Pokémon breeding
This article is incomplete. Please feel free to edit this article to add missing information and complete it. Reason: Missing Japanese name and other languages section |
Pokémon breeding is a method of obtaining a new Pokémon by producing and hatching an Egg. In the anime, it also refers to Pokémon grooming and caretaking.
In the games
How to breed
In Generation II through Generation VI, two compatible Pokémon can breed when left at the Pokémon Day Care. In Generation VII and Generation VIII, this is instead done by leaving two compatible Pokémon at the Pokémon Nursery. In Generation IX, having a picnic with two or more compatible Pokémon allows for them to breed (regardless of whether the Pokémon are in the player's party or other players' Pokémon visiting via the Union Circle). Breeding is absent in Generation I, Pokémon Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee!, and Pokémon Legends: Arceus.
Two Pokémon are compatible if they share at least one Egg Group and are of opposite genders. As an exception, Ditto is compatible with almost all Pokémon regardless of gender (which is the only way for gender unknown Pokémon to breed). Pokémon in the No Eggs Discovered Egg Group cannot breed in any way whatsoever, and Ditto also cannot breed with another Ditto.
In Generation II only, if the Defense IVs of two Pokémon are the same and the Special IVs are either the same or differ by 8, they cannot produce Eggs. Because of how IVs are passed down from parents, this condition suggests the Pokémon are related.
Locations
Pokémon Day Cares and Pokémon Nurseries can be found in the following locations:
Region | Facility | Location |
---|---|---|
Kanto (FRLG only) | Pokémon Day Care | Four Island |
Johto | Pokémon Day Care | Route 34 |
Hoenn | Pokémon Day Care | Route 117 Battle ResortORAS |
Sinnoh | Pokémon Day CareDPPt Pokémon NurseryBDSP |
Solaceon Town |
Unova | Pokémon Day Care | Route 3 |
Kalos | Pokémon Day Care | Route 7 |
Alola | Pokémon Nursery | Paniola Ranch |
Galar | Pokémon Nursery | Route 5 Bridge Field |
Breeding rate
This section is incomplete. Please feel free to edit this section to add missing information and complete it. Reason: Scarlet and Violet Egg generation mechanics chart, Datamined mechanics link |
The chance of any two Pokémon producing an Egg is determined by their species (two Bulbasaur are the same species, while Bulbasaur and Ivysaur are not) and their Original Trainers. In Generation III or later, the Day-Care Man will describe the two Pokémon's compatibility when the player speaks to him. An Egg may be generated after every 256 steps the player takes.
Species | Original Trainer | Quote | Chance for Egg |
---|---|---|---|
Same | Different | "The two seem to get along very well!" Man: "Those two seem to get along like a house on fire."ORAS Lad/Lady: "They really seem to like hanging out!"ORASSM |
70% Standard 88% with Oval Charm |
Same | Same | "The two seem to get along." Man: "Those two seem peaceable enough toward each other." / Lad: "The two seem to get along all right."ORAS Lady: "They seem to get along all right."SM |
50% Standard 80% with Oval Charm |
Different | Different | ||
Different | Same | "The two don't really seem to like each other very much." Man: "But I have to say, those two don’t seem to like each other all that much." / Lad: "But they don’t seem to like each other very much..."ORAS Lady: "They don't seem to like each other very much, though."SM |
20% Standard 40% with Oval Charm |
Different Egg Groups, same gender, No Eggs Discovered Group, or both in Ditto Group | "The two prefer to play with other Pokémon more than with each other." Man: "Those two would really rather play with other Pokémon, though, and not each other." / Lad: "Seems they’d rather play with other Pokémon—not so much with each other."ORAS Lady: "They don't seem to like playing together, though."SM |
0% |
The chances of finding an Egg are different in Generation II, and the compatibility can be checked by interacting with the Pokémon themselves instead of with the Day-Care Man.
Species | Original Trainer | Quotes | Chance for Egg |
---|---|---|---|
Same | Different | "It appears to care for <other Pokémon's nickname>." | 31.25% (80/256) |
Same | Same | "It's friendly with <other Pokémon's nickname>." | 15.63% (40/256) |
Different | Different | "It's friendly with <other Pokémon's nickname>." | 11.72% (30/256) |
Different | Same | "It shows interest in <other Pokémon's nickname>." | 3.91% (10/256) |
Different Egg Groups, same gender, No Eggs Discovered Group, or both in Ditto Group |
"It has no interest in <other Pokémon's nickname>." | 0% | |
Both Pokémon's Defense IVs are the same and their Special IVs are different by either 0 or 8 |
"It's brimming with energy." | 0% |
Receiving the Egg
When there are two compatible Pokémon in the Day Care or Nursery, the game will periodically decide whether the NPC standing outside the facility has found an Egg, with the chances depending on the compatibility of the two Pokémon as detailed in the section above.
If an Egg was produced, the NPC will move from their default position so that the player can know they have an Egg.
- In Generation II, the Day-Care Man will appear in the Day Care's yard.
- In Generation III, the Day-Care Man will step out of line with the fence.
- In Diamond, Pearl, and Platinum, the Day-Care Man will face the road instead of facing down.
- In HeartGold and SoulSilver, the Day-Care Man will face left or right instead of down and call the player over the Pokégear.
- In Generation V, the Day-Care Man will call out to the player when they are passing by on the road below.
- In Black and White, however, the Day-Care Man will not call out to the player if the player's party is full, even if he has found an Egg.
- In Generation VI, the Day-Care Man will face the road instead of in towards the Day Care.
- In Generation VII and Generation VIII, the Pokémon Nursery lady will fold her arms, with her right hand under her chin.
The NPC will hand the player an Egg if the player replies that they want it. If the player replies they do not want the Egg, the NPC will permanently keep it. Prior to Generation VII, the player will only be given the Egg if they have an empty slot in their party for it to fill; if the player says they want the Egg but does not have a spare slot, the Day-Care Man will keep it until the player next speaks to him, at which point he will offer it again. In Generation VII and Generation VIII, the player no longer needs an empty slot in the party to accept an Egg, with any Eggs accepted with a full party being automatically sent to a Box.
In Generation IX, Eggs will appear during picnics in the basket in front of the picnic table while any two compatible Pokémon are in the picnic (including both the player's party and any other players' Pokémon also present via the Union Circle). When an Egg is collected from the basket, it is automatically sent to a Box. More than one Egg can be found in the basket at once.
What will hatch
After taking enough steps, the Egg will hatch into a level 5 (Generation II and III) or level 1 (Generation IV onward) first-stage Pokémon of the female species's (or non-Ditto parent's) evolutionary chain.
Parents | Offspring | |
---|---|---|
Same species breeding | ||
Krookodile♂ | Krookodile♀ | Sandile |
Ditto breeding | ||
Dragapult | Ditto | Dreepy |
Same evolution family breeding | ||
Armarouge♂ | Ceruledge♀ | Charcadet |
Same Egg Group breeding | ||
Infernape♂ | Medicham♀ | Meditite |
Field/Human-Like | Human-Like | Human-Like |
No Eggs Discovered Egg Group breeding | ||
None | ||
Great Tusk | Iron Treads | None |
No Eggs Discovered | No Eggs Discovered | N/A |
Different Egg Group breeding | ||
None | ||
Torterra♂ | Staraptor♀ | None |
Monster/Grass | Flying | N/A |
Same gender breeding | ||
None | ||
Empoleon♀ | Empoleon♀ | None |
Water 1/Field | Water 1/Field | N/A |
Gender-counterpart species
There are two pairs of Pokémon families where the male and female are different species. In these cases, an Egg produced has an even chance to hatch into either the male or female variant. The pairs are the following:
Parents | Offspring | |
---|---|---|
Poison Pin Pokémon | ||
Nidoran♀ | Any compatible Pokémon |
Nidoran♀ |
Nidoran♂ | ||
Nidoran♂, Nidorino, or Nidoking |
Ditto | Nidoran♀* |
Nidoran♂ | ||
Firefly Pokémon | ||
Illumise | Any compatible Pokémon |
Volbeat |
Illumise | ||
Volbeat | Ditto | Volbeat |
Illumise* |
Incense breeding
Prior to Generation IX, there were several Pokémon which could produce two different kinds of Eggs, dependent on whether or not a parent of the Egg held a specific incense when it was produced.
Parents | Item | Offspring | |
---|---|---|---|
Marill and Azumarill | |||
Sea Incense | |||
No item | |||
Marill | Azumarill | Azurill | |
Marill | |||
Wobbuffet | |||
Lax Incense | |||
No item | |||
Wobbuffet | Wynaut | ||
Wobbuffet | |||
Roselia and Roserade | |||
Rose Incense | |||
No item | |||
Roselia | Roserade | Budew | |
Roselia | |||
Chimecho | |||
Pure Incense | |||
No item | |||
Chimecho | Chingling | ||
Chimecho | |||
Sudowoodo | |||
Rock Incense | |||
No item | |||
Sudowoodo | Bonsly | ||
Sudowoodo | |||
Mr. Mime and Mr. Rime | |||
Odd Incense | |||
No item | |||
Mr. Mime | Mr. Rime | Mime Jr. | |
Mr. Mime | |||
Chansey and Blissey | |||
Luck Incense | |||
No item | |||
Chansey | Blissey | Happiny | |
Chansey | |||
Mantine | |||
Wave Incense | |||
No item | |||
Mantine | Mantyke | ||
Mantine | |||
Snorlax | |||
Full Incense | |||
No item | |||
Snorlax | Munchlax | ||
Snorlax |
Regional forms
If a Pokémon has regional forms, then its offspring will always hatch into the form native to that region. However, if a parent of a foreign form is holding an Everstone and is from the same evolutionary family as the offspring, then the offspring will hatch into that parent's form.
Parents | Offspring | |
---|---|---|
In Paldea | ||
Wooper♂ | Wooper♀ | Paldean Wooper |
Paldean Wooper♂ | Quagsire♀ Everstone |
Wooper |
Quagsire♂ Everstone |
Ditto | Wooper |
Psyduck♂ Everstone |
Wooper♀ | Paldean Wooper |
Other
There is one special case, where a Pokémon can produce offspring that cannot evolve into it exclusively, and they are not gender counterparts.
Parents | Offspring | |
---|---|---|
Ditto breeding | ||
Manaphy | Ditto | Phione |
Phione | Ditto | Phione |
Hatching Eggs
- Main article: Pokémon Egg
The time it takes for an Egg to hatch depends on its species's required number of Egg cycles. Magikarp have the fewest Egg cycles, meaning they hatch the fastest. Some baby Pokémon in the No Eggs Discovered Egg Group, such as Cleffa, Pichu, and Igglybuff, hatch quickly as well. Besides these, most Pokémon take considerable time to hatch. Rare and powerful Pokémon, like Dratini, Bagon, Beldum, Larvitar, Chansey, and more, start with a high number of Egg cycles and take a long time to hatch. Most Legendary Pokémon have a very high number of Egg cycles, although it's not possible to get these Pokémon in an egg in-game.
"Time" is actually determined by Egg cycle completion, which is determined by in-game steps or biking. An Egg cycle is a counted number of steps that activates breeding-related programs in the game. One Egg cycle lasts 256 steps in the second and third generations, 255 steps in the fourth generation, and 257 steps in later generations. When the game reaches the end of an Egg cycle, it does a few things: the step counter for the cycle is reset to zero, the game randomly decides if an Egg is to be found at the Day Care (if compatible Pokémon are present in the Day Care at the time), and all (or only a few) Eggs currently in the player's party have their Egg cycle count reduced by one. If the Egg cycle count for an Egg reaches zero after being reduced (in the second and in the fifth or later generations) or is zero when it would be reduced (in the third and fourth generations), the Egg will begin to hatch. Prior to the fifth generation, if an Egg hatches, the game will not subtract an Egg cycle count from the rest of the Eggs after it in the party, ensuring that no two Eggs can hatch at the same time. In the fifth generation and later, if more than one Egg reaches zero at the same time, the first Egg hatches immediately while the rest hatch in order each time the player takes another step.
In the third and fourth generations, the Egg cycle's step counter can be reset by receiving an Egg from the Day-Care Man or the Manaphy Egg from the Mystery Gift delivery man in the Poké Mart. When an Egg is received from one of these people, the game resets the Egg cycle step counter to one in the third generation and to zero in the fourth generation.
As an example, in Pokémon X and Y, a Misdreavus Egg starts with 25 Egg cycles, meaning it requires from 6169 to 6425 steps to hatch, depending on where the Egg cycle step counter is when the Egg is picked up. After each Egg cycle is completed, the Egg's Egg cycle count will drop by one, first to 24, then 23, then 22, and so on until the Egg cycle count hits zero, at which point the Egg will hatch into Misdreavus.
There are ways to speed up the time required to hatch an Egg. Riding a Bicycle reduces the time required simply by making it faster to complete steps. From Pokémon Emerald onward, if a Pokémon with Flame Body, Magma Armor, or Steam Engine is in a player's party, Egg cycles are reduced by two instead of one at the end of an Egg cycle, effectively halving the steps needed to hatch the Egg. In the Misdreavus example, the Egg would start at 25, and with Slugma in the party, the Egg would drop 2 Egg cycle counts after each Egg cycle, to 23 then 21 then 19 and so on, until it finally drops from 1 to 0 and hatches. Having multiple Pokémon with the Ability or one with each will not increase the Egg cycle reduction. Since the fifth generation, Hatching Powers can also be used (either from Pass Powers or O-Powers) to shorten the length of an Egg cycle, making Eggs hatch 1.25, 1.5, or 2× faster depending on the strength of the power used. In Pokémon Omega Ruby and Alpha Sapphire, Secret Pals in the player's Secret Base can also use the skill "Take care of an Egg" to reduce an Egg's Egg cycle count by half of its base Egg cycles.
Passing moves down
The moves obtained by a Pokémon when hatching are as follows:
- By default, the baby Pokémon will start with any moves that it learns at level 1. (In Generation II and Generation III, they will know all moves that are level 5 and below in their learnset.)
- If both parents know a move that the baby can learn via leveling up, the Pokémon will inherit that move.
- Prior to Generation VI, if the father knows any moves that are TMs or HMs in that game (and in Crystal, moves that are taught by a Move Tutor) that the baby is also compatible with, it will inherit the move. If a Pokémon species that is gender unknown (such as Magnemite) breeds with Ditto, the resultant baby will inherit any compatible TM or HM moves that the non-Ditto parent knows.
- If the father or, starting in Generation VI, the mother knows any specific Egg Moves that the baby can learn, the baby will inherit the move.
- From Pokémon Emerald onward, if either parent is holding a Light Ball, a bred Pichu will know Volt Tackle. Volt Tackle cannot be passed down as a normal Egg Move.
If this would result in the baby possessing more than four moves, the moves take priority in the order listed: Volt Tackle, mother's Egg Moves, father's Egg Moves, TM and HM moves, inherited level-up moves, baby's default moveset. The moves passed down will be ordered on the baby Pokémon by the priority listed above.
Starting in Generation VI, the Move Reminder can teach any Pokémon hatched in a Generation VI or later game any move that it knew when it hatched, if it has forgotten it. Moves that can be taught this way due to inheriting them appear at the top of the Move Reminder's list. However, even if a Pokémon meets the requirements for more than four inherited moves, only the moves it knew when it hatched can be taught by the Move Reminder.
Inheriting stats
This section is incomplete. Please feel free to edit this section to add missing information and complete it. Reason: Generation 7 and swap breeding |
A Pokémon's individual values are also passed down. This is determined differently between generations.
Generation II
In Generation II games, the baby inherits its stats from the parent of the opposite gender, unless one parent is Ditto, and in that case it inherits the stats from Ditto. The Defense IV is passed, and also either the Special IV or the Special IV plus or minus 8 (plus for values in the 0-7 range; minus for values in the 8-15 range); the Special IV has a 50% chance of remaining the same. Attack and Speed IVs are determined entirely at random, whereas HP is determined by the IVs of the other four stats, using the same formula for wild Pokémon. The probability of a Pokémon having the same IVs as its opposite-gender parent is therefore 1/512.
If the Defense IVs of two partners are the same, and the Special IVs are either the same or differ by 8, the two Pokémon are incompatible. This is due to the high likelihood of a family relation, hence the inability to breed.
Generation III
In Pokémon Ruby, Sapphire, FireRed and LeafGreen, exactly three of the baby's IVs are inherited from its parents (e.g. if one parent contributes two IVs, its mate will contribute the third). The other three are determined at random, though it is possible that some of these may coincide with those of its parents without actually being inherited.
In Pokémon Emerald, the process is similar but more complicated. First, a random IV is passed from one of the parents to the baby. Afterwards, a random IV of any stat (other than HP) is passed from either parent to the baby; if it is the same stat (not necessarily the same IV value, depending on whether or not the same parent passed it on), it will override it. Finally, another random IV of any stat other than HP and Defense is passed from one of the parents to the baby; this IV will override any of the previous two if it is from the same stat. The remaining stats (a number ranging from 3 to 5) are determined at random, again with the possibility of one or more IVs coinciding with those of the parents.
Generation IV
Inheriting IVs in Pokémon Diamond and Pearl is determined in the same way as in Pokémon Emerald.
From Pokémon Platinum onward, the baby will inherit three IVs, each from a different stat and from a random parent.
From HeartGold and SoulSilver onward, if either parent holds an Power item, the baby will instead receive the IV of the corresponding stat from that parent, then inherit two other random IVs each from a random parent; if both parents hold a Power item, the baby will inherit the corresponding stat to their held item from one of those parents at random. For example, if a parent is holding the Power Anklet, the baby will inherit the Speed IV from that parent, and it will also inherit two other different IVs from its parents, such as Attack and Special Defense. As another example, if one parent holds a Power Anklet and the other parent holds a Power Weight, the baby will inherit either the Speed IV from the first parent or the HP IV from the second parent, and it will also inherit two different IVs from its parents other than Speed or HP (whichever was successfully inherited will be the one not chosen).
Generation V
Inheriting IVs in Generation V is determined in the same way as in HeartGold and SoulSilver.
Generation VI
From Pokémon X and Y onward, if at least one parent holds a Destiny Knot, the baby will inherit five IVs instead of three.
This can be combined with a Power item to ensure that one desired IV is always inherited; however, the offspring will still inherit only a total of five IVs from its parents (the Power item simply guarantees which IV will be transferred for one of the five that the Destiny Knot allows).
Inheriting Natures
In Pokémon Emerald, if the mother (in a male-female pair) or Ditto (in a pair that includes Ditto) is holding an Everstone, the baby has a 50% chance of inheriting that Pokémon's Nature.
In Diamond, Pearl, and Platinum, inheriting Natures remains the same as in Emerald, except that passing on Natures via an Everstone will not work if the Pokémon have different original languages.
In HeartGold and SoulSilver, whichever Pokémon is holding an Everstone will have a chance of passing down its Nature, regardless of gender, or whether it is breeding with a Ditto.
In Black and White, inheriting Natures remains the same as in HeartGold and SoulSilver, except that passing on Natures via an Everstone will now work even if the Pokémon are from different original languages.
From Black 2 and White 2 onward, if one parent holds an Everstone, its Nature will always be passed down. If both parents are holding an Everstone, a parent's Nature will still always be passed down, but which parent's Nature is passed down is randomly determined.
Inheriting Abilities
In Generations III and IV, Abilities could not be inherited by breeding—an Egg would simply randomly be born with one of its possible Abilities. From Generation V onward, parents have a chance to pass down their Ability slot in certain circumstances.
When breeding a female Pokémon with a male Pokémon, only the female Pokémon's Ability is relevant; when breeding a Pokémon with Ditto, only the non-Ditto Pokémon's Ability is relevant. If a parent's Ability is altered via Ability Patch or Ability Capsule, the new Ability slot is taken into account for breeding.
Rockruff with the Ability Own Tempo (which evolves into Lycanroc's Dusk Form) is treated as a separate form, so breeding it uses form inheritance rather than Ability inheritance mechanics.
Regular Abilities
Pokémon with two possible non-Hidden Abilities have a different Ability in slots 1 and 2, while Pokémon with only one possible non-Hidden Ability have the same Ability in both slots.
In Black 2 and White 2, if a female Pokémon is bred with a male Pokémon (but not when bred with Ditto), there is a 80% chance that its offspring will have the Ability in the same slot as the mother (regardless of whether it is a Hidden Ability or not). Pokémon bred with Ditto cannot pass their Abilities down. (In Pokémon Black and White, non-Hidden Abilities cannot be passed down.)
For Generation VI onward, if the female Pokémon has a non-Hidden Ability, there is a 80% chance that its offspring will have the Ability in the same slot as the mother (regardless of whether it was bred with a male Pokémon or Ditto).
Hidden Abilities
In Pokémon Black and White, if a female Pokémon has its Hidden Ability and is bred with a male Pokémon (but not when bred with Ditto), there is a 60% chance that its offspring will have its Hidden Ability; in Black 2 and White 2, there is instead an 80% chance the offspring will have its Hidden Ability. (Male and gender-unknown Pokémon cannot pass their Ability down in these games.)
From Generation VI onward, if a female Pokémon, or any Pokémon bred with Ditto, has a Hidden Ability, there is a 60% chance that its offspring will have its Hidden Ability.
If an Egg does not inherit a Hidden Ability from a parent, it can only be born with a non-Hidden Ability.
Inheriting forms
In most cases, if a hatched species has multiple forms (not dependent on in-battle conditions), it will often inherit the form of the mother or non-Ditto parent. Burmy will always hatch with the same cloak as its mother, and if bred between Mothim and Ditto, it will always hatch with a Plant Cloak. Rockruff with the Ability Own Tempo, which evolves into Lycanroc's Dusk Form, is treated as a separate form and can pass down this trait accordingly to its offspring. Oricorio, which changes its form using nectars, can also pass down its form by breeding.
There are a few exceptions to this inheritance pattern:
- Rotom will always hatch into its normal form, but can be changed afterwards.
- Vivillon's pattern depends on the real-world, geographic area of the save file it originated from, regardless of its parent's pattern.
- The form that Scatterbug will evolve into is predetermined when the Egg is first obtained, not when hatched or evolved.
- Scatterbug hatched in Scarlet and Violet will only evolve into Fancy Pattern Vivillon.
- Furfrou, whose trims are temporary, always hatch in its Natural Form.
- Sinistea will always hatch as a Phony Form, even if its parent is an Antique Form.
In addition, species with regional forms will hatch into whichever form is native to that region. However, if a parent of a foreign form and the same family is holding an Everstone, the offspring will be of that parent's form instead.
The Gigantamax Factor, Alpha, Jumbo and Mini marks cannot be passed down by breeding.
Pokémon such as Dunsparce, Wurmple, and Tandemaus, where the species and form they will evolve into is predetermined when they are first generated, do not follow form inheritance rules. The forms of the parents have no influence on the personality value or encryption constant.
Inheriting Poké Balls
From Generation II through V, all Eggs are obtained in standard red-and-white Poké Balls, regardless of the type of ball either parent was obtained in. In later generations, this is still used as the default ball if another type of ball is not inherited.
Generation II through V | ||
---|---|---|
Parents | Offspring | |
Great Ball ♂ | Ultra Ball ♀ | Always Poké Ball |
In Generation VI, the Poké Ball of the female Pokémon is always passed down to its offspring (even when bred with Ditto); male and gender-unknown Pokémon have no effect on their offspring's Poké Ball in this generation.
Generation VI | ||
---|---|---|
Male and female parents | ||
Parents | Offspring | |
Great Ball ♂ | Ultra Ball ♀ | Ultra Ball |
Ditto and a female parent | ||
Parents | Offspring | |
Quick Ball | Ultra Ball ♀ | Ultra Ball |
Ditto and a male parent | ||
Parents | Offspring | |
Quick Ball | Ultra Ball ♂ | Always Poké Ball |
Ditto & Gender unknown Parents | ||
Parents | Offspring | |
Quick Ball | Premier Ball | Always Poké Ball |
From Generation VII onward, usually offspring will have the same Poké Ball as the female Pokémon, or the non-Ditto Pokémon when breeding with Ditto. However, if a male and female Pokémon of the same species are bred (regardless of form), the offspring has an equal chance of inheriting either parent's Poké Ball.
Generation VII through IX | ||
---|---|---|
Male and female parents Different species | ||
Parents | Offspring | |
Great Ball ♂ | Ultra Ball ♀ | Ultra Ball |
Male and female parents Same species | ||
Parents | Offspring | |
Moon Ball ♂ | Ultra Ball ♀ | 50% Moon Ball 50% Ultra Ball |
Ditto and a female parent | ||
Parents | Offspring | |
Quick Ball | Ultra Ball ♀ | Ultra Ball |
Ditto and a male parent | ||
Parents | Offspring | |
Quick Ball | Great Ball ♂ | Great Ball |
Ditto & Gender unknown Parents | ||
Parents | Offspring | |
Quick Ball | Premier Ball | Premier Ball |
The Master Ball, Cherish Ball, and Strange Ball cannot be inherited via breeding; instead, the game treats any parent obtained in those balls as if they were in a standard Poké Ball for the purposes of inheritance.
Master, Cherish, & Strange Ball | ||
---|---|---|
Same Species Parents | ||
Parents | Offspring* | |
Strange Ball ♂ | Ultra Ball ♀ | 50% Poké Ball 50% Ultra Ball |
Different species parents Male has un-inheritable Ball | ||
Parents | Offspring | |
Strange Ball ♂ | Ultra Ball ♀ | Ultra Ball |
Different species parents Female has un-inheritable Ball | ||
Parents | Offspring | |
Ultra Ball ♂ | Strange Ball ♀ | Always Poké Ball |
Ditto & Non-Ditto Parents | ||
Parents | Offspring | |
Quick Ball | Strange Ball | Always Poké Ball |
Breeding for Shininess
Generation II
In Generation II, due to Shininess being determined by IVs and the fact that IVs are passed down through breeding, it is possible for an Egg bred from a Shiny Pokémon to have a chance as high as 1/64 of being Shiny itself, but only if the offspring is of the opposite gender as the Shiny parent. This is not possible in any later generations due to Shininess no longer being related to IVs.
Generation III
In Generation III, a bred Pokémon always has the same chance of being Shiny as any Pokémon met in the wild.
Generation IV
Starting in Generation IV, if the two parents have different languages of origin, the Pokémon in Eggs they produce are more likely to be Shiny due to the Masuda method. The game does this by generating up to four additional personality values if the Pokémon is not Shiny, meaning that the Pokémon is approximately five times as likely to be Shiny (approximately 5/8192 or 1/1639).
Generation V
Starting in Generation V, the Masuda method now generates five additional personality values, meaning that the Pokémon is approximately six times as likely to be Shiny (approximately 6/8192 or 1/1366).
In Pokémon Black 2 and White 2, the Shiny Charm was introduced, which increases the player's chance of encountering or hatching Shiny Pokémon while in the player's Bag. If the player has the Shiny Charm when an Egg is generated, the game generates two additional personality values if the Pokémon is not Shiny, meaning that the Pokémon is approximately three times as likely to be Shiny (approximately 3/8192 or 1/2731).
The Shiny Charm and Masuda method can both apply at the same time. If they both do, their rerolls stack, resulting in seven additional personality values being generated, meaning that the Pokémon is approximately eight times as likely to be Shiny (approximately 8/8192 or 1/1024).
Generation VI
The overall Shiny rate has been increased to 1/4096. As a result, while the number of rerolls remains the same, the probability of hatching a Shiny Pokémon when using the Masuda method or Shiny Charm has also increased.
- The Masuda method alone generates five additional personality values (approximately 6/4096 or 1/683 chance of a Shiny Pokémon).
- The Shiny Charm alone generates two additional personality values (approximately 3/4096 or 1/1365 chance of a Shiny Pokémon).
- The Masuda method and Shiny Charm together generate up to seven additional personality values (approximately 8/4096 or 1/512 chance of a Shiny Pokémon).
Generation VIII
In Generation VIII, the Masuda method now generates six additional personality values, which would make it more likely to hatch a Shiny Pokémon; however, due to a bug, while breeding the original roll is skipped if any bonus rolls are applied. As a result, the Masuda method has the same probability of producing Shiny Pokémon as it does in Generation VII (both with and without the Shiny Charm); while the Shiny Charm alone actually has a lower chance of producing a Shiny Pokémon than it does in Generation VII or wild encounters do with the Shiny Charm alone.[1][2]
- The Masuda method alone generates a total of six personality values (approximately 6/4096 or 1/683 chance of a Shiny Pokémon).
- The Shiny Charm alone generates a total of two personality values (approximately 2/4096 or 1/2048 chance of a Shiny Pokémon).
- The Masuda method and Shiny Charm together generate a total of eight personality values (approximately 8/4096 or 1/512 chance of a Shiny Pokémon).
Generation IX
The Pokémon Egg Shiny Roll bug from Generation VIII (which affects the effectiveness of the Shiny Charm while breeding) still applies.
The "Sparkling Power" provided by Sandwiches does not affect the chances of an Egg being Shiny.
In the anime
In the anime, Pokémon breeding refers to an entire line of work practiced by Pokémon Breeders, such as Brock and Reggie. The anime has shown and discussed little about the literal breeding of Pokémon to produce Eggs, but it is assumed to be a part of a Breeder's work.
Pokémon breeding in the anime focuses heavily on raising happy and healthy Pokémon and keeping them in top condition by grooming them well and feeding them nutritious food. When preparing Pokémon food, Breeders will carefully select ingredients to ensure that the Pokémon will consume all it needs to grow stronger and healthier.
Breeders are shown to have knowledge on how to treat Pokémon illnesses and injuries by administering Potions and other medicine. Some Breeders will use a mortar and pestle to crush and grind herbs to produce herbal medicine. They also know which Berries can be used to cure Pokémon from status conditions.
It has been shown that Pokémon Professors get their starter Pokémon from Breeders who specifically raise and breed them, like Old Man Swamp from A Mudkip Mission. There are also a few farm-like facilities that produce Pokémon Eggs of various species. Both Ash and May have obtained Eggs from such locations.
In Following A Maiden's Voyage!, Johanna stated that Dawn would need to learn about breeding in order to become a Top Coordinator. This is because Pokémon Coordinators must care for their Pokémon's appearance and well being, something which requires them to know how to produce nutritious snacks in the form of Pokéblocks and Poffins, as well as to regularly groom them.
In the manga
Pokémon Adventures
Gold's special skill, as described by Professor Oak, is Pokémon hatching and is known as the "Hatcher" (孵す者 Hatcher). He has the ability to draw out the largest potential of a baby Pokémon, having lived with Pokémon his whole life. Togebo and Pibu are testaments to that title, and share similar traits with him.
Trivia
- With the exception of Pokémon species with gender unknown or in the No Eggs Discovered group, all other known Pokémon species can be indirectly or directly related to each other via their shared Egg Groups, even if no breeding with Ditto is involved.
- Nidorina and Nidoqueen cannot breed, despite the fact that the Nidoran♂ line and Nidoran♀ can. This is because Nidorina and Nidoqueen's inability to lay Eggs was established by Japanese media before breeding became a game mechanic.[3][4] As such, Nidoran♀ is the only Pokémon that loses the ability to breed upon evolving.
- Although all Legendary Pokémon, Mythical Pokémon, and Ultra Beasts except Manaphy (and Phione, whose status as a Mythical Pokémon is disputed) cannot breed in the core series games, Eggs containing Articuno, Zapdos, and Moltres can be hatched in Pokémon Snap, and a baby Lugia appears in the anime. Likewise, Manaphy can be hatched from a special Egg transferred from Pokémon Ranger in the Generation IV games.
- When a Pokémon hatches from an Egg during both Generation II and Generation III, it is at level 5. However, many Pokémon from the wild can be found between levels 2 and 4, which is below the level of newly hatched Pokémon. This oddity has since been addressed from Generation IV onwards, where all hatched Pokémon start at level 1.
- The Pokémon Mansion journals (which predate Generation II's introduction of breeding) describe Mew giving birth as opposed to producing an Egg. This was not changed in Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen, but in Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee!, the journal instead says "We obtained a new Pokémon from Mew." It is unclear as to whether this is meant literally or metaphorically.
- Due to a bug in Pokémon Sword and Shield, Galarian Stunfisk is not considered a regional form for the purposes of regional form inheritance.[5]
In other languages
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See also
External links
References
- ↑ https://twitter.com/SciresM/status/1319799153162006530
- ↑ https://twitter.com/SciresM/status/1319805906691842050
- ↑ Pocket Monsters Encyclopedia: 「ニドラン♀の進化形だが、ニドリーナになると、卵を産む能力はなくなる。」 ("It is the evolved form of Nidoran♀, but upon becoming Nidorina, has lost the ability to lay Eggs.")
- ↑ ポケットモンスター公式ファンブック Official Fan Book of Pocket Monsters: 「ニドラン♀の進化形だが、卵は産めない。」 ("It is the evolved form of Nidoran♀, but it cannot lay Eggs.")
- ↑ https://twitter.com/Sibuna_Switch/status/1404287033628106753
Pokémon training | |
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Catching • Nicknaming • Battling • Evolving • Trading • Breeding • Releasing |
This game mechanic article is part of Project Games, a Bulbapedia project that aims to write comprehensive articles on the Pokémon games. |