Physical attack uses a monster’s Attack stat against the target’s Defense, while special attack uses Special Attack against Special Defense, so the best choice depends on the monster’s stronger stat and the move’s category.
Two monsters at the same level can post wildly different damage numbers, and the reason almost always comes back to one thing: whether their moves match their best stat. Combat runs on two parallel damage systems — one physical, one special — and a move only hits hard when it leans on the stat your monster is actually built around. Here’s how each side works and how to stop wasting a monster’s strongest numbers.
Physical and special damage at a glance
| Damage type | Uses your stat | Checks enemy stat | Move style | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical | Attack | Defense | Punches, claws, bites, contact strikes | High-Attack monsters |
| Special | Special Attack | Special Defense | Energy blasts, elemental and ranged skills | High-Special-Attack monsters |
The split is simple to state but easy to get wrong in practice. A physical move runs your monster’s Attack against the enemy’s Defense. A special move runs your Special Attack against the enemy’s Special Defense. That small difference completely changes how effective a monster becomes, because each category rewards a different kind of build — and neither one is universally stronger. Everything depends on the monster you’re using and the role you want it to fill.
How physical moves deal damage

Physical moves are the direct, hands-on attacks — your monster physically strikes the target with punches, claws, bites, or other contact-based hits. When one lands, the game weighs your Attack stat against the opponent’s Defense, so the higher your Attack climbs, the more damage these moves can potentially deal.
Where special moves get their power

Special moves work on a separate track. Instead of contact, they cover elemental and ranged attacks — energy blasts, elemental damage, and other long-range skills that never touch the target directly. Their damage comes from your Special Attack stat measured against the enemy’s Special Defense, which is effectively its own damage system sitting alongside the physical one.
Because of that, plenty of monsters built around elemental abilities perform far better with special moves than with physical ones. The catch is that a move looking flashy or powerful doesn’t guarantee big damage — if it doesn’t line up with the monster’s strongest stat, the number that lands can be disappointing.
The mismatch that makes monsters feel weak

Why this matters more as fights get harder
Early on you can coast on levels and stronger unlocks without thinking much about any of this. That changes once you push into midgame and late-game content, where bosses get tougher and enemies gain better defenses. Inefficient builds that skated by before start visibly falling behind, and the gap between a matched moveset and a mismatched one widens fast.
Getting the pairing right is what lets you clear areas faster, take down bosses more efficiently, and build stronger teams overall. Evolution makes it count even more — as creatures level and unlock stronger forms, their stat growth becomes much more noticeable, so choosing moves that track those growing stats turns into a real effectiveness boost rather than a minor tweak.
Before locking in a moveset, check each move’s physical-or-special label and keep only the category that matches the monster’s higher attacking stat — it’s the single fastest way to raise damage without grinding more levels.
A simple rule for building movesets
Frequently Asked Questions
Is physical attack or special attack better overall?
Neither is stronger across the board. Physical attack suits monsters built around raw power and direct combat, while special attack favors elemental and ranged attackers. The better category is whichever one matches the monster’s higher attacking stat.
How do I know whether a move is physical or special?
Check the move description — every move is clearly labelled as physical or special. Physical moves are contact strikes like punches, claws, and bites; special moves are energy, elemental, or ranged attacks. Match the label to your monster’s stronger stat.
Why does my leveled monster still feel weak?
Usually because its moves don’t match its best stat. A high-Attack monster running mostly special moves (or a high-Special-Attack monster running physical ones) can’t use its strongest stat, so it underperforms no matter how many levels it gains.
Should a team use only one attack type?
No. Different monsters are built for different categories, so leaning on a single type wastes the ones suited to the other. The strongest teams blend physical and special attackers and match each monster’s moves to its own stat profile.
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