Pokémon Egg

From Bulbapedia, the community-driven Pokémon encyclopedia.
Revision as of 13:01, 9 September 2024 by Rockapheller (talk | contribs) (→‎Trivia)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigationJump to search
If you were looking for the sandwich ingredient, see Egg (item). For the curry ingredient, see Boiled Egg.
For the Egg-related glitches, see Glitch Egg and Bad Egg.
Eggs of Togepi and Elekid
A Larvesta hatching from its Egg

A Pokémon Egg (Japanese: ポケモンのタマゴ Pokémon Egg) is an object from which most Pokémon are known to hatch. Pokémon Eggs have appeared in all core series games where Pokémon breeding has been available, and were a major plot point in Generation II, in which they were introduced. They have also appeared in several spin-off games.

In some anime and manga appearances, an Egg's shell will have a pattern that reflects the appearance of the Pokémon inside.

In the core series games

Pokémon Eggs are produced by breeding two Pokémon of a compatible Egg Group and opposite gender together and will contain, by default, the lowest species in the evolutionary line of the mother. According to a girl in Solaceon Town, where one of many Pokémon Day Cares are located, no one has ever seen a Pokémon lay an Egg, and thus, it is not confirmed that this is how they appear. According to Professor Elm, as quoted by a man in Hearthome City, and a Monsieur in Coumarine City, Eggs are not actually eggs and are more like "cradles".

Some Pokémon, known as baby Pokémon, are also found by hatching them from an Egg created by their evolved forms, either naturally or through use of a held incense. Unlike other species which cannot breed, baby Pokémon evolve into species which can do so. In the games, Legendary Pokémon cannot breed in captivity, and only two Mythical PokémonManaphy and Phione—are capable of breeding, both producing Phione Eggs when bred with Ditto.

Mechanics

An Egg's status screen in Generation II

The amount of time left until a Pokémon hatches from its Egg is determined by the number of Egg cycles (which are measured in steps) that the player walks when it is in the party (including movement on a Bicycle or while Surfing). In-game time has no direct bearing on Egg hatching.

Eggs utilize the same memory allocation as Pokémon, so the coding structure is very similar. What would be the friendship value in a Pokémon is the Egg cycle count for an Egg. Unlike friendship, this value counts down at the end of every Egg cycle.

From Generation V to VIII, an Egg will hatch when its Egg cycle count reaches zero. If multiple Eggs become ready to hatch at the same time, the first Egg in the party will hatch first while each subsequent Egg will hatch with each subsequent step. In Pokémon Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl, each subsequent eggs will hatch back to back (due to the textbox with the "Oh?" message immediately apperaing when brought back in the overworld after hatching an egg) instead.

In Generations III, IV and Pokémon Scarlet and Violet, an Egg will only hatch if its Egg cycle count is zero before an Egg cycle ends (meaning that an extra Egg cycle must be walked). Only one Egg can hatch per Egg cycle, since Eggs are processed in order and if one hatches, any remaining Eggs are not touched.

Generation II is like Generations III and IV except that an Egg will hatch when its Egg cycle count reaches zero.

In Pokémon Scarlet and Violet, an Egg will not hatch when climbing, gliding or flying with Koraidon or Miraidon.

The number of Egg cycles that an Egg has left determines the text that is shown on its status screen.

Generation II

A pre-release image of an Egg hatching in Pokémon Gold and Silver

Generation II introduced the system of Egg creation and hatching that would continue, much unaltered, to the present. The first Pokémon Egg obtainable by the player in the series was a Key Item given by Mr. Pokémon in Pokémon Gold, Silver, and Crystal. The Mystery Egg is to be delivered to Professor Elm in New Bark Town; he will then study it and have one of his aides return it to the player in the Violet City Pokémon Center.

Elm's studies show that when a Pokémon Egg is carried with a Trainer with a party of lively Pokémon, it will eventually hatch. This is easily proven, as some time after the Egg is given, if it is kept in the party, it will hatch into a Togepi.

The player reaching the Daycare on Route 34 marks where the game mechanics of breeding are truly introduced. Though unrevealed in the games (and only ever truly shown by Pokémon Stadium 2 and Pokédex 3D), Pokémon belong to one or two of fifteen Egg Groups, and those which share an Egg Group and are of opposite gender are capable of breeding. Pokémon without gender can be bred with a Ditto, as can any other Pokémon not in the No Eggs Discovered Group. Pokémon in the No Eggs Discovered Group will not breed with any Pokémon or produce any Eggs.

Pokémon that hatch from an Egg will come out at level 5, having whatever moves their species can learn by that level, any move both parents know that the hatched Pokémon can learn through level-up, any TM or HM moves they are compatible with that were known by their father, and any Egg Moves their father passed down. The father's moves take priority over the moves the species would usually have at that level.

These are the only games in which an Egg's status screen differs considerably from that of a normal Pokémon, as all later games use either a modified version of the Pokémon status screen of that game (as is the case in Generation III), or the same status screen, minus some pages (as is the case in Generation IV, V, and VII).

Generation III

Generation III retained much of the system introduced in Generation II, with only one major change: incenses are introduced that, if held by the appropriate Pokémon, will cause them to produce Eggs that hatch into new baby Pokémon (who were introduced in this generation). There are incenses for Marill's and Wobbuffet's evolutionary lines, which allow them to produce Eggs that hatch into Azurill and Wynaut respectively. Presumably, these incenses are meant to keep the results of breeding consistent across generations while still allowing earlier evolutions to be introduced.

All other mechanics present in Generation II are present in Generation III, including the system for hatching Eggs, except that Eggs require an extra Egg cycle to hatch. Egg Groups now have more members, but the groups themselves number the same as in Generation II, and no Pokémon have changed groups.

In Pokémon Emerald, several more mechanics were added. A Pokémon's Nature could be influenced if its mother held an Everstone while in the Day Care, while Pokémon with Magma Armor or Flame Body shorten the hatching process if they are in the party with Eggs.

In Generation III, a Pokémon Egg's type is listed as ???.

No Eggs can be obtained from or traded to Pokémon Colosseum or XD.

Generation IV

050Diglett.png This section is incomplete.
Please feel free to edit this section to add missing information and complete it.
Reason: Manaphy Egg in Ranch

Generation IV expanded on the mechanics found in Emerald, making them standard to the series, as well as added more baby Pokémon only obtainable through incense breeding. A new mechanic is that either parent can now pass down its nature to its offspring if it holds an Everstone. In addition to this, Pokémon Eggs now hatch at level 1. This would have been possible in Generation III as well, but was not in Generation II due to a glitch in the programming that caused level 1 "Medium Slow" Pokémon to jump to level 100 instantly when leveled up.

A minor change in mechanics from Generation III causes Eggs to hatch slightly earlier, with the length of an Egg cycle dropping from 256 to 255 steps. The Manaphy Egg obtainable from Ranger games has its own sprite that is different from other, normal Eggs' sprites.

Trainers can use the Pokétch Day-Care Checker app to check whether or not an Egg has been produced, unlike in previous generations, where Trainers attempting to breed two Pokémon would need to stay near the Day Care if they wished to get an Egg as soon as it was ready.

Eggs may also be transferred to My Pokémon Ranch, but they will not hatch as long as they are kept in the game. When the ranch reaches the maximum level (level 25, requiring 999 Pokémon to be present in the ranch), Hayley will offer to trade any Pokémon Egg for her Mew.

In Pokémon Diamond, Pearl, and Platinum, Eggs can be given a spa treatment at the Ribbon Syndicate building. This will cause the Egg to have an increased friendship upon hatching. However, Eggs cannot be given massages; if attempted, the Massage Girl will exclaim, "That's silly! I'd break that Egg if I tried to massage it!"

Special dates

In the Generation IV games, Egg cycles are reduced from 255 steps to 230 steps on certain days. For example, on a reduced-cycle day, a Magikarp will take 1380 steps to hatch instead of 1530 steps.

Date Significance Games
 D  P   Pt   HG  SS 
January 12 Junichi Masuda's birthday
February 14 Valentine's Day
March 3 Hinamatsuri
April 1 School entrance ceremony
May 1 May Day
June 11 Unknown
July 7 Tanabata
August 21 Unknown
September 7 Pokémon Anime premier in North America
September 28 Pokémon Diamond and Pearl release date
October 31 Halloween
November 21 Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire release date
December 14 Pokémon Crystal release date
December 24 Christmas Eve
December 25 Christmas Day

Generation V

Building on the mechanics introduced in HeartGold and SoulSilver, Generation V makes it possible for female Pokémon with a Hidden Ability to pass on their Hidden Ability to their offspring, unless the father is a Ditto. The Manaphy Egg is found in the coding of Black and White, but was not used.

A significant change to the mechanics of Egg cycles in Generation IV causes Eggs to hatch at earlier times; Eggs now hatch when their Egg cycle count drops from 1 to 0, rather than when it is 0 at the end of an Egg cycle, effectively reducing the number of Egg cycles that need to be walked by 1. The length of an Egg cycle was also increased from 255 to 257 steps, but this effect is overshadowed by the change in the hatching trigger.

Generation VI

Again expanding on mechanics from previous games, Generation VI builds upon the mechanics from Generation V by allowing mothers to pass on Egg Moves and Poké Balls, removing the ability to pass on TMs and HMs from the father, and allowing any Pokémon to pass down Hidden Abilities when bred with Ditto. Another new mechanic is the ability for the parents to pass down five IVs if one of them holds a Destiny Knot.

Generation VII

Again expanding on mechanics from previous games, Generation VII builds upon the mechanics from Generation VI by allowing fathers to pass on Poké Balls when bred with Ditto and randomizing which Poké Ball is passed down when two Pokémon of the same species breed and they are in different balls.

Generation VIII

Again expanding on mechanics from previous games, Generation VIII builds upon the mechanics from Generation VII by allowing two Pokémon to pass Egg Moves to each other if one knows the move and the other has an open move slot for it.

Generation IX

In Pokémon Scarlet and Violet, Eggs can be found during Picnics. Species that produced different baby Pokémon if holding an incense now produce these baby Pokémon naturally. No longer necessary, incenses have been removed from the game.

In some cases that the game may crash, Shiny Pokémon that are hatched from the Eggs can appear again, but only if the game was saved before the Egg is hatched and it is in the player's party.

Eggs received from in-game events

Main article: List of Pokémon Eggs from in-game events

In several core series games,the player is able to obtain Pokémon Eggs from certain non-player characters.

In the Generation I games, their Generation VII remakes, and in Legends: Arceus, there are no Pokémon Eggs due to the absence of the breeding mechanic. In Pokémon X, Y, Sword, and Shield, the breeding mechanic is available but no Eggs are received from in-game events.

Some Eggs can also be received in Pokémon Box Ruby & Sapphire and transferred to the Generation III games.

Appearance

Spr 2g Egg.png Spr 3r Egg.png Spr 3e Egg.png Spr 4d Egg.png Spr 5b Egg.png Spr b 5b Egg.png Spr 6x Egg.png Egg LGPE Model.png HOMEEgg.png
Image from
Generation II
Image from
Pokémon Ruby, Sapphire, FireRed and LeafGreen
Image from
Pokémon Emerald
Image from
Generation IV
Image from
Generation V (front)
Image from
Generation V (back)
Image from
Generations VI and VII
(Unused) Image from
Let's Go Pikachu and Eevee
Image from
Pokémon HOME
MS Egg II.png AniMS Egg II.png EggMS3.pngEgg Mystery Egg EggMS6.png EggMS8.png EggMSBDSP.png Menu LA Egg.png Menu SV Egg.png Menu HOME Egg.png
Menu sprites from
Generation II
Menu sprites from
Generations III, IV, and V
Mystery Egg sprite from
HeartGold and SoulSilver
Menu sprite from
Generations VI and VII
Menu sprite from
Sword and Shield
Menu sprite from
Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl
Dummied-out menu sprite from
Legends: Arceus
Menu sprite from
Scarlet and Violet
Menu sprite from
HOME

Manaphy Egg

Spr 4d ManaphyEgg.png Spr 5b ManaphyEgg.png ManaphyEggManaphyEgg ManaphyEggMSBDSP.png HOMEManaphyEgg.png
A Manaphy Egg from
Generation IV
A Manaphy Egg from
Generation V
Manaphy Egg menu sprites from
Generations IV and V
Manaphy Egg menu sprite from
Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl
Manaphy Egg model
from HOME

In the side series games

Pokémon Stadium 2

Egg
050Diglett.png This section is incomplete.
Please feel free to edit this section to add missing information and complete it.
Reason: Add image of a Shiny Egg in comparison to non-Shiny Eggs in the Pokémon Lab from Pokémon Stadium 2

In Pokémon Stadium 2, "EGG" is considered a nickname of the Pokémon species inside. Due to Pokémon Stadium 2 hue shifting nicknamed Pokémon into different colors, Eggs get hue shifted as well. This can be seen when viewing Eggs in the Pokémon Lab. Shinies do not ever get hue shifted, and therefore, all Pokémon Eggs with a Shiny inside are the default tan color without any color change. This way, it is possible to tell if a Pokémon Egg is Shiny before it hatches.

In the spin-off games

A Togepi Egg

Hey You, Pikachu!

In Hey You, Pikachu!, a Togepi Egg can be found and hatched while completing the Pokémon Picnic missions. In Japan, this game was released before the launch of Generation II, making it the first Egg to appear in a game.

Pokémon Snap

The Eggs of the Kanto legendary birds appeared in Pokémon Snap. This was the first appearance of Pokémon Eggs outside of Japan. These Eggs could be hatched by player interaction.

  • Articuno: This Egg is in the Cave area. It is silver and has a crystalline form. It hatches with the aid of two dancing Jynx.
  • Zapdos: This Egg is in the Tunnel area. It is yellow with a jagged electric pattern on it. It hatches with the aid of a Pikachu's Thunderbolt.
  • Moltres: This Egg is in the Volcano area. It is white with a red flame design on it. It hatches when a Pester Ball or an apple knocks it into the lava.

Pokémon Puzzle Challenge

Eggs available in Puzzle Challenge

Four Eggs are available as unlockables in Pokémon Puzzle Challenge; over time, they will hatch, and the Pokémon inside are only playable in Marathon mode.

  • Magby is available after hatching the Fire Egg.
  • Elekid is available after hatching the Lightning Egg.
  • Igglybuff is available after hatching the Normal Circle Egg.
  • Cleffa is available after hatching the Normal Star Egg.

Pokémon Breeder mini

Three Eggs containing Treecko, Torchic and Mudkip are available for the player to choose between in Pokémon Breeder mini. However, these Eggs have a generic appearance, rather than their individual designs present in other media.

Pokémon Channel

050Diglett.png This section is incomplete.
Please feel free to edit this section to add missing information and complete it.
Reason: images of the following Eggs: Azurill, Sentret, and Wynaut

In Pokémon Channel, Pokémon Eggs appear on the Eggzamination: Hatch Up! channel, where the player can guess which Pokémon is within an Egg, and will win money if correct on hatching, which can take any time between 5 minutes to 24 hours. While some Pokémon hatch from plain white Eggs, a number of Eggs that have appeared in the anime are a main feature on the channel.

Pokémon that hatch from their anime Eggs include Aipom, Azurill, Bellsprout, Cleffa, Hoppip, Igglybuff, Krabby, Ledyba, Magby, Mudkip, Phanpy, Pichu, Sentret, Slowpoke, Smoochum, Swinub, Teddiursa, Togepi, Torchic, Treecko, Wooper, and Wynaut.

Pokémon that hatch from plain white Eggs include Bulbasaur, Chansey, Charmander, Chikorita, Corsola, Cubone, Diglett, Delibird, Eevee, Geodude, Girafarig, Goldeen, Hoothoot, Koffing, Mr. Mime, Natu, Poliwag, Psyduck, Remoraid, Shellder, Smeargle, Squirtle, Sudowoodo, Vulpix, and Zubat.

Pokémon Pinball: Ruby & Sapphire

Pinball RS Eggs

Eggs can be hatched while playing in Egg Mode in Pokémon Pinball: Ruby & Sapphire. While playing on the Ruby Field, hit Cyndaquil into the Egg stand three times to start heating the Egg. Hitting it once more will make the Egg hatch. Afterwards, sending the ball into the Egg stand again will lead to Aerodactyl or Totodile replacing the Egg. While playing on the Sapphire Field, send the ball through the Egg Stand to turn on one of the lights. This only works by sending the ball up the lower Egg Loop and not through Spoink launching the ball. Once all four lights are lit, the Egg will hatch the next time the ball is sent through the Egg stand. Afterwards, sending the ball through the Egg stand once more makes a new Egg appear and the process starts over. After an Egg has been hatched it must be caught by hitting it twice with the Poké Ball in less than a minute, otherwise it will go back into the Egg Stand.

Pokémon Mystery Dungeon series

In Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Time, Darkness and Sky, the player can earn Eggs as a reward for missions with a reward listed as ???. Only one Egg can be kept at a time, and will be sent to Chansey's Day Care. The Egg will hatch after a random number of days, at which point, the hatched Pokémon will ask to join the player's team, be at level 1, and know Egg Moves.

201
Spoiler warning: this article may contain major plot or ending details.
201

A Wonder Egg can be found at the end of the Surrounded Sea, which will hatch into Manaphy the next morning.

201 Spoilers end here. 201

Pokémon Battle Chess

Pokémon Battle Chess BW Version

In Pokémon Battle Chess BW Version, a Victini Egg acts as the equivalent of a king piece in chess. The Egg can take three hits before it hatches, and Victini can take one before fainting. If this Victini faints, the controlling player loses. The Egg can still be moved even while unhatched, though only when it has been damaged at least once.

Pokémon Battle Chess (Set)

In the Pokémon Battle Chess set, a Togepi Egg replaced Victini as the king piece. Both Togepi and Victini have the same rules as an Egg and when undamaged, though they have different movement and damage rules for when each has taken damaged after hatching.

Pokémon Picross

Egg puzzle in Pokémon Picross

In Pokémon Picross, a Pokémon Egg appeared as a puzzle in Area 00-03.

Pokémon GO

For current and historic lists of Eggs in Pokémon GO, see List of Eggs in Pokémon GO.

In Pokémon GO, a Pokémon Egg can be hatched by placing it inside an Egg Incubator and travelling a required distance. A player can hold a maximum of nine Eggs at once and cannot discard unhatched Eggs. In addition, if these nine slots are filled, there are three bonus Egg slots that can only hold Strange Eggs and Eggs obtained from Adventure Sync rewards. The player's travel is only counted towards hatching an Egg at low speeds (i.e. walking and running speeds). Adventure Sync allows the player's walked distance to be tracked even while the app is closed; without it, only walking while the app is open counts towards hatching Eggs.

There are five different distances which Eggs can require: 2, 5, 7, 10, and 12 km. Starting October 25, 2016, Eggs are colored based on the total distance required to hatch them: 2 km Eggs are white with green spots, 5 km Eggs are white with orange spots, 7 km Eggs are yellow with pink spots, 10 km Eggs are white with purple spots, and 12 km Eggs (also known as Strange Eggs) are white with red spots. 7 km Eggs were introduced on June 21, 2018, initially only being able to hatch into Alolan forms, but the pool has since been expanded to include baby Pokémon as well. Strange Eggs were introduced on October 12, 2020.

In December 2020, three bonus storage spaces were added. If the player already has nine Eggs, Eggs can still be received from weekly Adventure Sync rewards or from Team GO Rocket Leader battles and placed into one of these slots.

Eggs can be obtained in a variety of ways. Each of the listed methods has its own separate pool of obtainable Pokémon Eggs.

  • Spinning a PokéStop or Gym has a chance of awarding the player a 2 km, 5 km, or 10 km Egg.
  • Gifts from Friends have a chance of containing a 7 km.
  • Weekly Adventure Sync rewards may include Eggs. The player can obtain a 5 km Egg for walking 25 km and a 10 km Egg for walking 50 km.
  • Winning a battle against a Team GO Rocket Leader will award a Strange Egg (12 km Egg).

While it is not possible to know what will hatch from an Egg beforehand, an Egg's properties are determined at the time it is obtained (not when it is hatched). The hatched Pokémon's power up level will match the player's Trainer level at the time its Egg was obtained, capped at level 20. Its origin location will be the location at which the player obtained Egg; for Eggs obtained from Gifts, it will be the location at which the Friend obtained the Gift. Pokémon that are hatched from Eggs are guaranteed at least 10 IVs (out of the maximum 15) in each stat. Region-exclusive Pokémon can only be hatched from Eggs obtained in its respective region; only during the 2018 and 2019 Ultra Bonus events, region-exclusive Pokémon (i.e. Farfetch'd, Kangaskhan, Mr. Mime, and Tauros) were obtainable worldwide from 7 km Eggs. Although the possible pool of Pokémon obtainable from Eggs is occasionally updated, these changes do not affect Eggs that players already have on hand, including Event Pokémon hatched after the event when it was obtained has ended.

Hatching Eggs is the only way to obtain most baby Pokémon, along with Salandit, Varoom, Charcadet and Larvesta.

Upon hatching an Egg, a player will receive a random amount of Stardust and Candy dependent on the Egg's distance. The number of Candy received directly corresponds to the amount of Stardust received.

  • 2 to 7 km:
  • 10 km:
  • 12 km:
Distance Stardust Candy
GO Egg 2 km.png
2 km
GO Stardust icon.png400 - 800 Candy5 - 10
GO Egg 5 km.png
5 km
GO Stardust icon.png800 - 1600 Candy10 - 21
GO Egg 7 km.png
7 km
GO Stardust icon.png800 - 1600 Candy10 - 21
GO Egg 10 km.png
10 km
GO Stardust icon.png1600 - 3200 Candy16 - 32
GO Egg 12 km.png
12 km
GO Stardust icon.png3200 - 6400 Candy16 - 32

Pokémon Masters EX

Main article: Egg Pokémon (Masters)

In Pokémon Masters EX, the player character (Scottie or Bettie) can form sync pairs with Pokémon that are hatched from Eggs. Eggs can appear as random drops from certain battles, and some Eggs are available only during limited-time events.

Eevee × Tamagotchi

050Diglett.png This section is incomplete.
Please feel free to edit this section to add missing information and complete it.
Reason: Add sprite image of the egg from this game

In Eevee × Tamagotchi, the player's Eevee hatches from an Egg at the start of the game.

In the anime

Pokémon Eggs created by devolution in The Gates of Warp!

The anime was where Pokémon Eggs made their debut, with Ash's find of an Egg in Attack of the Prehistoric Pokémon predating Pokémon Snap by nearly a year. The Egg was kept safe by Brock, but unlike later episodes, was not kept in its own case. Later Eggs have been shown to be kept in a case, which includes a Poké Ball for the baby to be put into upon hatching.

In earlier anime series, Eggs are depicted with unique patterns that match the Pokémon contained within. This was changed in Pokémon Journeys: The Series, with Eggs instead being closer to the generic Egg design from the games; however, the spots on Eggs do vary in color based on the Pokémon, rather than only being green like in the games.

Aside from Togepi's Egg, which hatched similarly to a real egg, later Eggs are shown to flash white before hatching, then to glow white and transform into the Pokémon they contain, similarly to evolution. By Pokémon the Series: Black & White, hatching Eggs would be depicted as glowing and the eggshell bursting open to reveal the young Pokémon, much like in the games.

In the episode Address Unown, it was revealed that Pokémon are able to see the world outside of their Eggs. Additionally, Pokémon have been seen interacting from inside their Eggs, with Manaphy using Heart Swap on the Team Rocket trio before it even hatched (it is also implied that it was the one who gave May the dream involving the Sea Temple).

In Putting the Air Back in Aerodactyl!, a fossilized Aerodactyl Egg is shown and revealed to have been used in conjunction with an Old Amber to resurrect a living Aerodactyl.

In The Gates of Warp! and Showdown at the Gates of Warp!, Dialga and Palkia's battling, due to them both being instigated by Alternate World Team Rocket, had caused many Pokémon to devolve and turn back into Eggs. Once the crisis was resolved, Dialga and Palkia repaired the distortions and freed the Pokémon from their Egg forms, reversing the devolutions.

Pokémon hatched from Eggs

Pokémon Episode appeared
Episode hatched
Description Notes
Togepi Egg.png Misty's Togepi Attack of the Prehistoric Pokémon
Who Gets to Keep Togepi?
White with blue and red triangular spots. Found by Ash. Raised by Brock.
Phanpy Egg.png Ash's Phanpy Extreme Pokémon!
Hatching a Plan!
Light blue with no design. Given to Ash by Mr. Shellby.
Larvitar Egg.png Ash's Larvitar Lapras of Luxury
Hatch Me If You Can!
Jade green with no design. Given to Ash by Professor Elm.
May Eevee Egg.png May's Eevee May's Egg-Cellent Adventure
Time-Warp Heals All Wounds
Brown with a cream-colored zigzag stripe around its middle. Given to May by Christopher and Jeannie.
Happiny Egg.png Brock's Happiny All Dressed Up With Somewhere To Go!
One Big Happiny Family!
Light pink with a white stripe around the center and a red top. Received by Brock for winning the Pokémon Dress-Up Contest.
Cyndaquil Egg.png Dawn's Cyndaquil An Egg Scramble! Mostly green, with a cream colored bottom and three red spots near the bottom. Received by Dawn for winning the Johto Festival.
Scraggy Egg.png Ash's Scraggy Here Comes the Trubbish Squad!
Scraggy-Hatched to be Wild!
Tan with brown spots. Given to Ash by Karena.
Ash Noibat Egg.png Ash's Noibat A Not-So-Flying Start! Lavender with purple markings that resemble a Noibat's ears. Found by Ash's Hawlucha.
Ash Froakie Egg.png

Ash's Froakie

Light blue with white markings that resemble a Froakie's hands. Hatched offscreen. Shown in a flashback in Cloudy Fate, Bright Future!.
Pikipek Egg.png Ash's Rowlet Very little of the Egg was seen. Hatched offscreen. Shown in a flashback in First Catch in Alola, Ketchum-Style!.
Lillie Egg.png Snowy Lillie's Egg-xhilarating Challenge!
Racing to a Big Event!
White with a blue pattern that looked like flowers. Given to Lillie by Samson Oak.
Ash Riolu Egg.png Ash's Riolu Caring for a Mystery! Resembled an Egg from the core series games with light blue spots. The pattern of the spots was identical to all Eggs in Pokémon GO at the time of its appearance. Given to Ash by the Vermilion City Nurse Joy.
Ash Pichu Egg.png Ash's Pichu Showdown at the Gates of Warp! Resembled an Egg from the core series games with yellow spots. Devolved into an Egg due to the influence of Dialga and Palkia. Reverted back.
Ash Dratini Gastly Egg.png Ash's Dratini Showdown at the Gates of Warp! Resembled an Egg from the core series games with sky blue spots. Devolved into an Egg due to the influence of Dialga and Palkia. Reverted back.
Ash Dratini Gastly Egg.png Ash's Gastly Showdown at the Gates of Warp! Resembled an Egg from the core series games with dark purple spots. Devolved into an Egg due to the influence of Dialga and Palkia. Reverted back.
Dawn Goh Piplup Scorbunny Eggs.png Dawn's Piplup Showdown at the Gates of Warp! Resembled an Egg from the core series games with dark blue spots. Devolved into an Egg due to the influence of Dialga and Palkia. Reverted back.
Dawn Goh Piplup Scorbunny Eggs.png Goh's Scorbunny Showdown at the Gates of Warp! Resembled an Egg from the core series games with orange spots. Devolved into an Egg due to the influence of Dialga and Palkia. Reverted back.
Goh Sobble Egg.png Goh's Sobble Showdown at the Gates of Warp! Resembled an Egg from the core series games with light blue spots. Devolved into an Egg due to the influence of Dialga and Palkia. Reverted back.
Ash Goh Gastly Dratini Trapinch Aerodactyl Eggs.png Goh's Trapinch Showdown at the Gates of Warp! Resembled an Egg from the core series games with burnt-orange spots. Devolved into an Egg due to the influence of Dialga and Palkia. Reverted back.
Goh Trapinch Aerodactyl Egg.png Goh's Aerodactyl Showdown at the Gates of Warp! Resembled an Egg from the core series games with bluish-gray spots. Devolved into an Egg due to the influence of Dialga and Palkia. Reverted back.
Goh Grookey Egg.png

Goh's Grookey

Showdown at the Gates of Warp! Resembled an Egg from the core series games with lime green spots. Devolved into an Egg due to the influence of Dialga and Palkia. Reverted back.
Cynthia Gible Egg.png Cynthia's Gible Resembled an Egg from the core series games with dark blue spots. Hatched offscreen. Shown in a flashback in It's... Champion Time!.

Pokémon hatched from Eggs that were not seen

May's Eevee hatching from its Egg in Time Warp Heals All Wounds
Brock's Mudkip
Mudkip was one of the many Eggs given to Old Man Swamp to raise to be first partner Pokémon for beginning Trainers of the Hoenn region. It was eventually given to Brock due to Mudkip being too strong for a new Trainer.
Misty's Azurill
It was the offspring of Tracey's Marill, and then Tracey gave it to Misty as mentioned in The Scheme Team!, when Azurill itself first appeared.
Iris's Axew
Axew was given to Iris prior to the start of the series a few days after he had hatched.

Other Pokémon Eggs in the anime

A Mudkip hatching from its Egg in A Mudkip Mission

Pokémon Journeys: The Series & Pokémon Horizons: The Series

Eggs seen in these series feature a more standardized design, closely resembling the generic Egg designs from the core series games, albeit with the color of the spots depending on the Pokémon inside.

In the manga

Pokémon Adventures

Red, Green & Blue arc

In Sigh for Psyduck, Mr. Fuji's deceased Doduo is shown hatching from an Egg in a photograph. Notably, this was before the concept of Pokémon Eggs was introduced, and the Egg seen in the photograph was more similar to a real-life bird egg.

Gold, Silver & Crystal arc

In Teddiursa's Picnic, Gold received an Egg produced by Jasmine's two Togetic, which eventually hatched into a Togepi, nicknamed Togebo.

In Playful Porygon2, Pika and Chuchu, Red and Yellow's respective Pikachu, produced an Egg, which later hatched into Gold's Pichu, Pibu. It initially appeared as a plain Egg without a pattern, with the Pichu pattern only appearing on it shortly before it hatched.

In a flashback shown in The Last Battle XIV, Pryce's Lapras, La Glace, was shown hatching from an Egg.

Diamond & Pearl arc

In Hurrah for Rapidash, Roark's Cranidos is seen as an egg in a flashback.

In Lucky Lucario II, Riley's Riolu's Egg was put inside a cavern as a final task for Diamond during his training on Iron Island. It hatched soon after being found.

Platinum arc

In Alternate Dimension Showdown XI, Diamond was given a Manaphy Egg by Looker, who had been entrusted with it during a mission in Fiore. The Egg later hatched into Manaphy at the Pokémon Day Care. Manaphy later produced an Egg that hatched into a Phione.

HeartGold & SoulSilver arc

In All About Arceus IX, Red's Snorlax, Snor, and Emerald's Snorlax were revealed to have produced an Egg.

Gallery

Pokémon Diamond and Pearl Adventure!

Pokémon Gold & Silver: The Golden Boys

Pokémon: Yeah! I Got Pokémon!

Pokémon Pocket Monsters

In the TCG

Trivia

  • The color of a standard Pokémon Egg may be a reference to the standard Yoshi Egg, as one of its early appearances was in Yoshi, a game also developed by Game Freak.
  • The Eggs of Elekid and Magby are the only Eggs whose designs depict those of the Pokémon's evolved form, rather than the Pokémon it directly hatches into.
  • Aside from Manaphy, which is Mythical, no Pokémon that has been seen hatching from an Egg in the anime is a Pokémon that is unable to evolve.
  • Even though Eggs are incapable of battling, they have base stats programmed into the game. Each stat is 10.
  • In Ruby and Sapphire, there was a minor bug when Pokémon hatched from an Egg in another game was traded to either game. When done, the "Egg" that appears after the location where the Egg hatched in the summary will change to "met" when traded to Ruby or Sapphire. This bug was fixed in Pokémon Emerald.
    • Also in Generations III, IV, and V, when an Egg is generated, it is given the OT, ID, secret ID, and game identifier of the game which created it. This can cause an Egg which is traded to hatch Shiny and then be normally colored, or hatch normally colored, and then be Shiny. This is due to the change in OT, ID, and secret ID happening after the hatching cutscene.
    • This issue is also present if a Pokémon is traded between the main and remake games of the third and fourth generations: the game identifier is never changed, meaning that an Azurill Egg generated in Hoenn, but then traded to Kanto and hatched will, though identifying itself as having the Kanto player as its OT, still be marked as having been generated in Hoenn. When transferred via Pal Park to Generation IV, it will say that it is from Hoenn, rather than Kanto, as this is determined not by index number of the location hatched, but by game identifier. In Generation IV, this occurs between Sinnoh and Johto games when Pokémon are transferred forward to Generation V. It cannot occur between Kanto/Hoenn and Johto/Sinnoh games, however, as Pokémon Eggs cannot be transferred via Pal Park.
    • Both issues were resolved in Generation VI, where an Egg uses its current owner's OT, ID, secret ID, and game identifier while hatching.
  • The DVs of the Pokémon hatched from the Odd Egg will always be either 0/2/10/10/10 if Shiny or all 0 if non-Shiny, regardless of language version. These are the lowest possible values in Generation II for any Shiny or non-Shiny Pokémon, respectively.[1]
  • The Odd Egg always hatches with 125 experience points. This matches the base experience for the Medium Fast experience group (which includes Pichu, Tyrogue, Smoochum, Elekid and Magby in this instance), but exceeds the base experience for the Fast experience group. This makes it possible for a Cleffa or Igglybuff hatched from the Odd Egg to start with more experience points than it would normally have.
    • This, in turn, means hatching a Cleffa or Igglybuff from the Odd Egg is the only way to newly obtain a Pokémon that already has experience point progress towards its next level.
  • Prior to Generation IV, due to the fact that Pokémon hatched from Eggs at level 5, several wild Pokémon found in early routes had lower levels than newly-hatched Pokémon.

In other languages

Language Title
Japan Flag.png Japanese タマゴ Egg
Chinese Cantonese Dáan
Mandarin Dàn
Denmark Flag.png Danish Æg
The Netherlands Flag.png Dutch Ei
Finland Flag.png Finnish Muna
France Flag.png French Œuf
Germany Flag.png German Ei
India Flag.png Hindi अंडा Anda
Hungary Flag.png Hungarian Tojás
Indonesia Flag.png Indonesian Telur
Italy Flag.png Italian Uovo
South Korea Flag.png Korean Egg
Norway Flag.png Norwegian Egg
Poland Flag.png Polish Jajo
Portuguese Brazil Flag.png Brazil Ovo
Portugal Flag.png Portugal Ovo*
Russia Flag.png Russian Яйцо Yaytso
Spain Flag.png Spanish Huevo
Sweden Flag.png Swedish Ägg
Thailand Flag.png Thai ไข่ Egg
Turkey Flag.png Turkish Yumurta
Vietnam Flag.png Vietnamese Trứng Pokémon

See also

References

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.