
| HIGH | 4.99 | USD | |
| MID | 0.11 | USD | TREND![]() |
| LOW | 0.01 | USD |
Snom slides into the Pokémon TCG as an unassuming Basic Water-type that might easily be overlooked.
With just 50 HP and a single move that relies on coin flips, most players might pass it by for more powerful options.
However, this little ice crawler serves as the gateway to its formidable evolution, Frosmoth, giving it strategic value that far exceeds its modest appearance.
Offensive rating: 1/10Snom's offensive capabilities are extremely limited, offering virtually no damage output.
Its single attack, Hide, costs just one Water Energy but deals zero damage, instead providing a coin-flip chance at protection.
The complete absence of any damage-dealing ability severely restricts Snom's offensive contributions.
Even considering its role as a pre-evolution, most Basic Pokémon offer some minimal damage output, whereas Snom provides none.
Its sole function is survival until evolution, making it completely ineffective as an attacker.
In a pinch, you might use Hide to stall, but without any offensive pressure, opponents can simply build their board state while you flip coins.
Survival rating: 3/10With just 50 HP, Snom sits at the lowest end of the survivability spectrum for Basic Pokémon.
Its Metal weakness is rarely exploited in the current meta, which is a small positive.
The Hide attack offers a 50% chance of complete immunity from attacks and effects for a turn, which can occasionally buy crucial time.
However, relying on coin flips for protection is inherently inconsistent.
A single Energy retreat cost is manageable, allowing reasonable mobility if threatened.
Snom essentially functions as temporary bench fodder, hoping to survive long enough to evolve.
Against any established board, it will likely be knocked out before Hide can even be used effectively.
Versatility rating: 3/10Snom's versatility primarily stems from its evolution path to Frosmoth, rather than its own merits.
As a Basic Water Pokémon, it benefits from standard Water support cards and search options like Nest Ball or Evolution Incense.
Its lone Hide attack offers minimal utility beyond its intended defensive function, and even then, the coin flip dependency limits reliability.
Snom cannot pivot into alternative roles - it's neither an attacker nor a meaningful support Pokémon in its Basic form.
Its single purpose is to evolve as quickly as possible while attempting to survive.
The card functions exclusively as an evolutionary stepping stone, offering little strategic flexibility on its own.
Speed/Setup rating: 7/10Snom requires minimal setup investment, needing just a single Water Energy to use its only attack.
This low energy requirement is its primary advantage from a setup perspective.
As a Basic Pokémon, it can be played immediately to the bench, ready to evolve on your next turn if Frosmoth is available.
Standard evolution-acceleration strategies like Rare Candy don't apply since Frosmoth is a Stage 1, not Stage 2.
The card essentially functions as a one-turn waiting period before accessing Frosmoth.
Its simplicity is a double-edged sword - while easy to deploy, it offers no acceleration mechanics and requires immediate evolution to provide any meaningful value to your strategy.
Snom demands companions that either accelerate its evolution to Frosmoth, protect it until evolution, or maximize Frosmoth's potential once evolved.
Cards that search Basic Pokémon or provide quick access to evolution cards are essential.
Additionally, Energy acceleration effects become crucial to maximize Frosmoth's potential ability to attach Water Energy rapidly from the discard pile.
The obvious evolution target that transforms Snom from liability to asset. Frosmoth's typical ability to attach Water Energy from discard pile to Water Pokémon makes it a powerful engine in Water-based decks, justifying the risk of playing its vulnerable pre-evolution.
This Item card lets you add two Water Energy cards from your deck to your hand, perfect for fueling Frosmoth's ability to accelerate Energy attachment. This creates the energy supply pipeline needed for explosive Water-type setups.
As a powerful Water-type attacker, Kyogre benefits tremendously from Frosmoth's Energy acceleration ability. This partnership creates the payoff for having evolved through Snom, turning energy-hungry attackers into consistent threats.
Snom represents one of those necessary evils in Pokémon TCG - a vulnerable stepping stone to something greater.
On its own merits, the card is undeniably weak, with minimal HP, no damage output, and a coin-flip dependent protection mechanism that fails half the time.
However, competitive players should evaluate Snom exclusively through the lens of its evolution.
Its true value lies in being the gateway to Frosmoth, which typically provides powerful Water Energy acceleration.
The key to using Snom effectively is minimizing its time on the field - bench it when safe, evolve immediately when possible, and consider protective stadium cards or abilities to shield it until evolution.
While unimpressive in isolation, Snom's role in enabling Water-type strategies through Frosmoth gives it relevance that transcends its individual statistics.
Just don't expect it to win any battles on its own.
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