Quick answer: how should you use the Evomon type chart?
Use the type chart before spending rare rewards. A team that only stacks high-damage Evomon can still lose if three members share the same counter. Start by checking your main attacker, the type that beats it, and one safe switch that can cover that weakness. Then compare your choice with the tier list and your current codes rewards. If fruit, balls, coins, or rerolls are limited, invest first in the Evomon that fixes the widest matchup gap instead of the one that simply looks rare.
A lower-ranked Evomon that solves Fire, Water, Plant, Electric, Ice, Earth, Dark, or Neutral pressure can be more valuable than a flashy pick that repeats a weakness.
Evomon type matchup planning table
Exact values can change as the Roblox experience updates, so treat this table as a planning model for team coverage. Use it to ask the right question: which type pressures my team, which teammate can switch safely, and which reward should be saved until I confirm the matchup in-game?
| Type | Usually pressures | Usually helps against | Watch for | Team note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fire | Plant and Ice-style routes where burst damage matters. | Some Plant pressure and early farming fights. | Water and Earth answers can force a quick swap. | Pair Fire with Water, Plant, or Neutral support so one counter does not stop your route. |
| Water | Fire and Earth-style opponents that punish fragile attackers. | Fire pressure and some long-route chip damage. | Plant and Electric pressure can punish lazy switching. | Water is a stable starter partner when you need safer farming and fewer risky catches. |
| Plant | Water and Earth-heavy teams that rely on predictable damage. | Water routes and some early resource farming patterns. | Fire, Ice, and fast coverage attackers. | Use Plant to stop Water pressure, but do not leave it as your only defensive plan. |
| Electric | Water picks, speed checks, and teams with weak switch options. | Some fast pressure and momentum-based fights. | Earth-style counters and bulky neutral pivots. | Electric is best when you need tempo, not when your team already lacks a safe switch. |
| Ice | Plant, Earth, and route enemies that dislike burst control. | Narrow matchups where stopping a specific threat matters. | Fire and strong neutral damage can make Ice expensive to protect. | Use Ice as a targeted answer before treating it like a universal carry. |
| Earth | Electric and Fire picks that overcommit to fast damage. | Electric pressure and some physical-style trading. | Water, Plant, and Ice coverage. | Earth is useful for stabilizing a team, but it needs partners that answer Water pressure. |
| Dark | Utility-heavy or fragile teams that dislike disruption. | Some control and special-role matchups. | Unknown patch changes and direct counter picks. | Treat Dark as a role pick until your route confirms whether it carries or supports. |
| Neutral | General fights where consistency matters more than super-effective damage. | Situations where you need a low-risk filler or farming slot. | Teams that require specific elemental pressure. | Neutral is useful glue, but it should not replace real coverage. |
Use this as a decision table, not a permanent official chart. Confirm exact matchups in the Roblox experience and update your notes after major patches.
Six coverage rules that matter more than memorizing the chart
The best Evomon players use the chart as a checklist. Before you invest in a new catch, ask whether it changes a real battle outcome.
Cover your main attacker
Every carry needs one teammate that can enter when its counter appears. If your Fire pick loses to Water, your next slot should answer Water pressure.
Avoid duplicate weaknesses
Two strong Evomon can still be a weak pair when they both lose to the same type. This is the most common beginner team-building mistake.
Keep one neutral plan
Not every battle is solved by a super-effective hit. A stable neutral or defensive slot helps when the matchup is unclear.
Save rewards until the route proves the need
Use code rewards after you know which type gap matters. Fruit and rerolls are stronger when they remove a specific weakness.
Separate farming from boss planning
A route farmer can be efficient without being the best boss or dungeon pick. Do not rank both jobs with one letter.
Recheck after updates
New areas, code rewards, balance changes, and community discoveries can change which type is easiest to build around.
Team examples for common type-chart problems
These examples are not locked builds. They show how to think when your current team keeps losing the same kind of fight.
Fire starter with Water trouble
If your first strong Evomon is Fire, avoid building a second Fire pick too early.
- Add Plant or Electric pressure to punish Water checks.
- Keep a Neutral slot while you test the route.
- Use tier-list rankings only after the coverage gap is fixed.
Water core with Electric pressure
Water teams are stable, but Electric or Plant pressure can quickly expose a lazy build.
- Add Earth or a sturdy Neutral pivot.
- Do not spend rerolls on another Water role first.
- Check whether code rewards make the coverage pick easier to level.
Fast Electric attacker with no safe switch
Speed wins small fights, but a fast attacker still needs protection.
- Add Earth counterplay awareness before hard fights.
- Keep a second damage type ready for bulky matchups.
- Treat the Electric pick as tempo, not your entire team plan.
How codes and rewards should change type-chart decisions
Evomon codes can make a matchup fix practical earlier than normal. The mistake is spending rewards the moment they arrive instead of connecting them to the type chart.
- Redeem first, invest second Check the codes page, test current rewards in-game, and only then decide whether fruit, balls, coins, or rerolls should support a new coverage slot.
- Spend on the matchup you keep losing If Water pressure keeps stopping your route, a Plant, Electric, or stable pivot deserves resources before a cosmetic or duplicate role.
- Keep one cheap experiment Do not fully build every new catch. Test it cheaply, confirm the type role, then move it up your personal tier list.
- Record patch context When a new update changes areas or rewards, note the date before trusting old type-chart advice.
Common Evomon type-chart mistakes
Only checking offense
Super-effective pressure matters, but your switch options matter just as much. A team with no safe entry can lose even when it has strong attacks.
Copying a tier list without checking coverage
Tier lists rank value. The type chart explains fit. A lower-ranked coverage pick can be better for your account.
Spending rerolls before testing
Rerolls and fruit should fix confirmed problems. If the route does not require that type yet, wait.
Treating old screenshots as final
Roblox live-service games can change quickly. Use old charts as clues, then verify important matchups yourself.
Evomon type chart FAQ
Is this the official Evomon type chart?
No. Evomon.blog is an independent fan guide. Use this page as a planning guide and verify exact interactions inside the Roblox experience.
What type should beginners build first?
Build the type that covers your starter's worst matchup. For many players that means adding a Water, Plant, Electric, Earth, or Neutral support slot before chasing a rare duplicate attacker.
Should I use codes before reading the type chart?
Redeem available codes first, but spend the rewards after checking the type chart. Rewards are most useful when they support a clear coverage decision.
How does the type chart connect to the tier list?
The tier list helps you judge overall value, while the type chart shows whether that value fits your current team. Use both before investing.
Can a Neutral Evomon be worth using?
Yes. Neutral picks can be useful glue for farming or unclear matchups, but they should not be your only answer to specific elemental pressure.
How often should I update my matchup notes?
Update them after major patches, new areas, new codes, or community-confirmed changes. Date context matters for any live Roblox game.
Sources and verification notes
- Official Roblox Evomon experience - Use this for official play access, platform context, and live update signals.
- Evomon Fandom type chart page - Used as a community comparison signal; this guide rewrites the planning advice independently.
- Evomon tier list guide on Evomon.blog - Internal guide for connecting type coverage to team investment decisions.
- Evomon codes guide on Evomon.blog - Internal guide for checking rewards before spending resources on a coverage pick.