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How to breed amazing Pokémon in Scarlet and Violet

What you need to know about finding eggs, hatching them, and maxing out stats

A Pokémon egg hatches in the middle of a city. A trainer stares at it in awe Image: Game Freak/The Pokémon Company, Nintendo via Polygon
Kallie Plagge is Polygon’s senior copy editor. She began writing about games in 2014, and has covered beats from Pokémon and RPGs to first-person shooters.

Breeding is a key part of the main Pokémon series, whether you’re hatching eggs to complete your Pokédex or crafting a competitive-worthy team with flawless stats. While the main breeding mechanics have stayed the same since their introduction in Gold and Silver, Pokémon Scarlet and Violet make a few key changes. Our Pokémon Scarlet and Violet eggs and breeding guide outlines how to get and hatch eggs, the items you’ll need for breeding, and how to breed the best possible Pokémon.

Which Pokémon can breed?

Pokémon are compatible if they share an Egg Group and are opposite genders; the resulting egg will be the same species as the female parent.

Alternatively, you can pair a Pokémon of any gender with a Ditto to breed more of the non-Ditto Pokémon, and this is the only way to breed genderless Pokémon, like Voltorb, or Pokémon that can only be male. Keep in mind that certain Pokémon, including some genderless Pokémon and most legendaries and mythical Pokémon, are in the “undiscovered” Egg Group and can’t breed at all.

How to get Pokémon eggs in Scarlet and Violet

In a major change from previous Pokémon games, there’s no Day Care where you can leave two Pokémon to generate eggs. Instead, you can find eggs while on a picnic.

Make sure you have two compatible Pokémon in your party — it’s easiest if you put the other four in your Pokémon boxes, which you can access from the menu — and set up a picnic. The next step is to wait! Walk around, make a sandwich, hang out. After some time has passed, Pokémon eggs should appear in the basket near your picnic table. Press A near the basket to collect the eggs, which will be sent to your Pokémon boxes.

You can increase the spawn rate of eggs by eating a meal with the Egg Power bonus. Restaurants around Paldea will sell food with this meal power, and you can also make sandwiches with the Egg Power effect yourself during the picnic.

A Zangoose and Ditto enjoy a nice picnic together in a brown and orange forest Image: Game Freak/The Pokémon Company, Nintendo via Polygon

How to hatch eggs

Once you’ve collected some eggs, it’s time to hatch them. To do this, simply put the eggs in your party and walk (or ride Koraidon/Miraidon) around. (Some species take longer to hatch than others, so remember to be patient.) Keep in mind that you’ll need at least one non-egg Pokémon in your party at all times, and unlike with collecting eggs, you do actually have to move around to hatch them — idling doesn’t count.

To speed up the hatching process, you can include a Pokémon with the Flame Body, Magma Armor, or Steam Engine Abilities in your party. The most efficient way to hatch eggs is to limit your party so it’s just this Pokémon, with eggs taking up the remaining five slots. The Egg Power bonus will also make eggs hatch faster, so try to hatch eggs while the bonus is still active.

Pokémon in Scarlet and Violet that can have Flame Body, Magma Armor, and/or Steam Engine:

  • Fletchinder and Talonflame
  • Larvesta and Volcarona
  • Rolycoly, Carkol, and Coalossal
  • Camerupt

How to learn Egg Moves and where to get Mirror Herb

Scarlet and Violet also make a convenient change to Egg Moves, or moves that a Pokémon could previously only learn through breeding. Like breeding itself, it’s also tied to picnics, and you’ll need a brand-new item, the Mirror Herb, to make it work.

In your party, include a Pokémon that knows the desired Egg Move and the Pokémon you want to teach the Egg Move to. Make sure the Pokémon that wants to learn the Egg Move has an empty move slot — you can forget a move from the Pokémon’s summary screen at any time — and give that Pokémon a Mirror Herb to hold, then set up a picnic. The Pokémon holding Mirror Herb can learn any Egg Move its species is able to learn from any other Pokémon in your party, even if they’re the same gender, different species, or in different Egg Groups. This way, you don’t have to breed a brand-new Pokémon just for the Egg Move, and it should be instant, so you don’t have to wait around for anything to happen.

You can buy a Mirror Herb from the Delibird Presents store on the second level of Cascarrafa. They’re listed under “Battle items,” and each one costs 30,000. In battle, these are single-use items, so be sure to unequip it before battling so you don’t lose it!

An in-game Violet and Scarlet shop menu, noting where the Mirror Herb is, which is a green leaf Image: Game Freak/The Pokémon Company, Nintendo via Polygon

Helpful items for breeding Pokémon

Like in previous games, the parent Pokémon can hold items to affect what’s passed down to the resulting eggs. These items include the Everstone and the Destiny Knot, and using them is the most effective way to breed a Pokémon with the stats and nature you want.

A parent holding an Everstone will pass its nature, which affects how its stats develop, to the resulting Pokémon. Giving the other parent a Destiny Knot to hold will ensure that five IVs (or base stats) will be passed down from the parents’ collective 12 base stats, meaning only one stat will be randomized rather than several.

With or without held items, eggs will inherit:

  • IVs, though without a Destiny Knot, more base stats will be randomized
  • Ability, though it’s not a 100% chance if the Pokémon has more than one possible Ability; Hidden Ability is inherited from the female parent unless breeding with Ditto
  • Most types of Poké Ball — female’s if the species are different; 50/50 chance of either parent’s if the species is the same; non-Ditto parent’s if paired with Ditto
  • Egg Moves, as well as certain moves in the Pokémon’s usual movepool

Eggs do not inherit:

  • EVs (effort values, which affect stat growth and are separate from base stats)
  • Nature, if neither parent is holding an Everstone
  • Master Ball and Cherish Ball; the resulting Pokémon will have a regular Poké Ball instead

Getting the baby Pokémon from eggs

Note that in a change from previous games, you no longer need Incense items to breed the “baby” Pokémon, like Azurill and Bonsly, from their respective evolutions, like Marill and Sudowoodo. Instead, all eggs from these Pokémon will hatch as the baby, or pre-evolution.

For example, in past games, breeding Marill or Azumarill without the Sea Incense item would result in Marill eggs, rather than Marill’s pre-evolution, Azurill. Now, every egg from a Marill or Azumarill will hatch into an Azurill, so you don’t have to sacrifice an Everstone or Destiny Knot to breed the baby Pokémon.

Shiny hunting with the Masuda method

As Jacq alludes to during one biology lesson, the Masuda method still exists in Scarlet and Violet. If you pair two compatible Pokémon from different-language versions of the game, the resulting eggs have an increased chance of being shiny. This stacks with the Shiny Charm to improve your shiny odds while breeding.

How to pick your parent Pokémon

When breeding Pokémon, it helps to start with good parents. Tera Raid battles, particularly 5- and 6-star ones, are the most efficient way to find Pokémon with several perfect stats (and maybe some Egg Moves), and Terastal Pokémon you find in the wild will also have a few perfect stats. On the other hand, regular wild Pokémon are unlikely to have good stats.

First, you’ll want to check the base stats (IVs) of the parent Pokémon. You can check IVs once you’ve finished all the story quests and seen the game’s credits; talk to the woman at any Pokémon Center, who will tell you about the “Judge function” in your Pokémon boxes. Once you’ve unlocked the Judge function, you can press the Plus button while viewing any Pokémon in your boxes to change the view to its IVs. Our full IV training guide has more details about how this works.

For a Special Attacker, for example, you’ll want at least one parent to have a perfect Special Attack IV (and ideally a few other perfect IVs). You also want to make sure one of the parents has the nature you’d like the resulting Pokémon to have; in the Special Attacker example, you might want the Modest nature, which increases Special Attack and lowers Attack, since that Pokémon wouldn’t need a good Attack stat. The parent with the correct nature will hold the Everstone when breeding, while the other Pokémon gets the Destiny Knot.

As you breed, you’ll hatch better and better Pokémon. You can swap out one parent for another with better stats as you go.

The next level of puzzles.

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