Frogadier are noted for their pinpoint accuracy when slinging small pebbles, which allows them to hit soda cans from one hundred feet away – and it is equally noted that the pebbles, insulated with tiny bubbles, possess insufficient force to actually knock the cans over. Were it not for this flaw, Frogadier's webbed hands would be stained with the blood of countless nobles, kings, and anyone else unfortunate enough to infuriate their trainers – for absent the bubble, these pebbles would be as deadly as an assassin's bullet, fired from a creature known for its stealth, speed, and vertical climbing.
The bubbles around Frogadier's pebbles have been called the bubbles of divine providence, and were once used by grateful nobles and priests as an argument for the existence of Arceus, or at least a guardian angel. Yet without the bubbles to stabilize them, as many ambitious trainers learned to their chagrin, the slightest breeze would cause the pebbles to miss horribly. For this reason, Frogadier bubbles have also been called the bubbles of fools – a term which is today applied more widely to any solution which solves a problem at the expense of creating another.
The Frogadier, for their part, see no problem with their pebbles; it is their trainers who are so focused at what they can almost do that they ignore their accurate use. A Frogadier's pebble is useless as a weapon, but great as a diversion, for just as the cans they hit wobble, those hit by these bubble-wrapped pebbles turn around and spot the Frogadier, albeit with mild irritation. Frogadier do not use their pebbles for warfare, but to get the attention of their friends, trainers, or comrades from a vast distance, to warn them of danger – or, far more often, to simply make their presence known.
