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Fripside Split Tears Rarity

Before today, little was known about what species might hatch from an egg. Fortunately, the Silph Research Group has just cracked a major piece of the puzzle! It is the conclusion of the Silph Research Group that:Egg species is determined according to hidden rarity ‘tiers’ that are not the same as the egg distance tiers (i.e.

  1. Fripside Split Tears Rarity Lyrics
  2. Fripside Split Tears Rarity Video
Fripside Split Tears Rarity

2 km, 5 km, 10 km).In simple English, this means that not all 10 km egg species are rarer than 2 km egg species or 5 km egg species. A simple example of this is that Dratini is presently a very common hatch, despite being in 10 km eggs. It is currently easier to acquire a 10 km egg with a Dratini inside than a 2 km egg with a Machop inside.We’ll take it one step further and show the tiers we believe we have identified and the species therein. THE DATAOur researchers have been collecting egg data for many months and have observed several changes to the egg species distribution. For this study, we focus on eggs acquired after Halloween.5,945 eggs were collected post-Halloween before the launch of Gen II. Here is the breakdown in frequency, by species.

FINDINGSThe above visual immediately hints at the tiered nature of egg species distribution. Additional analysis leads us to believe that there are four rarity tiers at play, each 2x as common as the one before, which we have named:. COMMON. UNCOMMON. RARE. ULTRA-RAREThe average hatch rate in each group almost perfectly follows a ratio of 1:2:4:8. The split of RARE and ULTRA-RARE unfortunately isn’t as evident in this graph.

Fripside Split Tears Rarity Lyrics

However, when combining these two groups, the frequency counts do not seem to follow a binomial distribution. Note 2With the 1:2:4:8 ratio in mind, Silph Researchers examined known periods of changes to egg rarity, to confirm whether the rarity tiers held – they do.So which species are in which tier? Pre-Gen II, this breakdown looked like this. Ultra-Rare (Pre-Gen II)1/312 = 0.32% ChanceSO WHAT ABOUT NOW? (GEN II?)Though Gen II has only been live for a few weeks, the Silph Research Group has been hard at work cracking the new rarity tier distribution.

At time of publication, we have collected 2,514 eggs, which is sufficient to be confident in the COMMON / UNCOMMON tier species, with a few final ambiguities in the RARE and ULTRA-RARE tiers.For those curious at how the data is shaping up, however, here is our best guess at this point: RARITY TIERSPECIES. Common8/315 = 2.54%Uncommon4/315 = 1.27%Rare2/315 = 0.63%Ultra-Rare1/315 = 0.32%PARTING WORDSThese rarity tiers represent a major breakthrough in our understanding of egg species, travelers. Not only does this knowledge impact buddy selection criteria (e.g. Dratini is likely to hatch – there’s now much less need to walk yours!), but it helps place far less significance on the 2 km, 5 km, or 10 km egg attribute as a whole.Best of luck in your egg hatching endeavors, travelers!NOTESNote 1:Are eggs still possibly influenced by biome?This new information casts new light on previous egg species distribution hypotheses.

In our opinion, it is highly unlikely that these large gaps in the frequency counts would appear if our researchers were drawing from clearly distinct distributions.Notably, these gaps are only visible now because of this larger sample size and the fact that dilution from the high volume of Pidgey/Magikarp/etc. Has been removed.We do not currently believe biome is influencing egg species – but more research is needed!Note 2:Why are the RARE and ULTRA-RARE tiers difficult to distinguish?

Fripside Split Tears Rarity Video

Is it possible there are only 3 tiers?Despite examining many thousands of eggs in this ongoing research, RARE and ULTRA-RARE eggs are rare! So the sample sizes for these two groups are still much smaller than the more common tiers.

As more data pours in, these tiers will become more defined, as the COMMON and UNCOMMON tiers are now.As for alternative relative frequencies – we have attempted to combine the RARE and ULTRA-RAREgroups. In this case the ratio between the RARE, UNCOMMON and COMMON groups would be approximated well by 1:3:6. However the observed frequency counts of the rare group do not seem to follow a binomial distribution. Here is a plot of the (sorted) cumulative binomial probabilities of the frequency counts of all species in this combined group. Rare Binomial DistributionNote 3:History of changes to the rarity tiers:Over the past several months, the Silph Research Group has observed multiple changes to the egg rarity tiers. Here is a list of known events which disrupted the previous tier distribution: EVENTEFFECTHalloweenRattata and Pidgey no longer hatched.

Split

These 2 Pokemon belonged to a fifth egg group of very common Pokemon which seems to have hatched in a ratio of 1:2:4:8:16. Unfortunately not enough data is available to confirm the exact ratio apart from the fact that 6 Pokemon hatched significantly more often than the current common ones. The 4 other Pokemon belonging to this group got moved to the common group: Weedle, Zubat, Magikarp and Caterpie.Introduction of Baby Pokemon6 Pokemon stopped hatching: Pikachu, Clefairy, Jigglypuff, Jynx, Electabuzz and Magmar. Six babies replaced them: Pichu, Cleffa, Igglybuff, Smoochum, Elekid and Magby. The egg group of the evolved form was the same as the current egg group of the baby.

A 7th baby Pokemon was added to the rare egg group: Togepi.Christmas Event – Babies spawn more oftenThis event gave a rare glimpse into Niantic handling a temporary change in spawns for individual eggs. All 7 baby Pokemon changed their egg group from rare or uncommon to common.Post ChristmasAll 7 baby Pokemon change back to their former egg groups (needs confirmation).Valentine’s EventSpearow and Zubat no longer hatch. All uncommon pink Pokemon hatch as common Pokemon, rare and ultra-rare pink Pokemon also appear to hatch more often. All other Pokemon seem to be unchanged in their egg groups.UnknownIt is unknown when regional Pokemon stopped hatching. Some very early data (non-TSR) seems to indicate that there has been at least one undocumented change in egg groups between the start of the game and Halloween.Note 4:Anecdotal reports which support this discovery:Several unofficial research efforts to learn more about egg species have been conducted by Silph Road travelers outside the Silph Research Group.