The entire Pokemon series is a completionist's dream – with the whole concept being to, y'know, catch 'em all, there's always plenty to do for those dedicated enough to fill out their entire Pokedex. But what if you wanted to take things a step further?
Well, that's exactly what content creator 40 Cakes is doing in Pokemon Emerald. Since January 1, 2023, they've had a bot running 24 hours a day in an attempt to complete a Professor Oak's Living Shiny Dex challenge. A mouthful of a name, but it essentially means that before each gym badge, they must find every single possible shiny Pokemon (rare, alternate color palette Pokemon), with the goal of owning one of everything in sparkly form. They can't catch just one shiny Poochyena, for example, because they need to own both a Poochyena and its evolution, Mightyena. If it's possible to obtain something before a badge, it's got to be collected at that point.
You might think that employing a bot to do all of these random encounters and catch the shinies would make the challenge redundant, but I promise that's absolutely not the case. In fact, the whole concept is so difficult that only now, almost 20 months in, it's become possible for 40 Cakes to take on the first gym. Their bot found hundreds of shinies in that time, though, so what was the problem?
The answer lies with one ridiculously rare, weak Grass-type that lurks in Route 102 – Seedot. For some reason, Seedot only has a 1% encounter rate, which makes it hard to come by at the best of times, but when you're looking for a sparkly one in a game with 1/8192 shiny odds, that means you're looking at a 1/819,200 chance to find just one of them. Before they could enter the first gym, 40 Cakes unfortunately had to find two so that they could add shiny Nuzleaf (its first evolution) to their collection. It took 457 shinies before this second acorn eventually showed up, appearing after a grand total of 3,848,934 encounters and over a year after the first one.
After a FULL
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