Gen 8 — Singles12 min di letturaAggiornato: Aprile 2026
Gen 8 — Singles · Smogon OU

Generation 8 OU — Singles Format Reference

Gen 8 OU is the Sword & Shield Singles format — the metagame that introduced Heavy-Duty Boots, banned Dynamax mid-generation, and produced the Future Sight pivot pattern that defined balance teams for two years.

Cartridge

Sword & Shield

Type

6v6 Singles

Status

Frozen tier

Patch

Crown Tundra final

Heavy-Duty Boots permanently changed how teams approach hazards. Set Stealth Rock all you want — the opponent paid one item slot and your hazard pressure stopped working.
The Gen 8 OU structural fact

At a glance

Gen 8 OU is the longest-running OU format of the post-DLC era. Sword & Shield's two DLC waves (Isle of Armor, Crown Tundra) reshaped the meta multiple times before Gen 9 froze the tier in late 2022.

The format is now stable. The banlist is final. Heavy-Duty Boots distribution and Future Sight + Chilly Reception (Slowking-Galar) define the structural pressures every team builds around.

  • Format type6v6 Singles, all six brought to battle
  • Team previewYes — both sides see all six Pokémon before lead choice
  • MechanicsDynamax (banned mid-gen), Heavy-Duty Boots distribution
  • StatusFrozen — meta stable since Gen 9 succession
  • Where it's playedPokémon Showdown ladder + Smogon tournaments. Live tier page: /ss/ou.
  • Sister formatsUbers (above), UU (below)

Format rules

Gen 8 OU applies the standard Smogon Singles clause set on top of the cartridge ruleset. Dynamax was permitted at format launch, banned in late 2020 after a community suspect cycle.

Standard clauses

ClauseEffect
Sleep ClauseOnly one opposing Pokémon may be put to sleep at a time.
Species ClauseEach team can only carry one of any given species.
Evasion ClauseEvasion-boosting moves and abilities are banned.
OHKO ClauseSheer Cold, Fissure, Horn Drill, Guillotine are banned.
Endless Battle ClauseBattle states that cannot end are forbidden.
Moody ClauseMoody is banned outright.
Baton Pass ClauseSpeed-passing combined with stat-passing is forbidden.
Dynamax ClauseDynamax is BANNED in OU as of late 2020.

Banlist

Gen 8 OU's banlist accumulated rapidly across the DLC waves. Several Pokémon were banned, returned with adjusted access, and re-evaluated multiple times before the tier froze.

Notable Gen 8 OU bans

Pokémon / MechanicWhy it was banned
Dynamax (mechanic)Banned late 2020. Doubled HP + guaranteed Max-move boosts produced uncompetitive free value.
CinderaceLibero turned every move into STAB. Combined with Pyro Ball + Court Change, no defensive answer was reliable.
DracovishStrong Jaw + Fishious Rend + Choice Scarf produced a 170-BP first-strike Water move.
DracozoltBolt Beak + Choice Scarf parallel to Dracovish.
Spectrier145 SpA + 130 Spe + Grim Neigh. Calm Mind + Substitute sets broke through every reliable answer.
UrshifuSingle Strike form. Wicked Blow + Unseen Fist bypassed screens, Substitute, and Protect with guaranteed crits.
MagearnaCalm Mind + Stored Power + Soul-Heart engine.
NaganadelReturned via Crown Tundra. Specs Draco Meteor + 121 Spe outsped most of the format.
GenesectDownload SpA boost on switch-in + U-turn pivot + perfect coverage.
ZeraoraSuspect-tested late in the cycle for Volt Switch + Plasma Fists pressure.

Dynamax & Heavy-Duty Boots

Two structural decisions defined Gen 8 OU. The first was the Dynamax ban — early-format, controversial, and lasting. The second was Heavy-Duty Boots distribution — uncontested, format-defining, and permanent.

The Dynamax ban

Dynamax was legal in Gen 8 OU at format launch and remained legal through most of 2020. Smogon's council suspect-tested the mechanic mid-cycle and banned it after community vote. The official reasoning: Dynamax produced free positional value (3 turns of doubled HP + guaranteed Max-move stat boosts) that the format could not consistently answer through standard counterplay.

For the underlying mechanic — activation rules, Max move table, Gigantamax — refer to the Dynamax section of the Gen 8 Era guide.

Heavy-Duty Boots

Heavy-Duty Boots renders the holder fully immune to Stealth Rock, Spikes, Toxic Spikes, and Sticky Web. The item was distributed broadly — most defensive Pokémon, several offensive Pokémon weak to Stealth Rock, and many pivots run it in Gen 8 OU.

Archetypes

Gen 8 OU teams cluster into the standard Singles archetypes, with one format-specific addition: Future-Sight-driven offense built around Slowking-Galar.

Aggressive

Hyper Offense

Six offensive Pokémon. Composition: hazard-stack lead (often Mew with Ceaseless Edge or Garchomp), 2-3 wallbreakers (Choice Specs Latios, Banded Urshifu Rapid Strike), priority cleaner (Rillaboom Grassy Glide), endgame closer.

Balance

Future Sight Balance

Slowking-Galar(Future Sight) + a wallbreaker that exploits the delayed special hit. The "FuturePort" pattern — predict the opponent's wall, set Future Sight, switch out via Chilly Reception, bring in the wallbreaker on the same turn the Future Sight lands.

Balance

Bulky Offense

3-4 offensive Pokémon plus 2-3 defensive pivots. Common pivots: Toxapex, Ferrothorn, Clefable, Hippowdon. Win condition through wallbreaker pressure backed by reliable defensive switches.

Defensive

Stall

Six defensive Pokémon. Defining stall core: Toxapex + Ferrothorn + Clefable + Corviknight + Blissey / Chansey + a wincon (often Garganacl Salt Cure pre-Gen-9 or Iron Defense + Body Press Corviknight).

Specialty

Sun · Rain · Sand

Weather teams less central in Gen 8 than in Gen 5 or 6, but viable. Sand still runs Tyranitar + Excadrill cores. Rain runs Pelipper + Barraskewda Swift Swim. Sun is niche.

Specialty

Hazard Stack

Stealth Rock + Spikes layered up despite Heavy-Duty Boots, betting that 2+ Pokémon on the opponent's team don't run Boots. Setter examples: Mew, Skarmory, Ferrothorn.

The seven team roles

The same seven structural roles defined in the Gen 9 OU guide apply to Gen 8 OU. The role names are the same; the Pokémon filling them are different.

1. Hazard setterStealth Rock + Spikes / Toxic Spikes / Sticky Web

Defining setters: Hippowdon, Ferrothorn, Skarmory, Garchomp. Sticky Web most often via Galvantula.

2. Hazard controlRapid Spin / Defog / Court Change

Defining removers: Excadrill (Rapid Spin), Mandibuzz (Defog), Corviknight (Defog). Cinderace Court Change pre-ban.

3. Speed controlChoice Scarf / priority / Sticky Web

Defining options: Dragapult Specs, Tornadus-Therian Hurricane Specs, priority via Rillaboom Grassy Glide and Mega-Scizor equivalent (no Megas in Gen 8) — Bisharp Sucker Punch.

4. Status absorberMagic Guard / Natural Cure

Defining absorbers: Clefable Magic Guard, Blissey Natural Cure, Toxapex Regenerator (passively shrugs status via switch-out healing).

5. PivotU-turn / Volt Switch / Future Sight + Chilly Reception

Defining pivots: Slowking-Galar (Future Sight + Chilly Reception), Tornadus-Therian (U-turn), Heatran defensive pivot, Magnezone (Volt Switch + Magnet Pull).

6. WallbreakerChoice Specs / Choice Band / Setup

Defining breakers: Choice Specs Latios, Choice Band Urshifu Rapid Strike, Specs Heatran, Garchomp Swords Dance.

7. Win conditionSetup sweeper / progressive cleric

Defining wincons: Volcarona Quiver Dance, Garchomp Swords Dance, Dragapult Dragon Dance, Corviknight Iron Defense + Body Press progressive.

What makes Gen 8 OU different

Gen 8 OU sits between two structural shifts. The Heavy-Duty Boots distribution from below redefined hazard control; the Dynamax ban from above removed a generational mechanic mid-cycle.

Hazard pressure

Boots distribution defused most chip damage

Dynamax

Banned in OU after late 2020 suspect

Pivot meta

Future Sight + Chilly Reception central

  • Heavy-Duty Boots reshaped offense — fragile Stealth-Rock-weak Pokémon (Volcarona, Tornadus-Therian) became viable on offense by spending the item slot.
  • The Future Sight pivotSlowking-Galar with Future Sight + Chilly Reception (move, switch out, terrain set, slow special hit lands later) is unique to Gen 8. No prior gen had this kind of slow-pivot pattern.
  • Dynamax ban — the first OU mechanic ban — Smogon banned the gen's entire signature mechanic mid-cycle. The decision shaped how Gen 9 Tera was approached (Tera kept legal, but with frequent suspect tests on its abusers).
  • The DLC waves — Isle of Armor and Crown Tundra each reshaped the meta. Returning Pokémon (Garchomp, Volcarona, Tapu Lele) integrated mid-format rather than being available from launch.

How to get started

Gen 8 OU is a frozen tier with a settled meta — easier to learn than a moving format. The path below works for any retro Singles OU.

  1. Read the final Gen 8 OU tier page on Smogon — the banlist is locked, so the canonical analysis is stable. Pokémon analyses are similarly final.
  2. Pick an archetype — Future-Sight balance is the format's most-played; HO and stall are also viable. Try the archetype matching your patience.
  3. Copy a sample team — Smogon's vetted Gen 8 OU samples remain canonical. Play the team for 20 ladder games before tweaking.
  4. Ladder on Pokémon Showdown — Gen 8 OU has an active ladder despite the format's age. Tournament play continues via SPL and Smogon Tour.
  5. Analyse replays — every loss has a turn where the game was decided. Heavy-Duty Boots reads in particular are the format's primary skill differential.

Where to go from here

The above is the static reference for Gen 8 OU. Live frozen-tier data — final usage rankings, top sets, sample teams — lives in the rest of Pokékipe.

  • Live tier data/ss/ou for Gen 8 OU usage and Pokémon stats. Team Builder for assembling a team.
  • MechanicsGen 8 — Sword & Shield covers Dynamax, Gigantamax, abilities, and items.
  • Tournament historyTimeline tracks Smogon Tour and SPL Gen 8 OU results.
  • Adjacent formatsGen 9 OU covers the next-gen Singles format that succeeded Gen 8 OU.