The fastest way to win in Evomon Roblox is to stop leaning on one favorite monster for every fight and instead swap to counters that hit each enemy type for super effective damage.
Every enemy in Evomon has a type, and every type has a handful of counters that deal roughly double damage while soaking far less in return. Instead of forcing your strongest monster into every battle, the players who climb fastest keep a trained roster and swap to whatever the current enemy is weak to. The chart below pairs all fifteen enemy types with the counter types and named Evomon that beat them, then covers the flexible picks worth building first and the mistakes that quietly cost you fights.
Match the enemy type, then pick the counter
Winning in Evomon comes down to one habit: read the enemy’s type first, then send in a monster whose attacks hit that weakness. Fire melts Grass, Water drowns Fire, Ground shuts down Electric — the whole system runs on rock-paper-scissors logic, where a well-matched attack roughly doubles your damage and a bad one gets halved.

KEY!Level still counts, but it is not a substitute for type advantage. A slightly lower-level counter with the right attacking moves will usually beat a higher-level monster swinging into a resistance. Prioritize Evomon you have actually trained and given the correct offensive moves, rather than assuming one overpowered favorite can carry every matchup.
Counter chart for every enemy type in Evomon
| Enemy type | Best counters |
|---|---|
| Grass | Fire — Lavarock, Pixie, Blasmain, Ballcrest, Proseer, Chaladin |
| Water | Grass and Electric — Terragon, Dadim, Sylvvin, Leaplade, Arcapex, Boltonia |
| Fire | Water, Rock, or Ground — Meerfish, Bubblade, Clamspire, Pebbulum, Fluffar, Mudthorn, Spikecomain |
| Rock | Grass, Water, Fighting, or Ground — Terragon, Datinum, Meerfish, Bubblade, Clamspire, Pomesh, Astronite, Mudthorn, Spikecomain |
| Ground | Grass, Flying, Ice, or Water — Terragon, Datunymph, Ballcrest, Frostseer, Meerfish, Bubblade, Clamspire, Silvenarch, Leafblade |
| Flying | Electric, Ice, or Rock — Arcapex, Boltonia, Frostseer, Pebbulum, Fluffar |
| Bug | Fire, Flying, or Rock — Lavarock, Pixie, Blasmain, Ballcrest, Pebbulum, Fluffar, Churfum |
| Ice | Fire, Fighting, Rock, or Steel — Lavarock, Pixie, Blasmain, Hamesh, Astronite, Pebbulum, Fluffar, Tinkor |
| Steel | Fire, Fighting, or Ground — Lavarock, Pixie, Blasmain, Pomesh, Astronite, Mudthorn, Spikecomain |
| Electric | Ground — Pebbulum, Mudthorn, Spikecomain |
| Fighting | Flying or Psychic — Valest, Cherentum, Stormuse |
| Poison | Ground or Psychic — Mudthorn, Spikecomain, Starmuse |
| Psychic | Bug — Chaladin, Jipress, Sundercream, Twirby |
| Dragon | Ice or Poison — Frostseer, Glassattle, Frostlet, Wisphex, Viparch |
| Normal | Fighting — Pomesh, Astronite |
Click any enemy Evomon in battle to see exactly what it is super effective against and weak to, then swap to a matching counter before you commit to an attack.
Flexible Evomon worth building first
| Evomon | Role |
|---|---|
| Mopillow | Universal counter when you don’t know the enemy team |
| Wisphex | Poison-type coverage |
| Pummash | Fighting damage |
| Astraknight | Fighting damage and utility |
| Frostlet | Early Ice coverage |
You will not have a perfect counter for all fifteen types straight away, so early on it pays to invest in a few flexible Evomon that stretch across many fights. These are the picks that keep you covered while you fill in the gaps.
Mopillow is the safest blind pick thanks to its Counter skill and broad general coverage, so it earns a slot whenever you have no idea what the enemy is running. For raw Fighting damage, Pummash and Astraknight are the top physical attackers and handle Normal, Rock, Ice, and Steel enemies well.
Wisphex is one of the strongest Poison-type Evomon, evolved up the Wispuff line; wild ones live in Netherland around levels 155–160, so bring a team of at least level 120 before hunting there. If you would rather pressure that same Poison line, Ground and Steel attackers like Tink and Thorlord exploit its weaknesses. Frostlet fills the usually-thin Ice slot early — it carries triple S-tier talent and can be bought after World 1 for 99 Robux, which is a cheap way to shore up a type that otherwise has few good options. Your starter — Blazpup, Leafbun, or Bubble — is a fine early engine, but don’t pour rare resources into it expecting it to carry endgame content.

Mistakes that quietly lose Evomon battles
The most common way to drop a winnable fight is trusting raw level and ignoring the type chart. A high-level monster hitting into a resistance does half damage, and that gap is enough to lose a boss or PvP match you should have won. Read the type first, every time.
Over-investing in a starter is the next trap. Blazpup, Leafbun, and Bubble carry the early game fine, but they tend to fall off against high-level content compared with trained meta final evolutions, so plan the transition instead of funneling every resource into your first monster.
Be stingy with rare capture balls too. Save the guaranteed triple-S ball and prismatic balls for shinies and meta Evomon, not for low-value wild catches you will never train. And don’t assume catching an already-evolved enemy skips the grind — beat a mid-stage form like Whis Shade and the capture phase still hands you the base Wispuff, which you then have to evolve back up with stones.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best all-around Evomon counter?
Mopillow is the strongest general-purpose pick. Its access to the Counter skill and broad coverage make it the safe choice when you don’t yet know what the enemy team is running, which is exactly when a dedicated type counter isn’t an option.
Do type counters matter more than level in Evomon Roblox?
Yes, in most fights. A correct type matchup roughly doubles your damage and halves the damage you take, which usually outweighs a modest level gap. Level only wins out when the matchup is already neutral, so lead with type advantage and use level as the tiebreaker.
Which Evomon should I build first for early counter coverage?
Start with Mopillow for blind picks and Frostlet for the Ice slot, since Frostlet can be bought right after World 1 for 99 Robux. From there, add Pummash or Astraknight for Fighting damage and work toward Wisphex for Poison coverage as your team levels up.
Are Blazpup, Leafbun, or Bubble the best starter?
It is genuinely contested. In pure combat many players rank Blazpup highest, while others argue Bubble gives the best overall value across a full playthrough, with Leafbun as the third option. Any of the three is a fine start — the bigger mistake is expecting a starter to carry the endgame instead of moving on to meta final evolutions.
How do I know what type an enemy Evomon is weak to?
Check its element icon, or click the Evomon during battle to see what it is super effective against and what it is weak to. Cross-reference that with the counter chart above, then swap in an Evomon whose attacks hit the weakness while its own type resists the enemy’s element.
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