Sheen: Difference between revisions

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(Redirected page to Poffin#Smoothness and sheen)
 
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#REDIRECT [[Poffin#Smoothness and sheen]]
[[File:Sheen VIII.png|thumb|300px|A {{p|Sceptile}} with maximum sheen in {{pkmn|Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl}}]]
'''Sheen''' (Japanese: '''けづや''' ''fur sheen'') is a property of a Pokémon in the [[Generation]] {{gen|III}}, {{gen|IV}}, and {{gen|VIII}} [[core series]] games. It affects the score a Pokémon receives in the {{DL|Pokémon Contest|primary judging}} of a [[Pokémon Contest]], the [[Visual Competition]] in a [[Pokémon Super Contest]], or the {{DL|Super Contest Show|Visual Evaluation}} in a [[Super Contest Show]].
 
==Terminology==
Sheen was not named in-game until Generation IV, although its Japanese name is present in debug text in {{game|Ruby and Sapphire|s}}.
 
==In the core series games==
All Pokémon initially have sheen of 0, except Pokémon received in [[in-game trade]]s in the handheld Generation III games, which begin with a sheen of 10.
 
When a Pokémon eats a [[Pokéblock]] or [[Poffin]], that food item's [[Smoothness|feel or smoothness]] is added to the Pokémon's sheen, up to a maximum of 255. In {{game|HeartGold and SoulSilver|s}}, having the [[haircut brothers]] or [[Daisy Oak]] [[Pokémon groomer|groom]] a Pokémon also increases its sheen. If a Pokémon's sheen would exceed 255, it becomes 255 instead (the Pokémon's [[condition]] is still increased as normal). Note that Pokéblocks in {{g|Omega Ruby and Alpha Sapphire}} neither affect nor are affected by sheen.
 
A Pokémon with 255 sheen cannot eat any more Pokéblocks or Poffins in the Generation III, IV, or VIII games. Sheen is permanent and cannot be decreased or reset, and is retained even when a Pokémon is [[trade]]d or [[transfer]]red to a game where sheen has no effect. Therefore, a Pokémon can be fed more Pokéblocks or Poffins that have low smoothness.
 
===Checking sheen===
Sheen is displayed on the same screen as a Pokémon's [[Contest condition|condition]], located in the [[PokéNav]] in {{game2|Ruby|Sapphire|Emerald}} and the Pokémon's summary screen in {{game|Diamond and Pearl|s|Pokémon Diamond, Pearl}}, {{v2|Platinum}}, {{pkmn|Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl|Brilliant Diamond, and Shining Pearl}} as a series of sparkles.
 
<div style="display:inline-block; vertical-align:top">
{| class="roundtable c" style="background: #{{contest color light}}; border: 3px solid #{{contest color}}"
|+ '''Generation III'''
! Sparkles
! Sheen
|-
| 1 || 0-28
|-
| 2 || 29-57
|-
| 3 || 58-86
|-
| 4 || 87-115
|-
| 5 || 116-144
|-
| 6 || 145-173
|-
| 7 || 174-202
|-
| 8 || 203-231
|-
| 9 || 232-254
|-
| 10 || 255
|}
</div>
<div style="display:inline-block; vertical-align:top">
{| class="roundtable c" style="background: #{{contest color light}}; border: 3px solid #{{contest color}}"
|+ '''Generation IV/VIII'''
! Sparkles
! Sheen
|-
| 0 || 0-21
|-
| 1 || 22-42
|-
| 2 || 43-63
|-
| 3 || 64-85
|-
| 4 || 86-106
|-
| 5 || 107-127
|-
| 6 || 128-149
|-
| 7 || 150-170
|-
| 8 || 171-191
|-
| 9 || 192-213
|-
| 10 || 214-234
|-
| 11 || 235-254
|-
| 12 || 255
|}
</div>
 
These relationships can be expressed as the following formulas:
* Generation III:
:<math>\mathrm{sparkles} = \begin{cases}
  10, & \text{if } \mathrm{sheen} = 255 \\
  \left\lfloor \dfrac{\mathrm{sheen}}{29} \right\rfloor + 1, & \text{otherwise}
\end{cases}</math>
* Generation IV/VIII:
:<math>\mathrm{sparkles} = \begin{cases}
  12, & \text{if } \mathrm{sheen} = 255 \\
  \left\lfloor \dfrac{12 \times \mathrm{sheen}}{256} \right\rfloor, & \text{otherwise}
\end{cases}</math>
 
===Gallery===
{{Movegen
|type=contest
|genIII=Sheen III
|genIV=Sheen IV
|genVIII=Sheen VIII
}}
 
==In the manga==
===Pokémon Adventures===
===={{MangaArc|Diamond & Pearl}}====
In ''[[PS351|Perturbed by Pachirisu]]'', one of the [[Pokémon Super Contest]] judges remarks upon the sheen of {{adv|Platinum}}'s {{TP|Platinum|Prinplup}}. In early Japanese printings and the [[Chuang Yi]] edition, this judge is [[Keira]]; in later Japanese printings and the [[VIZ Media]] edition, this judge is [[Jordan]].
 
==In other languages==
{{langtable|color={{contest color light}}|bordercolor={{contest color}}
|zh_yue=光澤 ''{{tt|Gwōngjaahk|Sheen}}''
|zh_cmn=光澤 / 光泽 ''{{tt|Guāngzé|Sheen}}'' {{tt|*|Games}}<br>毛色 ''{{tt|Máosè|Fur color}}'' {{tt|*|Manga}}
|fr=Lustre
|de=Glanz
|it=Lucentezza ({{gen|VIII}})<br>Lustro ({{gen|IV}})
|ko=털색 ''{{tt|Teolsaek|Fur color}}''
|pt_br=Brilho
|es=Brillo
}}
{{Project Games notice|game mechanic}}
 
[[Category:Game mechanics]]
 
[[it:Lucentezza]]
[[ja:けづや]]
[[zh:光澤]]

Latest revision as of 23:21, 29 October 2023

Sheen (Japanese: けづや fur sheen) is a property of a Pokémon in the Generation III, IV, and VIII core series games. It affects the score a Pokémon receives in the primary judging of a Pokémon Contest, the Visual Competition in a Pokémon Super Contest, or the Visual Evaluation in a Super Contest Show.

Terminology

Sheen was not named in-game until Generation IV, although its Japanese name is present in debug text in Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire.

In the core series games

All Pokémon initially have sheen of 0, except Pokémon received in in-game trades in the handheld Generation III games, which begin with a sheen of 10.

When a Pokémon eats a Pokéblock or Poffin, that food item's feel or smoothness is added to the Pokémon's sheen, up to a maximum of 255. In Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver, having the haircut brothers or Daisy Oak groom a Pokémon also increases its sheen. If a Pokémon's sheen would exceed 255, it becomes 255 instead (the Pokémon's condition is still increased as normal). Note that Pokéblocks in Pokémon Omega Ruby and Alpha Sapphire neither affect nor are affected by sheen.

A Pokémon with 255 sheen cannot eat any more Pokéblocks or Poffins in the Generation III, IV, or VIII games. Sheen is permanent and cannot be decreased or reset, and is retained even when a Pokémon is traded or transferred to a game where sheen has no effect. Therefore, a Pokémon can be fed more Pokéblocks or Poffins that have low smoothness.

Checking sheen

Sheen is displayed on the same screen as a Pokémon's condition, located in the PokéNav in Pokémon Ruby, Sapphire, and Emerald and the Pokémon's summary screen in Pokémon Diamond, Pearl, Platinum, Brilliant Diamond, and Shining Pearl as a series of sparkles.

Generation III
Sparkles Sheen
1 0-28
2 29-57
3 58-86
4 87-115
5 116-144
6 145-173
7 174-202
8 203-231
9 232-254
10 255
Generation IV/VIII
Sparkles Sheen
0 0-21
1 22-42
2 43-63
3 64-85
4 86-106
5 107-127
6 128-149
7 150-170
8 171-191
9 192-213
10 214-234
11 235-254
12 255

These relationships can be expressed as the following formulas:

  • Generation III:
  • Generation IV/VIII:

Gallery

In the manga

Pokémon Adventures

Diamond & Pearl arc

In Perturbed by Pachirisu, one of the Pokémon Super Contest judges remarks upon the sheen of Platinum's Prinplup. In early Japanese printings and the Chuang Yi edition, this judge is Keira; in later Japanese printings and the VIZ Media edition, this judge is Jordan.

In other languages

Language Title
Chinese Cantonese 光澤 Gwōngjaahk
Mandarin 光澤 / 光泽 Guāngzé *
毛色 Máosè *
France Flag.png French Lustre
Germany Flag.png German Glanz
Italy Flag.png Italian Lucentezza (VIII)
Lustro (IV)
South Korea Flag.png Korean 털색 Teolsaek
Brazil Flag.png Brazilian Portuguese Brilho
Spain Flag.png Spanish Brillo
Project Games logo.png This game mechanic article is part of Project Games, a Bulbapedia project that aims to write comprehensive articles on the Pokémon games.