>>12017714Well first of all you're in RU, but only using one RU pokemon, so you'd likely fare better with that team by dropping the Lilligant, for something else, and making it an NU team.
If you're going to use T-Spikes, and while they usually aren't better than regular Spikes I don't blame you since they are much more fun when they work you should always look over their team to see how beneficial they are before using them. In this case they're a waste of time since he has 1 steel pokemon which is immune to poison, 1 flying, and one levitating pokemon which are immune to both types of spikes, one pokemon with Magic Guard for which poison only keeps it safe from other statuses, and one Poison type which removes T-Spikes on switch-in leaving only one pokemon actually able to be effected by them. Regular spikes would have been much more beneficial.
Then upon being taunted you went for the Megahorn. I'm going to assume that you simply forgot Poison is strong against bug, since the obvious switch-ins to your Earthquake which would have been your best choice would have been Moltres, and Rotom which are immune to EQ. However Megahorn still wasn't a good choice if you had predicted that since one resists it, and the other double resists. Here's a good website for just in five seconds looking up type effectiveness if you're not entirely sure.
http://jetlogs.org/sandbox/pokemon_type_calc.htmlYou had your Flareon use Toxic on the Ferroseed. I'd call that a good play since Ferroseed was very very likely to switch out being 4x weak to Fire, so Flareon was a big threat, and getting Toxic onto the Moltres would have been quite nice. If you were attempting to poison the Ferroseed itself then just try to remember that Steel is immune to poison.
Other than those few mistakes you played well, and just having more experience will help greatly so you'll learn things like about how much damage you can do to what targets such as that Aqua Jet on the Quilfish.