinum'', Roark was first encountered within the Oreburgh Mines, where he demonstrated the Rock Smash move and then returned to his gym after meeting [[Lucas (Pokemon)|Lucas]]/[[Dawn]]. After being defeated, Roark was ashamed to lose to a badgeless trainer but admitted that the victor was strong while he was weak, and he surrendered the Coal Badge along with TM 76: Stealth Rock. He also left Lucas/Dawn with the warning that the other seven gym leaders were tougher than him.
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=In Other Pokémon Games=
 
=In Other Pokémon Games=
  
In ''[[Pokémon Masters]]'', Roark and his Cranidos appear as a playable sync pair that could be recruited at random through the Sync Pair Scout feature. His Cranidos could also evolve into a Rampardos through a Sync Pair Story in which he had to battle [[Roxanne]].
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In ''[[Pokémon Masters EX]]'', Roark and his Cranidos appeared as a playable sync pair that could be recruited at random through the game's Sync Pair Scout feature. His Cranidos could also evolve into a Rampardos through a Sync Pair Story in which he had to battle [[Roxanne]]. He was also featured as the host of the "Evolution Material Mining" event, in which he guided the player in smashing rocks in search of Evolution Shards, Evolution Crystals and other items.
  
 
=Other Appearances=
 
=Other Appearances=
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=Trivia=
 
=Trivia=
  
*He is named after Howard Roark, a character from the Ayn Rand book ''The Fountainhead'', who is also a redheaded man that spent a fraction of his career mining and the rest as an architect.
+
*His English name could be considered a combination of "rock" and "ore", and it is also possible that he is named after Howard Roark, a character from the Ayn Rand book ''The Fountainhead'', who is also a redheaded man that spent a fraction of his career mining and the rest as an architect. His Japanese name is Hyouta, which is derived from the Japanese word for the calabash gourd, which matches his father being named after a wax gourd.
 
*In his youth, Roark is said to have played in the steel mines at Iron Island.
 
*In his youth, Roark is said to have played in the steel mines at Iron Island.
 
*Roark has more faith in his skills at a fossil-digging race than at Pokémon battles.
 
*Roark has more faith in his skills at a fossil-digging race than at Pokémon battles.
 +
*In ''Pokémon Masters EX'', he reveals that his dreams include building the world's largest tunnel and collecting enough fossils to open his own museum, with his greatest ideal being to build an underground city containing his museum. He also mentions having been deterred from his dream when the first tunnel he made collapsed.
  
 
{{Gym Leaders}}
 
{{Gym Leaders}}
  
 
[[Category: Pokémon Characters]]
 
[[Category: Pokémon Characters]]

Revision as of 02:25, 7 September 2021

Roark.jpg
"Call me Roark the Rock!"
Roark
Species Human
Hair color Cordovan
Eye color Cordovan
Base Oreburgh City
Relatives Byron (father)
Underground Man (Grandfather)
Voiced by Alejandro Saab (2019)
Debut Pokémon: Diamond/Pearl Versions

Roark is one of the eight gym leaders of the Sinnoh region faced in Pokémon: Diamond, Pearl and Platinum Versions. He is the first gym leader to be faced in these games and specializes in Rock-type Pokémon.

Background

Being the son of Steel-type gym leader Byron, Roark followed in his father's footsteps by aspiring to become another gym leader. He trained hard and liked to measure the toughness of his Pokémon in battle. However, his father still looked down at him as a child and originally offered a Gym Leader position to Riley instead. Riley declined in order to give Roark his chance. Thus, Roark became the gym leader of the Oreburgh City Gym, as well as the safety supervisor of the Oreburgh Mines. Despite his youth, he was able to safely maintain the mine while also allowing trainers to use the area to practice with their Pokémon.

In Diamond, Pearl and Platinum, Roark was first encountered within the Oreburgh Mines, where he demonstrated the Rock Smash move and then returned to his gym after meeting Lucas/Dawn. After being defeated, Roark was ashamed to lose to a badgeless trainer but admitted that the victor was strong while he was weak, and he surrendered the Coal Badge along with TM 76: Stealth Rock. He also left Lucas/Dawn with the warning that the other seven gym leaders were tougher than him.

When the player first used the Explorer Kit, Roark also appeared nearby to welcome them to the Underground. In Platinum, he was among the trainers who could be randomly battled at the Battleground, this time with a stronger line-up of Pokémon. Additionally, Roark could visit the player's villa on random days and comment about how fossils could make good decorations. He would also muse about the Underground and wonder if it could extend to Kanto and Johto.

Roark later appeared in Black and White 2 as one of the competitors in the Pokémon World Tournament held at Unova. He took part in the Sinnoh Leaders, World Leaders and Type Expert Tournaments.

Pokémon Roster

Roark uses the following Pokémon in Diamond, Pearl and Platinum:

The following is the roster he uses in Battleground matches:

In Black 2 and White 2, the Pokémon he uses for tournament matches can include Rampardos, Probopass, Golem and Relicanth as well as Sudowoodo and Onix in the Sinnoh Leaders Tournament or Archeops and Crustle in the World Leaders and Type Expert Tournaments.

In Other Pokémon Games

In Pokémon Masters EX, Roark and his Cranidos appeared as a playable sync pair that could be recruited at random through the game's Sync Pair Scout feature. His Cranidos could also evolve into a Rampardos through a Sync Pair Story in which he had to battle Roxanne. He was also featured as the host of the "Evolution Material Mining" event, in which he guided the player in smashing rocks in search of Evolution Shards, Evolution Crystals and other items.

Other Appearances

Other Media

  • He has appeared in a total of six episodes of the Pokémon anime's Diamond and Pearl series. In his initial appearances, he was bested by Paul but defeated Ash Ketchum until Ash won their rematch. He reappears when the group arrives at Canalave City, in an episode dealing with his father problems. He acts as a referee during the battle with Byron, who is shown to have more affection for his son than he lets on.
  • Roark also appears in the Diamond/Pearl arc of the Pokémon Adventures manga, where had just returned from some type of conference (which later turned out to be about Team Galactic) with Byron and the Underground Man, and was defeated by Platina in her first gym challenge. He reappeared at Canalave, where his Cranidos evolved, and he worried about his father's recklessness. Near the end of the arc, he tunnels through Mt. Cornet with his father and grandfather to get the gym leaders atop Spear Pillar so that they could fight Team Galactic.

Trivia

  • His English name could be considered a combination of "rock" and "ore", and it is also possible that he is named after Howard Roark, a character from the Ayn Rand book The Fountainhead, who is also a redheaded man that spent a fraction of his career mining and the rest as an architect. His Japanese name is Hyouta, which is derived from the Japanese word for the calabash gourd, which matches his father being named after a wax gourd.
  • In his youth, Roark is said to have played in the steel mines at Iron Island.
  • Roark has more faith in his skills at a fossil-digging race than at Pokémon battles.
  • In Pokémon Masters EX, he reveals that his dreams include building the world's largest tunnel and collecting enough fossils to open his own museum, with his greatest ideal being to build an underground city containing his museum. He also mentions having been deterred from his dream when the first tunnel he made collapsed.