Outsider Pokémon: Difference between revisions

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m ("Outsider" is used in RB (possibly "outsider Pokemon" is explicitly used somewhere sometime, but I'm not bothered enough by the difference to check...))
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==Description==
==Description==
[[File:Chding.png|thumb|250px|Once on the {{player}}'s game, Elyssa's {{p|Farfetch'd}} is classed as an outsider Pokémon.]]
[[File:Outsider Pokémon.png|thumb|Once on the {{player}}'s game, Elyssa's {{p|Farfetch'd}} is classed as an outsider Pokémon]]
A Pokémon is recognized as an outsider if its recorded data about its [[original Trainer]] does not match that of the {{player}} for the current game. This includes the Trainer's name, gender (since [[Generation III]]), [[Trainer ID number]], and {{DL|Trainer ID number|Secret ID}}. When any new game is started, it is very unlikely that the Trainer ID and Secret ID will match another game's even if the Trainer's name and gender do. Only in the very rare chance (2<sup>-32</sup>, less than 1 in 4 billion) that all the ID numbers do match can a Pokémon be traded between two games without being recognized as an outsider.
A Pokémon is recognized as an outsider if its recorded data about its [[original Trainer]] does not match that of the {{player}} for the current game. This includes the Trainer's name, gender (since [[Generation III]]), [[Trainer ID number]], and {{DL|Trainer ID number|Secret ID}}. When any new game is started, it is very unlikely that the Trainer ID and Secret ID will match another game's even if the Trainer's name and gender do. Only in the very rare chance (2<sup>-32</sup>, less than 1 in 4 billion) that all the ID numbers do match can a Pokémon be traded between two games without being recognized as an outsider.


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