A Mago Berry, when held by a Pokémon, will restore ⅛ of its maximum HP when its HP drops to ½ or below, but causes confusion to Pokémon that dislike the sweet flavor. (Specifically, it confuses Pokémon with Brave, Quiet, Sassy, or Relaxed Natures.) When forcibly consumed via Fling, Pluck, or Bug Bite, it restores ⅛ of the consumer's maximum HP, and confuses any consumer that dislikes the sweet flavor.
Generation VII
A Mago Berry now restores ½ of the holder's HP when it drops to ¼ or below.
Generation VIII
The restored amount is decreased to ⅓ of the holder's HP. If the holder has Ripen, it will instead restore ⅔ of its maximum HP.
Bag item
Generation III-VI
When used from the Bag on a Pokémon, it restores the Pokémon's HP by ⅛ of its maximum HP. It is consumed after use.
Generation VII
A Mago Berry now restores the Pokémon's HP by ½ of its maximum HP when used from the Bag on a Pokémon.
Generation VIII
A Mago Berry now restores the Pokémon's HP by ⅓ of its maximum HP when used from the Bag on a Pokémon.
In Pokémon Legends: Arceus, it restores the Pokémon's HP by ½ of its maximum HP. A wild Pokémon that hates sweet flavors will briefly pause if it eats a Mago Berry.
Mago Berries have a base Berry Powder of 50 and a difficulty of 60. With two players, this Berry will contribute 100 units of Berry Powder at 100% silkiness.
15 Mago Berries, Pecha Berries, and Persim Berries are used to dye any white or dyed clothing into pastel pink. 30 Mago Berries, Petaya Berries, and Roseli Berries are used to dye any white or dyed clothing into dark pink.
A Berry that can be fed to a Pokemon to restore its HP by up to half its max. If a wild Pokemon that hates sweet flavors eats one of these Berries, it will briefly pause.
If a Pokémon holds one of these Berries, it will be able to restore some HP should it find itself in a pinch. But it will become confused if it hates the Berry's taste.
A Mago plant will yield 1-5 Berries. A growing Mago plant's soil dries by 10% every hour, fully drying out in 10 hours.
Generation V
Planted 0 hours
Sprouted 7.5 hours
Taller 15 hours
Flowering 22.5 hours
Berries 30 hours
A Mago plant will yield ? Berries.
Generation VI Pokémon X and Y
Planted 0 hours
Sprouted 4 hours
Growing 8 hours
Bigger 12 hours
Budding 16 hours
Bloom 20 hours
Berries 24 hours
A Mago plant will yield 3-15 Berries. During its growth, watering the plant adds 1.5 Berries to the final harvest, weeding it adds 1, and removing a pest adds 3. Mago plants attract Spewpa as pests. If grown next to each other, a Mago Berry and an Iapapa Berry may mutate into a Pomeg Berry.
Pokémon Omega Ruby and Alpha Sapphire
Planted 0 hours
Sprouted 4 hours
Taller 8 hours
Flowering 12 hours
Berries 16 hours
A Mago plant will yield 3-15 Berries.
Generation VII Pokémon Sun, Moon, Ultra Sun, and Ultra Moon
Planted 0 hours
Sprouted 6 hours
Taller 12 hours
Flowering 20 hours
Berries 24 hours
A Mago plant will yield 3 Berries if Isle Aplenny is at Phase 1, 6 Berries if it is at Phase 2, and 9 Berries if it is at Phase 3.
Generation VIII Pokémon Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl
The Mago Berry is available in Pokémon Sleep as one of the Berries that can be gathered by helper Pokémon and fed to Snorlax.
Effect
Mago Berries raise Snorlax's Strength, doubling the effect if the Berry is Snorlax's favorite. The base amount of Strength raised by the Berry is determined by the level of the helper Pokémon that gathered it.
This Berry progressively curves as it grows. The curvier the Berry, the sweeter it tastes.
Acquisition
Mago Berries can be gathered by Psychic-type helper Pokémon in the player's team. Like all Berries in the game, gathered Mago Berries do not go into the player's inventory and instead are immediately eaten by Snorlax.