As a side note, I am not interested on the ethnicity of this glitch. Which finally brings me to the point of this post: a collection of information, inquiries, and experiences using Glitzer Popping to more accurately create Pokémon. Although I am no programming genius, it would seem that there would be a way to manipulate the corruption accurately. However, as most of us know, Pokémon RNGs aren't actually random. It is a very touchie process and, as Werster stated in a video, seemingly random. Theoretically, by using Glitzer Popping, a player is able to corrupt the data of Pokémon within the first two PC boxes, altering the Pokémon substructures, essentially allowing any Pokémon, any item, and/or any move to be generated. Seeing how I only have the Emerald cartridge, over a decade after Nintendo events, and no hacking devices, glitches seem to be the only chance I have at doing this.Īfter doing quite a bit of research I found out about Glitzer Popping (a pleasant sounding term Werster created to avoid cliché "mew glitch/celebi glitch" titles), a sub-glitch of the Pomeg Berry glitch. Now, after beating the Hoenn Elite Four and playing around at the Battle Frontier, my achievement hunter urge kicked in and I wanted to complete the Pokédexes. I am sure that this is an older subject for most, but I have only recently began my adventure into the third generation.
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