Evomon Tier List 2026: Every Evomon Ranked Worst to Best

If you’ve been grinding away in Evomon on Roblox and you’re not sure who’s actually worth keeping on your team, you’re in the right place. I ranked every single Evomon in the game from the absolute bottom all the way up to the best of the best, and I’m breaking it all down here so you can bookmark this page and come back to it whenever you need it.

This updated Evomon tier list ranks every major Evomon from S-Rank (build your team around these) down to C-Rank (skip if you can), explains why each one lands where it does, and gives you a ready-to-use team comp for the current meta.

How This Tier List Works

Evomon’s elemental system is the single biggest factor in every fight. Almost every Evomon is strong against two or three types and weak against two or three others, so the best picks are the ones that cover the most common matchups you’ll actually run into — Water, Rock, Grass, Fire, Flying, and Electric show up constantly, so Evomon that answer those types get bumped up the list. Dual-typed Evomon tend to punch above their weight here, since they can threaten multiple elements at once instead of just one.

A few other things factor into these rankings:

  • Longevity — does this Evomon still matter after you’ve unlocked better options, or is it just a placeholder?
  • Weakness count — some types (like Grass-Ice) stack up five, six, even seven weaknesses, which makes them a liability no matter how good the numbers look on paper.
  • Team role — tanks, glass cannons, and generalists all have a place, but only if they’re the best version of that role available to you.

With that out of the way, let’s get into the rankings — starting from the bottom.

C-Rank: Skip These If You Can

These Evomon just don’t hold up once you have alternatives.

Twirlby and Gempress are basically the same problem twice — plain Bug-types with nothing special going for them. If you’re after Poison coverage for Grass-types, just grab Wisphex instead and save yourself the trouble.

Tinkore handles Rock and Ice fine, but it crumbles the second a Ground- or Water-type shows up, which makes it a liability outside of very specific matchups.

Then there’s the water trio of disappointment: Bubblade, Clamspire, and Mirefish. All Water-type, all underwhelming. Bubblade is one of your three starters, and it’s the weakest of the bunch by a wide margin. Pebolem and Spikumane cover the same Fire, Rock, and Ground matchups far more effectively.

Leafblade, another starter, gets an early pass because Grass helps you steamroll the first few areas full of Water and Rock types. But the moment the game opens up, it stalls out hard.

Frostelle is rough. Grass-Ice sounds cool on paper until you realize that typing combo racks up something like seven different weaknesses — Fire, Flying, Bug, Poison, Rock, Steel, and Fighting will all give it trouble.

Chirphantom rounds out the bottom — a Flying-type with nothing unique going on. If you want real Flying coverage, there are two much better options further up this list.

B-Rank: Usable, But Replaceable

These aren’t bad Evomon — they’re just standing in the way of something better.

Viparch is a pure Poison-type whose only real job is beating Grass, and there are Evomon later on this list that handle that matchup while covering three other types at the same time.

Sundercrene, another Flying-type, holds up early against Grass and Fighting, but it gets left in the dust late-game once Volcrest enters the picture.

Silvanarch is a solid defensive Grass pick and genuinely fine if you haven’t found Tarragon or Datunymph yet. Once you have, there’s no reason to keep it around.

Mopillow is a weird one — pure Normal typing means it’s never great against anything, but it’s also never terrible against anything, making it a jack-of-all-trades support pick if that fits your playstyle.

Glacitadel gives you early Ice-type coverage and works fine as a placeholder. The moment you find Frosteer, swap it out.

Flullastar is a Rock-type living in the shadow of two better Rock-types further up this list. Skippable if you’ve got other options.

Blazmane, your third starter, is actually a strong early pick — Fire coverage matters a lot in the first regions — but it falls off hard once Lavarock shows up.

Notice the pattern here: a lot of these B-Rank picks are only good because you don’t have the better version yet. Keep that in mind heading into the next section.

A-Rank: The Real Contenders

This is where your team starts looking genuinely dangerous.

Wisphex is a Poison-Psychic hybrid with serious range, capable of taking down heavy hitters like Tarragon thanks to its Poison-based attacks.

Starmuse, pure Psychic, is a fantastic pick if you need something that demolishes Poison and Fighting-types. Simple, but effective.

Spikumane is one of the few Ground-types worth mentioning. No secondary typing, but it covers Fire, Rock, Poison, and Electric well enough to matter in most fights.

Pummash hits hard as a Fighting-type — a glass cannon built for picking off Normal, Rock, Ice, and Steel threats. Don’t expect it to tank hits, though.

Pebolem is your early defensive Rock option and a genuinely good one, though it struggles once opponents bring the right counters.

Thordlord, a Grass-Ground combo, is excellent specifically against Electric-types, which matters since Electric shows up constantly. Just watch out for Fire, Flying, Bug, or Ice matchups.

Empixy is worth grabbing early — a strong Fire-type available from one of the first islands, just a notch below Lavarock.

Datunymph, Grass-Psychic, is one of the better Psychic picks in the game, especially useful against Poison and Fighting.

S-Rank: Build Your Team Around These

The best of the best. These six aren’t just strong — they’re the backbone of any team that wants to compete late-game.

Volcrest

A Flying-Electric combo, and that dual typing is exactly what earns it an S-Rank slot — it has answers for Grass, Bug, Fighting, Water, Flying, and Steel all at once. That’s six types one Evomon can comfortably handle. Its only real danger is a Rock or Ground opponent, so as long as you’re watching for that, Volcrest is a fantastic roster choice. It also pairs beautifully with Tarragon or Astraknight, covering exactly the gaps they leave open.

Tarragon

Grass-Dragon is a rare and powerful combination, and what puts it in S-Tier is the flexibility. Its Dragon attacks hit hard, but the real value is access to wide-hitting Grass moves that can damage an entire enemy team at once. Not many Evomon can threaten a full team in one move — that alone justifies the ranking.

Lavarock

Earns its spot by being one of the rare Evomon that offers both offense and defense in one package. As a Fire-Rock type, it dishes out solid damage while also being tanky enough to take hits back. That combination — hit hard, survive longer — is exactly what makes a team reliable. Just bench it against Water, Ground, or Fighting, since those are the only real cracks in its armor.

Frosteer

Here for one simple reason: it’s the best Ice-type in the game, and it’s not close. Ice usually comes with a long list of weaknesses, but Frosteer’s typing is clean enough that only Dragon-types can reasonably fight back. If your opponent doesn’t run a Dragon, Frosteer is close to unstoppable — that kind of consistency is rare.

Astraknight

The highest-risk, highest-reward pick on this list. As a Fighting-type, it’s built to demolish Normal, Rock, and Ice-types, and it only has two weaknesses in the entire game — Flying and Psychic. That’s an incredibly short counter list, especially compared to something like Frostelle, which got ripped apart earlier for having seven. The catch is that Astraknight isn’t a tank — it’s built to hit hard and end fights fast, not to absorb damage, so if a Flying or Psychic-type shows up, it can go down quickly if you’re not careful. Pair it with something that can bait out or tank a Flying or Psychic hit, and Astraknight will single-handedly win you fights against three of the most common types you’ll face.

Arcapex — The Best Evomon in the Game

At the very top: Arcapex, the most complete Evomon in the game, and there isn’t much of a debate about it. As an Electric-type, it threatens Flying, Steel, and Water — three types that show up constantly throughout Evomon, meaning you’ll almost never have a match where Arcapex isn’t doing something useful. Compare that to Astraknight, which is incredible until it isn’t — Arcapex doesn’t really have that problem. Its only weaknesses are Ground and Rock, and those are easy enough to play around since you’ll usually see them coming.

It’s not the flashiest pick on this list — no wild dual-typing gimmick like Volcrest or Tarragon — but that’s exactly the point. It’s consistent. It slots onto almost any team composition without creating a glaring hole, it doesn’t ask you to build around it, and it rarely leaves you stuck with no answer. That kind of reliability across dozens of matchups is rare, and it’s exactly why Arcapex sits at number one.

Best Evomon Team Comp Right Now

For the strongest possible lineup as of the current meta, aim for:

Arcapex, Astraknight, Frosteer, Lavarock, Tarragon, and Volcrest — that’s your S-Tier core.

Start with Blazmane if you want an easier early game, but keep other Evomon in mind as you progress. Evomon evolve, the meta shifts, and so should your team.

Evomon Tier List FAQ

What’s the best starter in Evomon? Each of the three starters — Bubblade (Water), Leafblade (Grass), and Blazmane (Fire) — is strong for the opening islands, since early zones tend to be built around Water and Rock enemies that Grass and Fire handle well. All three fall off by mid-game, though, so don’t get too attached; plan to replace your starter once better same-type or dual-type Evomon become available.

Why do dual-type Evomon dominate the S-Rank tier? Because they get two sets of type advantages instead of one. An Evomon like Volcrest or Tarragon can threaten five or six enemy types at once, which means far fewer “dead” matchups where you’re forced to bench them.

Is this tier list based on PvP or story progression? This ranking is built primarily around overall usefulness across story progression, general PvE fights, and team-building flexibility — not a single boss or PvP ladder. An Evomon’s position here reflects how often it’s the right pick across the widest range of situations, not just its ceiling in one niche fight.

Should I ever use a B-Rank or C-Rank Evomon? Yes, situationally. Several B-Rank picks (like Mopillow or Blazmane) are genuinely useful early on or fill a specific coverage gap until you find something better. C-Rank Evomon are the ones you can skip almost entirely once you have any reasonable alternative.

Quick Recap: Full Tier List Summary

S-Rank: Arcapex, Astraknight, Frosteer, Lavarock, Tarragon, Volcrest

A-Rank: Wisphex, Starmuse, Spikumane, Pummash, Pebolem, Thordlord, Empixy, Datunymph

B-Rank: Viparch, Sundercrene, Silvanarch, Mopillow, Glacitadel, Flullastar, Blazmane

C-Rank: Twirlby, Gempress, Tinkore, Bubblade, Clamspire, Mirefish, Leafblade, Frostelle, Chirphantom


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