The Great Starter Face-Off: Every Evolution in Eleon Adventures (Stats + Who to Pick)

Last updated: April 11, 2026

Why this guide exists

If you are hunting eleon adventures starters evolution answers—or just want the full picture before you commit—you are in the right place. This article walks through all three first-stage starters, what our Dex says about their level-up and TM kits, how their base stats compare, and which pick lines up with common playstyles. Everything numeric comes from EleonDB’s live eleons export (not a live pull from Roblox). Patches can rebalance the live game—verify anything mission-critical in your client.

For the wider eleon adventures creatures roster, our Eleon Dex indexes 69 rows today, and 18 of them already include at least one elemental type tag. That split matters: the typed slice is what plays nicely with the type chart and type calculator when you theorycraft routes or boss prep. The remaining rows are mostly image-first stubs we still backfill—think of them as a preview of future Dex coverage, not a guarantee of what is currently catchable in-game.

Quick takeaways before you scroll:

  • All three starters share the same origin string in the dataset: Oakwood Town Lab.
  • Recorded evolution names are Valograr, Rhiron, and Nautitan—but their Dex rows are still sparse placeholders on EleonDB, so treat stats and typings there as “coming soon” unless we publish a full refresh.
  • Base stat totals (BST) tie at 220 for Scoraptor and Cascub, while Vinuki sits at 215; the real difference is how those points are distributed, not raw power creep.

All three starters & their evolution lines

EleonDB marks exactly 3 starters. Evolution targets below are copied verbatim from each row’s evolution field:

  • Vinuki (Grass, #001) — HP 45 · ATK 60 · DEF 45 · SPD 65 (BST 215) → evolves into Valograr
  • Scoraptor (Fire, #004) — HP 50 · ATK 70 · DEF 40 · SPD 60 (BST 220) → evolves into Rhiron
  • Cascub (Water, #007) — HP 65 · ATK 50 · DEF 60 · SPD 45 (BST 220) → evolves into Nautitan

Want the dedicated pages? Here they are again for convenience: Vinuki, Scoraptor, and Cascub. Whenever you are unsure how a late-game fight will feel, jump back to the Dex filters—sorting by stat focus or stage is the fastest way to see who actually covers your weaknesses after your starter locks in.

Base stat spread: who leads what?

Because BST is nearly flat across the trio, the smarter question is where the budget went. Rankings below are computed directly from the same numbers shown on each Dex card.

  • Attack: Scoraptor first (70), then Vinuki (60), then Cascub (50). If you live for crit fishing and burst windows, that ordering is your north star—just remember to cross-check typings on the chart so you do not slam Fire into a wall of Water-route trainers without a plan B in the box.
  • Speed: Vinuki leads (65), followed by Scoraptor (60) and Cascub (45). Higher SPD usually means less reactive healing and more chances to set tempo—pair that mental model with the calculator when you start stacking dual typings later.
  • Bulk: Cascub has the highest HP (65) and DEF (60). Scoraptor is the glassiest (40 DEF), Vinuki sits in the middle (45 DEF), and Cascub is the sturdiest (60 DEF). That makes Scoraptor the starter you babysit most if you are still learning encounter cadence.

None of these numbers replace play feel—latency, move priority, and encounter design all matter—but they are honest anchors when every YouTube thumbnail screams “best starter” without showing the sheet.

Level-up, TM, and egg coverage (per Dex rows)

The lists below are exactly what EleonDB stores today. If your in-game learnsets diverge, ping us via the submission flow on the homepage so we can reconcile the diff.

  • Vinuki: Lv. 1: Vine Whip (Grass, power 40); Lv. 16: Leaf Blade (Grass, power 70) TM slate: Razor Bloom (Grass, power 80); Nature Shield (Grass, power 0) Egg: Seed Pounce (Grass, power 45)
  • Scoraptor: Lv. 1: Ember (Fire, power 40); Lv. 16: Flame Tail (Fire, power 65) TM slate: Heat Crash (Fire, power 85); Burning Roar (Fire, power 0) Egg: Spark Claw (Fire, power 55)
  • Cascub: Lv. 1: Bubble (Water, power 35); Lv. 16: Water Crush (Water, power 65) TM slate: Tidal Dash (Water, power 75); Shell Wall (Water, power 0) Egg: Aqua Kick (Water, power 50)

Pattern-wise, every starter gets a 40-ish power STAB move at level 1 and a stronger STAB spike at level 16 (70 power for Vinuki, 65 for the Fire/Water pair). TM slots skew offensive for Scoraptor (including an 85-power Heat Crash) while Cascub’s TM bundle mixes damage with Shell Wall (0 power—likely defensive utility in the live game). Vinuki’s Nature Shield is also flagged at 0 power, hinting at protective or setup value even though we do not simulate battles here.

Starter spotlight: how each one reads on paper

Vinuki — Grass (#001) → Valograr

Flavor text in the dataset calls Vinuki highly intelligent and quick to bond with trainers—useful if you role-play loyalty arcs. Mechanically, it is the fastest starter with a respectable ATK stat, so it rewards players who like to dictate turn order. Lean on the type chart once you add secondary typings to the squad; Grass can swing from hero to liability depending on the biome you are clearing.

Scoraptor — Fire (#004) → Rhiron

Scoraptor’s description leans into emotional tells—the tail flame flares when it is excited—mirroring its stat spread: explosive ATK, the lowest DEF in the trio, and mid-tier HP. It is the pick for pilots who accept risk for faster clears, as long as they rotate in defensive pivots found via the Dex. When you start experimenting with mixed offensive teams, plug hypothetical typings into the calculator so you know whether your opener still resists the next boss gimmick.

Cascub — Water (#007) → Nautitan

Cascub’s lore blurb highlights hidden strength—“cute” outside, enough force to crush river stones—which matches the highest HP/DEF pairing. Speed is the tax (45 SPD), so expect to eat hits more often than you outsprint them. That makes Cascub attractive if you prefer methodical routes, healing economies, or teaching younger players how to recover from mistakes without wiping.

Which starter should you pick? (playstyle-first)

Think in verbs, not vibes. Match how you actually play Roblox RPGs to the kit that supports it—then use tools to validate typings before you sink hours into a route.

  • Chase the hardest hits: Scoraptor leads ATK (70). Pair that aggression with the type chart so you do not walk Fire-weak fights blind.
  • Want the safest early curve: Cascub owns both HP and DEF highs—great if you like trading hits while you learn encounters. Stress-test awkward dual typings with the type calculator.
  • Prefer tempo and initiative: Vinuki tops SPD, with the second-highest ATK print—ideal if you like moving first and forcing reactions before the AI stabilizes.
  • Still torn on typings? Grass beats Water, Water beats Fire, Fire beats Grass—that triangle is the same mental model Pokémon fans use, and it still helps you choose based on which early-route enemies you dread more. Re-open the chart whenever you add a new party member so you do not double up on shared weaknesses.

If you are a completionist chasing every roster slot, bookmark the Dex and revisit after patches—our index grows whenever contributors verify new encounters, moves, or typings.

What we know about the evolved forms (Valograr, Rhiron, Nautitan)

Honesty matters: on EleonDB, the second-stage slugs exist mostly as placeholders. Snapshot straight from the file:

  • Valograr — Dex number #???, types currently not filled, rarity not filled. Treat this row as a stub until we publish full stats and moves.
  • Rhiron — Dex number #???, types currently not filled, rarity not filled. Treat this row as a stub until we publish full stats and moves.
  • Nautitan — Dex number #???, types currently not filled, rarity not filled. Treat this row as a stub until we publish full stats and moves.

That gap is why this guide leans on first-stage data for comparisons. Once the evolved entries are fully populated, the same Dex filters you use today will light up their BST and movepools automatically—no need to hunt a second article unless the meta shifts hard.

Beyond starters: more evolution examples

Starters are not the only Eleons with evolution metadata in our file. Other examples include Timpel → Chirrook and Morfur → Morterra / Morswept / Mormancy, a clean illustration of branching evolution lines that do not map 1:1 with the Grass/Fire/Water triangle. Use those entries as a reminder to read every evolution string literally—some lead to multiple slugs separated by slashes.

When you are ready to treat EleonDB as your personal eleon adventures all creatures checklist, start from the full list, filter by rarity or stage, and cross-link anything spooky into the calculator before you burn items or cubes on a bad matchup.

Codes, giveaways, and staying current

Starters are only the opening chapter—codes and limited events often hand out currency or boosters that make early leveling smoother. Our Codes hub aggregates what we have verified on file; it is not a live Twitter feed, so if something expired in-game, let the community know and we will trim the entry on the next pass.

Between codes, typings, and Dex refreshes, the workflow we recommend is simple: pick a starter that fits your stats comfort zone, verify its typings against the chart, simulate new catches inside the calculator, and keep the Dex tab pinned for whenever patch notes drop.

Keep going with EleonDB

  • Eleon Dex — filter by type, rarity, stage, and stat focus.
  • Type chart — defensive and offensive matchup tables.
  • Type calculator — dual-type matchup math in one click.
  • Codes — curated code drops when we have them on file.