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  2. This Bulbapedia article covers the mechanic in depth, but the TLDR is that every time the player takes around ~255 steps an Egg Cycle occurs. When an Egg Cycle occurs, every egg in the player's party has a counter that ticks down once (or twice if you have a Flame Body/Magma Armor Pokemon in your party).

  3. It could take from 1,000 to roughly 10,000 steps to hatch the egg, depending on the type of Pokémon. Daunted? Use the Bike and go back and forth withing some routes routes to the east and west.

    • Steps Per Cycle
    • Decreasing Egg Cycles
    • Quotes
    • Trivia
    • See Also

    The number of steps per Egg cycle differs between generations. 1. In Generations II, III, and VII, Egg cycles are 256 steps long. 2. In Generation IV, Egg cycles are 255 steps long. 2.1. In Pokémon Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl, Egg cycles are also 255 steps long, but are shorter on special dates. 3. In Generations V and VI, Egg cycles are 25...

    Generation IX

    Every time an Egg cycle is completed, the game goes through the Eggs in the player's party in order and performs the following: 1. If the Egg's Egg cycle count is 0, the Egg hatches and no other Eggs are processed. 2. Otherwise, subtract 1 from the Egg's cycle count.

    Generations V through VIII

    Every time an Egg cycle is completed, the Egg cycle count for all Eggs in the player's party is decreased by 1; if a Pokémon with Flame Body, Magma Armor or Steam Engineis in the party, it is instead decreased by 2 (but not to less than 0). When an Egg's Egg cycle count reaches 0, it hatches. If multiple Eggs are ready to hatch after an Egg cycle ends, the first Egg in the party will hatch immediately, while the remaining Eggs will hatch—in party order and one at a time—each time the player t...

    Generations III and IV

    Every time an Egg cycle is completed, the game goes through the Eggs in the player's party in order and performs the following: 1. If the Egg's Egg cycle count is 0, the Egg hatches and no other Eggs are processed. 2. Otherwise, subtract 1 from the Egg's cycle count. 2.1. In Pokémon Emerald or Generation IV games, if a Pokémon with Flame Body or Magma Armoris in the party, subtract 2 instead of 1 (but to no less than 0). As a consequence of this logic, in order to hatch a given Egg, the playe...

    The quote shown from the table below depends solely on the Egg cycle value in the Egg's Pokémon data structure. That is, since, in Generations III and IV, the number of Egg cycles remaining for the player to walk before an Egg hatches is one greater than the value in the Egg's data structure, the maximum number of Egg cycles the player must walk is...

    In the Pokémon data structure, the number of Egg cycles required to hatch an Egg is stored in the same field that stores the friendshipof Pokémon that are not in Eggs.
    The only Pokémon species with more than 40 Egg cycles are those in the No Eggs Discovered Egg Group, and therefore those Eggs cannot be obtained legitimately. However, the Wynaut and Togepi Eggs re...
  4. May 3, 2018 · Example: you get an egg with 15 egg cycles and you walk 257 steps. Its egg cycle will have gone down to 14. Then you walk 256 steps to the PC and deposit the egg. Then you walk 1 more step - now another egg cycle triggers, but the egg is in the PC so it stays at 14.

  5. An egg cycle is composed of 257 steps (in Generation V and on), so a Meowth egg should take 257*20 or 5140 steps to hatch. Serebii refers to this number as Base Egg Steps.

  6. If you go to the south end of Goldenrod, and bump up against the inner-right side of the arch, you can ride straight north and south for a number of steps-85 to be exact-without worrying...

  7. 128 x Egg Cycles. Example: 128 x 40 = 5,120 steps. When the Egg Cycle is at 0 and you run one more cycle the egg will hatch. The abilities Flame Body, Magma Armor & Steam Engine tick the Cycle down by 2 instead of 1.

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