Note that the total number of Pokémon shown in this bar graph is 73, not 46 because I am looking at both primary and secondary types. In order to deduce which type of Pokémon yields the most legendaries, I created a bar chart comparing the number of legendary Pokémon that belong to each type. In my data set of 721 Pokémon, 46 of them are legendary. In the Pokémon universe there are a number of Legendary Pokémon that are significantly rarer and more powerful than the average Pokémon. It is always a good idea to maintain a diverse team of Pokémon and this analysis of the Pokémon types is designed to help players with just that. In most Pokémon games, the player can only carry 6 Pokémon with him or her at one time, therefore it is always difficult to decide which Pokemon to bring along and which to leave behind often times this decision is influenced by the Pokémon’s type. There are currently eighteen types of Pokémon: Bug, Dark, Dragon, Electric, Fairy, Fighting, Fire, Flying, Ghost, Grass, Ground, Ice, Normal, Poison, Psychic, Rock, Steel, and Water. Pokémon embody one to two “types” which, in part, determine that Pokémon’s various stats, the moves it can use, and its appearance. In the end, however, I decided that I would set out to compare the numerous Pokémon types. I originally picked this dataset because it contained many variables, both categorical and quantitative, that I could attempt to correlate in a number of ways. The dataset I chose for my project was called “Pokémon for Data Mining and Machine Learning” which I found on Kaggle.