PokéCollection
Chien-Pao
◇ Missing
EN Scarlet & Violet Black Star Promos · 1 Jan 2023 · 152/196

Chien-Pao

パオジアン Ruinous Pokémon
Water Promo Basic
120HP
≈S$16est. to buy
1 / 13 Chien-Pao cards owned 0 / 9 in Scarlet & Violet 2 promo prints

Chien-Pao collection

1 / 13 collected

8% complete
Owned1 Missing12 TrackedS$0.22 Missing est.≈S$88

Gameplay profile

Unlimited: Legal Standard: Legal Expanded: Legal
Ability

Snow Sink

When you play this Pokémon from your hand onto your Bench during your turn, you may discard a Stadium in play.

Attack

Icicle Loop

120
2 Water • Colorless

Put an Energy attached to this Pokémon into your hand.

Versions & finishes

Chien-Pao — Holofoil missing
Holofoil not owned ≈ S$15.54

Artwork is identical across finishes; the holo or reverse shimmer is indicative.

Story & meaning

Chien-Pao is a Dark/Ice-type Legendary Pokémon introduced in Generation IX (Pokémon Scarlet and Violet), classified as the Ruinous Pokémon. According to its lore, it was born from the accumulated hatred of those slain by swords long ago…

“The hatred of those who perished by the sword long ago has clad itself in snow and become a Pokémon.”

Read full notes
History

Chien-Pao is a Dark/Ice-type Legendary Pokémon introduced in Generation IX (Pokémon Scarlet and Violet), classified as the Ruinous Pokémon. According to its lore, it was born from the accumulated hatred of those slain by swords long ago, that malice cloaking itself in snow to take living form. It is one of the four Treasures of Ruin, alongside Wo-Chien, Ting-Lu, and Chi-Yu, each tied to a sealing object — Chien-Pao's being a set of wooden tablets meant to contain its destructive power. Agile and swift, it is said to whip up blizzards and slash foes with the icy fangs of swords frozen in snow.

Name & meaning

The Japanese name パオジアン (Paojian) is derived from Mandarin Chinese rather than Japanese roots, reflecting this Pokémon's connection to the Chinese-inspired 'Ruinous' Treasures of Ruin quartet. It combines elements relating to 'pao' (豹, leopard/panther, evoking its feline form) and 'jian' (剑/劍, sword), referencing the legend of those who perished by the sword. The English name 'Chien-Pao' reverses this order, with 'Chien' echoing the Chinese word for sword (jiàn) and 'Pao' the leopard, both transliterated to preserve the Chinese-language theme shared across its sibling Pokémon.

Your Chien-Pao cards

1 owned

The Chien-Pao cards already in your collection.

All Chien-Pao cards across sets

13 shown

Every Chien-Pao print in the catalogue, including promos and cards from other series.