In a regular wild Pokémon encounter, it would have a 1/8192 chance of having these stats, and thus being shiny. The famed Red Gyarados is the sole exception, and will always be shiny and male. The reason for why Pokemon can't be shiny in Gen 1 (DVs wise) is due to some algorithm problem relating to DVs generation. There are a few different methods to increase the chances of obtaining a shiny Pokémon. Basically what it does is determine if your pokemon is female, male, or a Mirage Island Pokemon. A Pokemon will be shiny in Gen 2 if it has the following DVs: 10 DVs in Def, Special, Spd. This is due to that in Generation II, Shininess was determined by IVs and the fact that IVs are passed down through breeding. Shiny Mewtwo statistically arrives after quite a lot of time! re: Gen 1 Shiny Hunting Saku for example I'm shiny hunting for a Zapdos on my cartridge version of Red. While Pokebank does use a faulty implementation of the shiny stats, I believe the problem is the same when trading Gen 1 -> 2. ChocoboKnight77 11 years ago #1 I've been playing Pokemon on and off since 1998 when I first got Blue Version, but I never learned the intricacies of IV's and EV's. Simply put, it seems not possible for wild encounters to create the wanted DVs in Gen 1. I asked ExtraTricky about that a while ago, while talking about how they could check Pokémon legality with Gen I => Gen VII Poké Bank. A Gender Value of 0 means it’s a mirage Island Pokemon, a value between 1 and 127 mean that it is male, and 128 to 256 mean it is female. This really isn’t that important in training a pokemon, but it is a Dynamic Value none the less. There are multiple combinations of DVs. glitch is a must for master balls. Funnily enough, in Gen 2 where shininess was still based on a Pokémon's Dynamic Values so pairing two shiny Pokémon as parents made it much easier to breed shinies (1/32, if I recall correctly), there's a certain point that if the DVs were similar they won't breed. P(shiny) = P(Atk)P(Def)P(Spe)P(Spc) = 1/2 x 1/16 x 1/16 x 1/16, or 1/8192, which is equivalent to the probability in later generations. Because of another mechanic in gen 2 however, gender is decided by stats which means if a Pokemon has a 50/50 gender ratio like say oddish it will have a 1/128 chance of being shiny if one of the parents has this shiny gene, likewise if the Pokemon has a smaller chance at being Male or none like tauros It decreases your odds of this working. If you shiny hunt for the legends, the missingno. So yesterday I read about IV's and EV's in some FAQs on this site, I also followed some of the links in the sticky topic. Interestingly enough, DVs in G/S/C also determines a Pokémon's gender, if it is indeed capable of being either male or female. Didn't want to talk about this here because I thought it would be irrelevant, but heh, Shoddy Battle did implement IVs checking on Gen IV Method 1 Pokémon, so why not. Breeding (Gen II) In Generation II, breeding with a Shiny Pokémon can increase the odds of producing a Shiny up to a 1/64 chance. Similarly to gender, a Pokemon caught in RBY that satisfies the above criteria will be shiny upon being traded to GSC.
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