phillippe going full dad mode with his long ass strip of family photos in his wallet
HE DOES IT FOR THEM AHHHHH

seen from Canada
seen from Australia

seen from Türkiye
seen from Australia

seen from United States
seen from Yemen
seen from India
seen from China

seen from Greece
seen from Japan
seen from Canada
seen from China
seen from Canada
seen from Norway
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from France
seen from Bosnia & Herzegovina

seen from Germany
phillippe going full dad mode with his long ass strip of family photos in his wallet
HE DOES IT FOR THEM AHHHHH
March 2026 adopts (all sold)
Let us not forget the OG metal bird, Scarmory
(note: this is in no way an attack on Corviknight, they are a really cool and well designed Pokemon)
#SWIFT #inktober2017 Here’s one of my favorite buddies from Pokemon Emerald lately. #skarmory
If you could have any Pokemon, which six would you have in your team?
5 more pokemon on the pokemon train for throwback thursday! Next week will be the last of the pokemon so stay tuned to find out what I post next after a brief panic of figuring out the best thing to post! #art #pokemon #dragonite #scrafty #scarmory #entei #elekid #Ifuckinloveelekid #pokemonart #camart #throwbackthursday #artistsoninstagram https://www.instagram.com/p/BxRIvyHAPbe/?igshid=18x6zwac5g173
Headcanon: What keeps all those floaty steel types in the air? Magnetics! Just like how our favorite lil Magnemite is literally a magnet who floats, it'd make sense if the other floating steel types also had some sort of magnetic field. Except I guess Skarmory. Because. It's a bird.
This is actually something I’ve thought about a lot, since a lot of metals tend to generate their own magnetic fields anyway. Probopass is even more obvious with this, since that ‘mustache’ is iron filings attracted by it’s inherent magnetism anyway. Skarmory, on the other hand, is probably made of a lighter, more easily aerodynamic metal than the other floaty types, most likely something akin to Magnesium or Titanium. Magnesium would especially fit the bill, as it’s traditionally used for stuff like drill bits and marine work, and fits with the whole ‘sword feathers’ thing.
- Mod Swalot