>>58712715Avery's Ironic Disney Villain Death.
Avery's arc revolves around his arrogance and his use of psychic powers to levitate things, especially himself and his opponents. A fitting Disney death would use this signature ability against him.
The Build-up: Avery, in a moment of hubris during a final, dramatic showdown, attempts to use his limited telekinesis to gain a decisive advantage, perhaps by levitating a massive, ancient Galarica Wreath high above the Master Dojo grounds or attempting to "elegantly" lift the player character into the sky during a battle.
The Ironic Twist: His powers, which he has always struggled to fully control and which his family viewed as a disappointment, fail him at the critical moment due to the immense pressure or a momentary lapse in concentration. The very objects he sought to control become his undoing.
The Final Act: He could be comically, but definitively, undone by his own ambition. A giant Galarica Wreath could slip from his psychic grasp and fall, trapping him in a tangle of branches and berries (a classic "caught in his own trap" trope), or his Slowpoke, tired of his over-the-top antics, could use its move, Slack Off, at the precise moment Avery needs support, leading to a farcical but final descent.
The Aftermath: Unlike a typical Pokémon scenario, his defeat would be met not just with his standard look of shock, but with a grand, final monologue about elegance before he comically disappears in a harmless, but embarrassing, puff of psychic energy or is left in a truly undignified state, his top hat askew, a final visual gag that seals his "villain" fate. The other dojo members would look on, perhaps with a mix of pity and "we saw this coming," before returning to their training.