Apricorn: Difference between revisions

13 bytes added ,  26 February 2021
Added 'in the anime' to the 400-700 years section for clarity, as this does not appear to be canon to core games.
mNo edit summary
(Added 'in the anime' to the 400-700 years section for clarity, as this does not appear to be canon to core games.)
Line 2: Line 2:
'''Apricorns''' (Japanese: '''ぼんぐりのみ''' ''Bonguri Fruit'') are fruits native to the [[Johto]] region that can be used to make [[Poké Ball]]s. They can also be found in the [[Kanto]] region in {{game|HeartGold and SoulSilver|s}} and on [[Galar]]'s [[Isle of Armor]] in {{g|Sword and Shield}}'s [[The Isle of Armor]] expansion.
'''Apricorns''' (Japanese: '''ぼんぐりのみ''' ''Bonguri Fruit'') are fruits native to the [[Johto]] region that can be used to make [[Poké Ball]]s. They can also be found in the [[Kanto]] region in {{game|HeartGold and SoulSilver|s}} and on [[Galar]]'s [[Isle of Armor]] in {{g|Sword and Shield}}'s [[The Isle of Armor]] expansion.


Specialists can hollow out Apricorns and fit them with special devices to allow them to function as Poké Balls. [[Kurt]] is one such specialist. Before [[History of Poké Balls|Poké Balls became standardized]], everyone used hollowed-out Apricorns to catch Pokémon. The process used to create the Poké Balls was developed sometime between 400 and 700 years<!--Between the burning of Brass Tower and first Orange League competitions--> before the present day.
Specialists can hollow out Apricorns and fit them with special devices to allow them to function as Poké Balls. [[Kurt]] is one such specialist. Before [[History of Poké Balls|Poké Balls became standardized]], everyone used hollowed-out Apricorns to catch Pokémon. The process used to create the Poké Balls in the anime was developed sometime between 400 and 700 years<!--Between the burning of Brass Tower and first Orange League competitions--> before the present day.


Because the outer skin of Apricorns are so tough, they cannot be eaten by Pokémon unprocessed. Instead, Trainers can blend Apricorns in an [[Apriblender]] to make Aprijuice for their Pokémon to drink.
Because the outer skin of Apricorns are so tough, they cannot be eaten by Pokémon unprocessed. Instead, Trainers can blend Apricorns in an [[Apriblender]] to make Aprijuice for their Pokémon to drink.