Safari Zone

serebii safari zone gen 1

A Safari Zone (Japanese: サファリゾーン Safari Zone ) is a special Pokémon preserve where Trainers can enter and participate in the Safari Game (Japanese: サファリゲーム Safari Game ) to catch rare wild Pokémon .

Safari Zones can be found in the following regions :

  • The Safari Zone in Kanto , located north of Fuchsia City .
  • The Safari Zone in Johto , located north of Route 48 beyond the Safari Zone Gate in Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver .
  • The Safari Zone in Hoenn , located north of Route 121 .
  • The Great Marsh in Sinnoh , located north of Pastoria City .
  • 1.1 Differences between games
  • 1.2 Similar examples
  • 3 In other languages

In the games

serebii safari zone gen 1

The mechanics of the Safari Zones are similar to each other. Most have a $ 500 entry fee, a step limit, a series of distinct areas with different wild Pokémon in each, and 30 Safari Balls , with which players may catch the Pokémon they come upon. The most important of their specific mechanics, however, is that Trainers do not initiate Pokémon battles with the wild Pokémon, but instead must catch them without battling them. The wild Pokémon within Safari Zones are capable of fleeing at any given time.

Differences between games

  • The Johto Safari Zone has no step limit.
  • In Pokémon Omega Ruby and Alpha Sapphire , the Hoenn Safari Zone does not use typical Safari Zone mechanics, instead functioning like normal routes .
  • Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee! effectively do not have a Safari Zone; the area that used to be the Safari Zone is replaced with GO Park , while the zoo area in front is referred to as the "Safari Zone" instead.

Similar examples

  • Johto 's National Park is somewhat similar to a Safari Zone, being a nature preserve for Pokémon and having a thrice-weekly Bug-Catching Contest which shares several aspects with a Safari Game.
  • Kalos 's Friend Safari area, located in Kiloude City , also bears some similarities with Safari Zones, differing in the available wild Pokémon (which are dependent on the Nintendo 3DS Friend Codes of other players) as well as allowing Poké Balls of any variety as opposed to solely Safari Balls.
  • The Pal Park in all Generation IV games bears some superficial similarities to a Safari Zone, being a special area where only a specific type of Poké Ball can be used, featuring possible Pokémon species that otherwise cannot be found, and where the player cannot battle the Pokémon found there. Additionally, in Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver , the Pal Park is placed in Fuchsia City where it replaces the Safari Zone.
  • In Hisui , the Safari Zone was not yet established, but the main gameplay of Pokémon Legends: Arceus is similar to the Safari Zone.

Unova , Alola , Galar , Paldea , and Kitakami have neither a Safari Zone nor anything similar to or resembling a Safari Zone.

  • In the Generation II games, there is some data for a beta Safari Zone in Fuchsia City , but it was ultimately unused.

In other languages

  • Articles needing more information
  • Safari Zones
  • Pokémon world
  • Locations by type
  • Game mechanics
  • Methods of obtaining Pokémon

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serebii safari zone gen 1

R/B/Y Safari Zone Mechanics

A staple of the Pokémon series since the originals is the Safari Zone: a special place with Pokémon that aren't found anywhere else (and some that are) where instead of getting to use your own Pokémon to weaken and capture them, you must employ more old-fashioned methods while the Pokémon may run at any moment. While they haven't been in every game, they shake up the usual routine of catching Pokémon and have had various interesting mechanics through the generations - however, the very most interesting has to be the original.

How It Works

In every Safari Zone, the player is unable to use their own Pokémon at all. Instead, when you encounter a Pokémon you have four options: throwing one of the limited number of Safari Balls you have; an aggressive action used to make the Pokémon easier to catch; an enticing action used to make it less likely to run away; or running away from the battle yourself.

In Red, Blue and Yellow, the aggressive action is called Rock , and the enticing action is called Bait . The basic idea is this: throwing a rock will double your chances of catching the Pokémon, but it will also make the Pokémon angry for 1-5 turns. Conversely, throwing bait will halve your chances of catching the Pokémon, but cause the Pokémon to be eating for 1-5 turns. While angry, a Pokémon is twice as likely to run on any given turn as if it were in its neutral state, while it is four times less likely to run while it is eating than in a neutral state.

However, there are several more interesting details and subtleties to how Safari Zone battles happen.

Throwing a Ball

Capturing in the Safari Zone follows the regular R/B/Y capture algorithm , though since neither the Pokémon's HP nor its status can be affected and the only balls available are Safari Balls (identical to Ultra Balls), a lot of things are abstracted out in the Safari Zone. Unfortunately, thanks to the game's flawed RNG , Safari Balls underperform against full-health Pokémon, making all capture chances in the Safari Zone lower than intended. The capture chance maxes out when the Pokémon has a catch rate of 150 or more, for which the chance will be about 27-30% depending on rounding errors; all other Pokémon are harder than that.

The catch rate C starts out being, as in regular captures, the intrinsic catch rate of the Pokémon species. However, unlike regular captures, your actions in the Safari Zone can directly modify C, as hinted above.

Throwing Rocks/Bait

Rocks and bait have two distinct effects. First, every time a rock is thrown, the catch rate C is doubled (though it is capped at 255, so if doubling would make the catch rate more than that, it is made 255 instead), and every time bait is thrown, C is halved and rounded down. This happens even if the Pokémon is already angry or eating, and it happens completely blindly - if the Pokémon has a catch rate of 235, and you throw a rock to give it a catch rate of 255, then throwing bait will take that catch rate down to 127, rather than "canceling out" to give it the same catch rate as before.

Since the capture chance maxes out when the catch rate is 150 as explained above, there is no point throwing rocks at any Pokémon with an intrinsic catch rate of 150 or more, or more than one rock at a Pokémon with a catch rate of 75 or more, or more than two rocks at one with a catch rate of 38 or more. As it happens that covers all Pokémon that can be found in the Safari Zone except for Chansey (catch rate 30) and Dragonair (catch rate 27 in Yellow), who would need three rocks to go over 150.

Secondly, while a battle in the Safari Zone is going on, the game also keeps track of two counters, the "angry counter" and the "eating counter", which stand for the number of angry or eating turns the Pokémon has left. They both start out at zero; however, when a rock or bait is thrown, a random number between 1 and 5 inclusive will be generated and added to the appropriate counter (i.e. the angry counter if it's a rock, or the eating counter if it's bait), while the other counter will be reset to zero regardless of its previous value. This means only one of the counters can be nonzero at any given time. Since the random number is added to whatever value the counter already has, throwing further rocks at a Pokémon that is already angry will prolong its angry state, and likewise with throwing bait at an eating Pokémon. The eating and angry counters are both capped at 255.

The Pokémon's Turn

You always get the first turn in the Safari Zone, but on the Pokémon's turn, two things happen.

First, the game will check if either of the angry and eating counters is nonzero. If so, then a message saying "Wild [Pokémon] is angry!" or "Wild [Pokémon] is eating!" as appropriate is shown and the counter is decreased by one. If the angry counter is decreased to zero this way, the Pokémon's catch rate will also be reset to its initial catch rate , regardless of how it has been modified in the battle before this point; note that this last bit does not happen when a Pokémon stops eating, nor when the angry counter is reset to zero because you threw a bait.

After this, the game will perform a calculation to determine whether the Pokémon will run away on this turn. The run chance depends only on which state the Pokémon is in - angry, eating or neutral - but not on how many times you've thrown rocks/bait in any way: a Pokémon that you've thrown five rocks at followed by one bait will be exactly as happy to stick around as one that you threw a bait at on the first turn. Note that the Pokémon's actual current state does not necessarily correspond to the state indicated by the message that was just shown, since the message indicates only that the counter in question was nonzero before it was subtracted from. This also means that if you throw a rock or bait and the random number generated is 1, you will see an angry/eating message, but the Pokémon will in fact be back in its neutral state before even the run check is performed.

The run calculation itself goes as follows:

  • Make a variable X equal to the low byte (i.e. the remainder if you divide by 256) of the Pokémon's Speed ( not the base Speed of the species, but the individual's actual Speed).
  • If the outcome is greater than 255 (i.e. if the Pokémon's Speed was 128 or more), the Pokémon automatically runs. Skip the rest of the procedure.
  • If the Pokémon is angry, double X again (if it becomes greater than 255, make it 255 instead).
  • If the Pokémon is eating, divide X by four.
  • Generate a random number R between 0 and 255 inclusive.
  • If R is less than X, the Pokémon runs away.

All in all, this means that so long as (the low byte of) the Pokémon's Speed is less than 128 (which it always will be in the actual game - the highest Speed any Pokémon actually found in the Safari Zone can have is 75), the chance that it will run is 2*Speed/256 if it's in a neutral state, min(255, 4*Speed)/256 if it's angry, or int(Speed/2)/256 if it's eating.

Crucially, since this is the actual individual Speed and not the base Speed of the species, lower-leveled individuals are less likely to run . While Scyther at level 25 or 28 have around or above a 50% chance of running every turn in a neutral state, for instance, Yellow's level 15 Scyther are considerably easier to catch, with only a 32% chance of running in a neutral state at the most. Thus, perhaps the best piece of strategic advice for the Safari Zone is to go for the lowest-leveled possible version of your desired Pokémon, given the lower-leveled version isn't unacceptably rare.

So, well, how should one go about trying to achieve success in the Safari Zone, other than trying to catch lower-leveled Pokémon? Four basic kinds of strategies come to mind:

  • Balls only. This is the simplest way to go about the Safari Zone - just madly lob balls at everything you want to catch and pray that they don't run before you catch them.
  • Rocks, then balls. Throw some sensible number of rocks, then lob balls and hope you catch it before it either runs or calms down and resets the catch rate. If you see it's not angry anymore, start again from scratch with the rocks.
  • Bait, then balls. Throw some bait to put the Pokémon in the eating state and make it stick around, then throw balls and hope the reduced catch rate doesn't come back to bite you. Unlike with rocks, where once the Pokémon stops being angry you're back at square one, it's not quite as obvious here that you should throw more bait once the Pokémon stops eating - each bait you throw lowers the catch rate more, after all.
  • Rocks to increase catch rate, then bait to get it to stay, then balls. Throw a rock or two (or three) and then immediately throw bait. Provided your first rock doesn't generate one as the number of angry turns (in which case the Pokémon will calm down immediately and reset the catch rate), you'll manage to increase the Pokémon's catch rate before the bait gets thrown, meaning you end up with a catch rate of the same, double or quadruple the original (depending on the number of rocks), but a 4x reduced chance of running and assurance that the catch rate won't reset when it returns to the neutral state.

There are other possible strategies, but they appear obviously flawed - if you were to throw bait and then a rock, for instance, you'd end up with a normal catch rate but a higher running chance after wasting two turns, which can't possibly be helpful. These are the main ones that at a glance appear to hold some kind of promise.

You may think, as I did when I was initially working this out, that the fourth strategy has the most potential. However, as it turns out, the R/B/Y Safari Zone is broken: the balls-only strategy nearly always wins by a considerable margin, at least in terms of your overall chance of catching the Pokémon per encounter. Wasting your time on bait and rocks is only worth it in a couple of very exceptional cases.

Wait, What?

Good question. If you don't care about getting an intuitive grasp on why this is true, feel free to skip to the Safari Zone calculator.

Here's the thing. The entire Safari Zone experience basically simplifies to a game where you and the Pokémon alternate turns, with each of you having a given chance of "winning" on each of your turns (you win if you catch the Pokémon, while the Pokémon wins if it runs). When you throw bait or a rock, however, you do that instead of throwing a ball on that turn, while the Pokémon will continue to have a chance of running on every single one of its turns; essentially, you are forgoing one of your turns (attempts to "win") in exchange for a later advantage.

What is that later advantage, then, and is it worth losing that turn? Well, in the case of a rock, you double your chances of winning (catching the Pokémon) for up to four subsequent turns - but you also double the Pokémon's chances of winning (running away), and because you used up your turn throwing the rock, it's the Pokémon that has the next move.

You can hopefully see how that's not really a recipe for success. However, it's not quite as bleak as it appears, thanks to the one place where the simplification breaks down: you have a limited number of Safari Balls. A rock, by doubling both yours and the Pokémon's chances of winning each turn, will shorten the average duration of the battle. Thus, if you have sufficiently few balls and the Pokémon has a sufficiently low catch rate and Speed, to the point that in an average battle against it you'd run out of balls before either catching it or it running, throwing a rock and shortening the battle so your balls will last can actually be worth it, even at the aforementioned cost. For instance, if you only have one Safari Ball left, then you can either throw that one ball with a regular catch rate or throw some rocks first, which will make your single ball much more likely to be effective once you do throw it; you'll only get one attempt to catch it either way. The risks will still outweigh the benefits if the Pokémon is pretty speedy, since then it will be likely to run before you can actually throw the ball at all, but for a sufficiently slow target (for a single Safari Ball, the highest Speed where a rock will be worth it is 25 or so), rocks can be a good idea when you don't have a lot of Safari Balls left.

Throwing multiple rocks can also help, at least in theory, since more rocks will continue to double your chances of catching the Pokémon without raising the running chance further. Primarily, in many of those situations where a lack of Safari Balls means one rock is a good idea, two (or possibly three) rocks improve your chances even further, though the range of situations where this works is even narrower than for one rock. Technically multiple rocks can also help in general for Pokémon with very low Speeds and low catch rates - however, that's low Speeds as in single digits, and no Pokémon that fit the bill are actually found in the Safari Zone, making that point kind of moot. Otherwise, if you have plenty of balls to spare, the free angry turns they usually get to run away before you even start trying to catch them just result in a disadvantage you can't make up for.

What about bait? Bait is immediately somewhat more promising than rocks, since it halves your chance of "winning" but quarters the Pokémon's. However, bait also differs from rocks in that the catch rate doesn't go back to normal after the Pokémon stops eating, and just like rocks shorten the duration of the battle, bait prolongs the battle - it makes both parties less likely to win on subsequent turns. And the longer the battle goes on, the more the up-to-four turns (remember, the counter is decreased before the run check) that the Pokémon is actually less likely to run diminish in significance compared to all the turns after the Pokémon stops eating, when it will still have a lowered catch rate but a regular chance of running. That's besides the fact that again you must forgo a turn to throw the bait in the first place. In fact, as it turns out this makes bait wholly useless: there is not even in theory a Speed/catch rate combination for which bait will do you any good.

Where does this leave that especially promising-looking "rocks, then bait" strategy? Ultimately, it's stuck in the same rut rocks are: it's normally only useful for Pokémon with such ludicrously low Speed that they don't actually exist in the Safari Zone, and unfortunately, while rocks at least have a niche when you're running low on balls, you're always going to be better off just throwing however many rocks you're going to throw and then throwing your ball than throwing the rocks and then wasting your time on bait if you only have a couple of balls left. This strategy requires wasting several turns without throwing any balls, during some of which the Pokémon will have an increased chance of running, and to make matters worse, if the number of angry turns generated is one, you're going to lose even the rock's advantage and end up with the bait's lowered catch rate after all that preparation. It just kills it.

So, again, in nearly every case the best strategy is to just throw balls and hope you get lucky. That is, however, assuming that what you want to maximize is your chance of success per encounter: since rocks shorten the battle and make for fewer Safari Balls required, rocks may actually save you time and money.

The Safari Zone calculator below includes a variety of strategies, despite their mostly limited usefulness; play around with it if you think you might go with a different one.

Safari Zone Calculator

Use this tool to calculate your chances of capturing a given Pokémon.

As it is, it only includes Pokémon that are actually found in the Safari Zone in either Red, Blue, Yellow, or the Japanese-exclusive Blue version. If there is demand for adding other Pokémon just for the hell of it, I can do that too, but in the meantime, I feel this makes more sense.

In addition to your chances of capturing the Pokémon with any or all of the provided strategies, the calculator will also provide you with the basic capture rate and run chance per turn. When you select a Pokémon and game, additionally, it will give you the locations, levels and rarities at which the Pokémon is found in the Safari Zone in that game, so that you can perhaps attempt to find your Pokémon at a lower level or in an area where it's more common.

The base percentages the calculator gives may not match exactly up with those given by my R/B/Y catch rate calculator , since this calculator makes the simplifying assumption that the Pokémon's HP and Speed are equal to the average HP/Speed a wild Pokémon of the given species/level would have, while the catch rate calculator does the entire calculation for each possible HP IV and takes the average of the actual outcomes. I chose not to do the more accurate calculation here because this calculation is both already relatively slow and involves two different stats - trying every possibility would mean doing that whole relatively slow calculation up to 256 times, which just seems like way more trouble than it's worth.

Pokémon: Chansey Cubone Doduo Dragonair Dratini Exeggcute Goldeen Kangaskhan Krabby Lickitung Magikarp Marowak Nidoran (f) Nidoran (m) Nidorina Nidorino Paras Parasect Pinsir Poliwag Psyduck Rhyhorn Scyther Slowpoke Tangela Tauros Venomoth Venonat

Game: Red Blue/JP Green JP Blue Yellow

Safari Balls remaining:

Strategy: Show all Balls only One rock Two rocks Three rocks Bait repeatedly One bait Two bait Three bait Rock, then bait Two rocks, then bait Three rocks, then bait

Page last modified August 9 2021 at 02:53 UTC

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serebii safari zone gen 1

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  • Pokémon Games
  • Pokémon Generation III Discussion

List of Safari Zone?

  • Thread starter Arokosaki
  • Start date Nov 1, 2006

Contingency Planner

  • Nov 1, 2006

I know there's a feature that lists which Pokemon appear in the Safari Zone, along with where and how often in each location, for FR/LG. Has anyone compiled a similar thing for R/S/E, or is it down to the hard way (manually Pokedex digging)? I'm willing to do the digging, I just wanted to be sure it was necessary first.  

[Insert Wacky Title]

Conveniently, SPP already did it. Might want to look into it before asking, aye? http://www.serebii.net/emerald/safarizone.shtml  

I love assumptions, don't you? While the link that I'm perfectly already aware of is nice and dandy (the areas that unlock after the E4 are defeated are detailed very well), that doesn't help me with the MAIN area(s) that are available before the E4 are defeated. I have not been able to find the information neatly compiled anywhere in the R/S or E links on the main site.  

Well-Known Member

Arokosaki said: I love assumptions, don't you? While the link that I'm perfectly already aware of is nice and dandy (the areas that unlock after the E4 are defeated are detailed very well), that doesn't help me with the MAIN area(s) that are available before the E4 are defeated. I have not been able to find the information neatly compiled anywhere in the R/S or E links on the main site. Click to expand...
  • Nov 2, 2006

Thank you very much, Aquarelle  

IMAGES

  1. Gen 1 Safari Zone Map

    serebii safari zone gen 1

  2. Pokéarth

    serebii safari zone gen 1

  3. Gen 1 Safari Zone Map

    serebii safari zone gen 1

  4. Gen 1 Safari Zone Map

    serebii safari zone gen 1

  5. Safari Zone Oras Serebii

    serebii safari zone gen 1

  6. Gen 1 Safari Zone Map

    serebii safari zone gen 1

VIDEO

  1. Sonic Frontiers

  2. *MYSTERY GRADED POKEMON CARDS* Safari Zone Mystery Slabs Unboxing + Shining Fates Elite Trainer Box!

  3. Pokemon Battle Trozei

  4. Pokemon Battle Trozei

  5. safari

  6. Sonic : Code Gray

COMMENTS

  1. Pokéarth

    -Gen 1 Attackdex-Gen 2 Attackdex-Gen 3 Attackdex-Gen 4 Attackdex-Gen 5 Attackdex-Gen 6 Attackdex-Gen 7 Attackdex-Gen 8 Attackdex-Gen 9 Attackdex; ItemDex; Pokéarth; Abilitydex; Spin-Off Pokédex; Spin-Off Pokédex DP; Spin-Off Pokédex BW; Cardex; Cinematic Pokédex; Game Mechanics-Scarlet/Violet IV Calc. Pokémon of the Week-9th Gen-8th Gen ...

  2. Pokéarth

    The Johto Safari Zone is the most unique Safari Zone ever existing in the games. This Safari Zone has 12 areas, which you can customise at will. Only six areas are accessible at any one time, with you able to switch them around. As you progress through the Safari Zone, you can place blocks in the various areas which attract even more Pokémon ...

  3. Pokéarth

    -Gen 1 Attackdex-Gen 2 Attackdex-Gen 3 Attackdex-Gen 4 Attackdex-Gen 5 Attackdex-Gen 6 Attackdex ... The Safari Zone is located within Route 121 and contains a variety of Pokémon not typically found within the Hoenn region. It has four areas within it which require traversal using either the Mach Bike or Acro Bike, with some parts requiring ...

  4. Kanto Safari Zone

    The Kanto Safari Zone (Japanese: サファリゾーン Safari Zone) is a special Pokémon preserve in Kanto that Trainers can enter to catch wild Pokémon. It is owned by Baoba.. For $ 500, the player can play the Safari Game (Japanese: サファリゲーム Safari Game) and receive 30 Safari Balls.Trainers are limited to 500 R B Y /600 FR LG steps in the Safari Zone before the Game is over.

  5. Serebii.net Pokéarth: Kanto

    Welcome to the Kanto section of Pokéarth. This section will deal entirely upon the region of Kanto and the extention; The Sevii Islands. This section covers the areas within the first, second and third generations to their maximum potential. To navigate, click the area you require on the map or, failing that, utilise the drop down menu ...

  6. Pokémon Emerald

    Pokémon Emerald - Safari Zone. The Safari Zone Gets an Upgrade After you defeat the Elite 4. 2 More Areas to the right of the entrance are opened up. These 2 Areas Contain a vast array of GSC Pokémon...and to make it even tastier, most of these have been unavailable in games previously without having to breed Colosseum Pokémon.

  7. Johto Safari Zone

    The Johto Safari Zone (Japanese: サファリゾーン Safari Zone) is a special Pokémon preserve where Trainers can catch certain types of Pokémon. The Johto Safari Zone made its debut appearance in Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver, where it was shown to be located northwest of Cianwood.It is located at the Safari Zone Gate, a bazaar that sprung up due to the Safari Zone's popularity.

  8. Safari Zone

    In Hisui, the Safari Zone was not yet established, but the main gameplay of Pokémon Legends: Arceus is similar to the Safari Zone. Unova, Alola, Galar, Paldea, and Kitakami have neither a Safari Zone nor anything similar to or resembling a Safari Zone. Trivia. In the Generation II games, there is some data for a beta Safari Zone in Fuchsia ...

  9. Safari Zone (Kanto) Pokémon locations

    This is the Pokémon Location guide for Safari Zone in Kanto. Choose which generation of games you're playing to see the Pokémon and capture methods. Generation 3. Center. East. North. West. Generation 1. Center.

  10. Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen/Safari Zone

    Safari Zone - Area 1. Secret House Sweepstakes. A surfing Pokémon can ferry you across bodies of water. With the ability, you can finally visit the Power Plant, speak to the old man across the pond in Celadon City, and reach a few more spots. It's recommended to visit the Power Plant before heading south to the open ocean.

  11. Pokéarth

    -Gen 1 Attackdex-Gen 2 Attackdex-Gen 3 Attackdex-Gen 4 Attackdex-Gen 5 Attackdex-Gen 6 Attackdex-Gen 7 Attackdex-Gen 8 Attackdex-Gen 9 Attackdex; ItemDex; Pokéarth; Abilitydex; Spin-Off Pokédex; Spin-Off Pokédex DP; Spin-Off Pokédex BW; Cardex; Cinematic Pokédex; Game Mechanics-Scarlet/Violet IV Calc. Pokémon of the Week-9th Gen-8th Gen ...

  12. R/B/Y Safari Zone Mechanics

    Throwing a Ball. Capturing in the Safari Zone follows the regular R/B/Y capture algorithm, though since neither the Pokémon's HP nor its status can be affected and the only balls available are Safari Balls (identical to Ultra Balls), a lot of things are abstracted out in the Safari Zone. Unfortunately, thanks to the game's flawed RNG, Safari ...

  13. Pokémon Red and Blue/Safari Zone

    Area 1[ edit] Safari Zone - Area 1. In Area 1, the Poké Ball on the ledge contains a Carbos. To the left of the house nearby, you will find a Full Restore. On the patch of ground that extends into the lake, a TM 37 can be found in the grass. And close to the entrance to Area 2 there's a Max Potion on the ground. Red.

  14. Safari zone guide gen 1 : r/pokemon

    Safari zone guide gen 1. the safari zone is a pain in the ass. unless your trying to complete the pokedex, get chansey/tauros/dratini cos theyre good or just for fun, dont do it. there are 7 pokemon that are not easily obtainable to get outside of the safari zone. they are:

  15. Understanding the Safari Zone in Pokémon Emerald, Ruby & Sapphire

    The Safari Zone is a pretty large chunk of land, divided into 4 areas. These areas house different Pokémon and may require special things to traverse them. Area 1 is the area you enter from, and just West of Area 1 is Area 2. North of Area 2 is Area 3, only accessible with the Mach Bike as there's a mudslide dividing the two.

  16. Safari Zone map?

    Yes, but read the quote, would you? Wikipedia says that there is a map of the Safari Zone on the G/S/C cart and they took the entrance out to avoid a glitch city type thing in G/S/C. If there is one, I don't have it, and I don't believe Wikipedia all that much. ^^. The GSC Militia: -Double-Edge. -.TraX.

  17. Safari Zone by the numbers

    Add 1 to the number of times you threw bait and the number of times you threw mud, and divide the mud number by the bait number. 2. Multiply this number by 100/1275. 3. And then by the Pokémon's catch rate. 4. If the number is lower than 3, set it to 3. If the number is higher than 20, set it to 20.

  18. Safari Zone

    Well in R/S/E, most of the safari zone pokemon were from the previous generation w/the exception of Rhyhorn,Pinsir,Pikachu,Psyduck,etc., so maybe if they follow that trend, if D/P has a safari zone then maybe most of the pokemon found there will be from the 3rd generation Safari Zone pokemon that should always be there: Pinsir Rhyhorn Pikachu ...

  19. Pokéarth

    The Safari Zone is located within Route 121 and contains a variety of Pokémon not typically found within the Hoenn region. Originally, it has four areas. The two bottom ones can be accessed at any time. The northwest one requires the Mach Bike while the northeast one requires the Acro Bike. In Emerald, two more areas open up after the National ...

  20. List of Safari Zone?

    I know there's a feature that lists which Pokemon appear in the Safari Zone, along with where and how often in each location, for FR/LG. ... Discord.gg/serebii. If you're still waiting for the e-mail, be sure to check your junk/spam e-mail folders ... Pokémon Games. Pokémon Generation III Discussion . List of Safari Zone? Thread starter ...