>>56491335Got one of these bad boys, which is a very interesting pokemon to give to a young kid, though probably the least troublesome dragon pokemon. I'd imagine him as someone interested in pokemon, but maybe not intending to be a trainer. Maybe the type of person interested in being a researcher or professor, who lucked into getting a rare pokemon, and now has to adjust to the difference between reading about something and doing it.
The main issue is that I don't think this is the kind of pokemon you can keep as a house pet. Axew's entries all talk about territorial behaviour and challenging other pokemon in order to strengthen its tusks, so without regular exercise our young trainer is going to have a very frustrated Axew and a lot of property damage on his hands.
It's described eating berries, prey, and requiring underground minerals in the entry for Axew, Fraxure, and Haxourus respectively so I think it's fair to assume that it's omnivorous. It's likely going to need a large source of calcium to keep regrowing tusks as an Axew.
As he spends some time battling and training, his interest in pokemon would only grow. He'd end up capturing a team of other rarer/interesting pokemon. By the team he has an established team and maybe a couple badges by the time that Axew evolves.
If his time with Axew is a time of discovery and development, Fraxure is the time to temper that strength. The Axew and Fraxure are strong, but at this point he's realizing that battling is something that he's passionate about and not just a means to see new pokemon. But since evolving, Fraxure has been more violent, but also can't just run over unprepared trainers anymore, so he needs to be more strategic, and use Fraxure a bit more sparingly.