Favorite Pokemon List Maker

Top 100 Favorite Pokemon Picker

Build a ranked favorite Pokemon list instead of a type chart. Search the full picker database, add the Pokemon you love, reorder your ranking, save progress in your browser, and export a clean Top 10, Top 25, Top 50, or Top 100 list.

1000+Pokemon choices
100ranking slots
4list sizes
0accounts needed

Find Pokemon

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When a Favorite Pokemon List Maker Works Better Than a Chart

A Pokemon picker chart is best when you want one favorite for each type and generation. A Top 100 Favorite Pokemon Picker is better when your goal is a ranked list: your all-time #1, your next ten favorites, and the Pokemon that still matter enough to make the full list. It is less rigid than a grid and easier to compare with friends.

Use this page when the search intent is closer to "make my favorite Pokemon list" than "fill a type chart." The ranking format answers a different question: not "what is my favorite Fire-type from Gen 3?" but "which Pokemon would I actually keep if I had to order every favorite from strongest emotional pick to honorable mention?" If you want the full visual grid, the main Favorite Pokemon Picker tool is the better starting point.

For searchers who type "top 100 favorite pokemon picker" or "favorite pokemon list maker," this page is the direct tool page. Start with a short Top 10 if you only need a quick answer, then expand the same ranking into Top 25, Top 50, or Top 100 when you want a more complete favorite Pokemon list.

It also works as a lightweight favorite Pokemon sorter. Add candidates quickly, move close calls up or down, and use the export box as the final ordered answer. The page should not replace the main Favorite Pokemon Picker for broad browsing; it is best once you already know the Pokemon you want to compare and need a clean ranking order.

Format Best For Use This Page When
Top 10 A quick personal shortlist You only want the Pokemon that define your taste.
Top 25 Balanced ranked favorites You want starters, legendaries, regional forms, and nostalgic picks in one compact list.
Top 50 Community posts and debates You want enough room for favorites from every generation without making the list too long.
Top 100 A complete favorite Pokemon ranking You want a full favorite Pokemon list maker that captures your long-term fandom.

How to Pick Your Top 100 Pokemon Without Overthinking

The fastest method is to build the list in passes. First, add the Pokemon that are automatic choices. Next, filter by generation so every era gets attention. Finally, filter by type to catch favorites that are easy to forget, especially single-stage Pokemon, regional forms, late-game legendaries, and designs that were not on your first in-game team.

Start With Locks

Add the Pokemon that are obviously making your list first. Your starter, first shiny, favorite legendary, or longtime mascot should not be stuck behind a filtering process.

Filter by Generation

Work through Gen 1 to Gen 9 if your memory is tied to games. This keeps your Top 100 Pokemon picker list from being dominated by the first names that come to mind.

Use Type Filters

Check Fire, Water, Dragon, Ghost, Fairy, and other types separately. Type passes help catch favorites you would miss in a single alphabetical search.

Favorite Pokemon Sorter Workflow

A sorter-style workflow is useful when two favorites are close and you need a repeatable rule. Add both Pokemon, move the one with the stronger reason higher, then continue down the list. The exported ranking becomes easier to explain because every placement has a reason instead of feeling like a random search result order.

Sorting Pass Question to Ask Best Tool Control
Automatic favorites Which Pokemon would stay even if the list were only Top 10? Search by name, then add directly.
Generation review Did each era get a fair pass before the list filled up? Generation filter.
Type review Are favorite types like Fire, Water, Dragon, Ghost, or Fairy underrepresented? Type filter.
Final reorder Would you defend this Pokemon being above the one below it? Move up and move down buttons.

Top 100 List Maker vs Team Builder vs Type Chart

These formats overlap, but they should not target the same keyword. A favorite Pokemon team picker is about six slots and party identity. A Pokemon picker chart is about filling a structured type and generation grid. A Pokemon tier list maker groups Pokemon into S to D rows. A Top 100 favorite Pokemon list maker is about ranking preference across the whole Pokedex in one strict order. Keeping those formats separate helps users find the right tool and prevents pages on this site from competing for the same search query.

Search Intent Best Page Why
favorite pokemon picker Main picker Broad tool intent: choose favorites by generation, type, shiny form, and chart cell.
pokemon team picker Team picker Six-slot intent: build, save, and export a compact dream team.
pokemon picker chart Chart guide Informational intent: learn how a generation by type chart works and how to share it.
pokemon tier list Pokemon Tier List Maker Grouped-tier intent: place Pokemon into S, A, B, C, and D rows instead of exact order.
top 100 favorite pokemon picker This page Ranked-list intent: create an ordered favorite Pokemon list from #1 to #100.

Internal Links for Each Favorite Pokemon Tool

These pages are intentionally split by task. Use the Favorite Pokemon Picker for a broad grid, the Pokemon Team Picker for a six Pokemon party, the Pokemon Picker Chart Guide when you need instructions, the Pokemon Tier List Maker when the output should be grouped tiers, and this Top 100 page when the output should be an ordered list.

Recommended Ranking Workflow

1. Build a Top 25 First

A Top 100 list is easier after a smaller draft. Set the tool to Top 25, add your strongest picks, then switch to Top 50 or Top 100 when the core order feels right.

2. Sort by Emotional Weight

For favorite rankings, personal history matters more than competitive strength. A Pokemon from your first save file, first shiny hunt, or favorite anime moment has a valid reason to outrank a stronger battler.

3. Rebalance the Bottom Half

The #60 to #100 range is usually where duplicates and impulse picks appear. Review that section by generation and type so the final list feels intentional instead of alphabetical.

Rules That Make a Top 100 Pokemon Picker List Clear

A ranked list is easier to understand when the rule is visible before the export. Decide whether the list is about design, nostalgia, battle memories, anime moments, shiny hunts, or a mix of everything. Then keep that rule consistent from #1 to #100 so the finished favorite Pokemon list feels intentional instead of random.

Ranking Rule Good For What to Avoid
Design and personality Avatar ideas, profile lists, fan art prompts Letting competitive strength overrule visual preference.
Game memories Playthrough teams, first starter nostalgia, shiny stories Forgetting later generations because older games came to mind first.
One form per species Cleaner community comparison lists Filling many slots with regional forms of the same Pokemon.
Forms counted separately Lists where regional, Mega, GMax, or special forms are the point Comparing your list with someone using a base-species-only rule.

Export and Sharing Tips

The copy button is designed for text-first platforms: Discord, Reddit comments, forum posts, notes apps, and social captions. For readability, share a Top 10 or Top 25 when you want quick discussion, and save the full Top 100 for posts where people expect a longer ranking. If you are comparing lists with friends, agree on one rule before you start: whether alternate forms count separately from the base Pokemon.

For a cleaner public post, add one sentence above the export explaining your ranking rule. Examples: "design and nostalgia only," "no competitive strength considered," or "separate regional forms allowed." That small note prevents most arguments about why a legendary, starter, or shiny form did or did not make your favorite Pokemon list.

Data and Update Notes

This tool uses the same local Pokemon database as the site picker, including all numbered generations currently supported by the project. For cross-checking names and official franchise context, use the official Pokemon Pokedex and the official Pokemon video games pages. Those sources are useful when a new game, DLC, or regional form changes what fans expect to see in a complete favorite Pokemon selector.

The page intentionally avoids claiming that any Pokemon is objectively the best. It is a preference tool: the right ranking is the one that reflects your taste. The filters, export format, and saved list are there to make that preference easier to organize and share.

FAQ

Is this different from the main Favorite Pokemon Picker?

Yes. The main picker creates a generation and type grid. This page creates a ranked favorite Pokemon list, which is better for Top 10, Top 25, Top 50, and Top 100 posts.

Does the Top 100 favorite Pokemon picker save my list?

Yes. Your ranking is saved in your browser automatically. You can come back on the same device and continue editing without creating an account.

Can I use this as a favorite Pokemon list maker for fewer than 100 Pokemon?

Yes. Change the list size to Top 10, Top 25, or Top 50. The export output updates to match your selected format.

Is this a Top 100 Pokemon picker or a team builder?

This is a ranked Top 100 Pokemon picker for personal favorites. If you want a six Pokemon team, shiny forms, or a type and generation chart, use the main Favorite Pokemon Picker instead.

Does it include alternate forms and shiny Pokemon?

The search database includes many alternate forms from the site picker. This ranked list maker focuses on name ranking; use the main picker when you want visual shiny toggles or a full chart image.

Where should I share my Top 100 Pokemon list?

The copied text works well for Discord, Reddit, forum posts, notes apps, and social captions. For a visual grid, use the main Favorite Pokemon Picker or the Pokemon Picker Chart Guide.

What is the best way to start a Top 100 Pokemon picker list?

Start with a Top 25 draft, add automatic favorites first, then expand the list after checking each generation and type. This keeps the ranking from being dominated by the first Pokemon you remember.

Should regional forms count separately?

Either rule is fine as long as you state it before sharing. A base-species-only list is easier to compare, while a form-separated list is better when alternate forms are a major part of your fandom.

Can I use this as a favorite Pokemon sorter?

Yes. Add candidates, compare close choices, move them up or down, and export the finished order. It is a lightweight sorter for fans who want a ranked Top 10, Top 25, Top 50, or Top 100 without a long tournament bracket.

Should I start with Top 10 or Top 100?

Start with Top 10 or Top 25 if you are unsure. A smaller draft makes the hard choices visible, and you can expand to Top 50 or Top 100 after checking every generation and type.