Please report any issues on Discord.
Jun 02, 2020 This is the complete collection of GameShark codes for Pokemon Emerald cheats. Every Pokemon game is amazing until you finally complete it. If you start the game again, your experience will be relatively similar So let’s mix things up, and have some fun. We’ve brought you this list of the complete Pokemon Emerald cheats (GameShark.
There isn't an Map Editor in Animal Crossing. Where is your house on Pokemon emerald? If You have a Pokemon that knows FLY, fly to Littleroot town toward the bottom of the map. Added spinda spot editor in pid generator. Added spinda spot and unown form edit to pokedex editor. Main window ui tweaked. Met location list tweaked. Added pokerus to pokemon editor. Fixed more pokedex bugs! Fixed pokedex edit bug in R/S. Added national dex toggle to pokedex editor. Fixed pokedex edit bug in FR/LG. Map for Emerald Vale Region on Terra 2 Planet in The Outer Worlds with Walkthrough, discovered Points of Interest, Fast Travel locations, Emerald Vale Quest List, NPCs, Vendors and Vending Machines, Workbenches and secrets. Game Guide & Walkthrough for The Outer Worlds. Blibili Photo Link View map now! The Minecraft Map, Pokemon Emerald Map, was posted by Rnscat.
Pokémon Emerald Version |
---|
Also known as: Pocket Monsters Emerald (JP) This game has unused areas. |
To do:
|
Pokémon Emerald is an updated version of Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire. It pits the player against Team Aqua and Team Magma, adds a new Deoxys form, and introduces the Battle Frontier.
- 1Debugging Tools
- 4Unused Graphics
- 10Regional Differences
Debugging Tools
To do: Search for more. |
Sound Check
Japanese Emerald has Sound Check like Ruby, Sapphire, FireRed, and LeafGreen and, akin to the latter, it was removed in localizations.
To access it, patch 0x301AC to 21 83 0E 08 to replace the Options entry on the main menu with a call to Sound Check.
The changes to the 'stereo' entry in the Driver Test made in FireRed and LeafGreen were carried over to Emerald.
Unused Music
In addition to the unused music in Ruby and Sapphire, Emerald also contains the entire soundtrack from FireRed and LeafGreen, although only a few music tracks from that particular soundtrack are used in Emerald.
In the sound test, the tracks from FireRed and LeafGreen are prefixed with the letters 'RG'. MUS-KAIHUKU remains unused, is now labeled MUS-RG-KAIHUKU, and its new ID is 01ED.
Unused Map Data
The maps from the Pokémon Festa 2002 demo of Ruby and Sapphire are still in Emerald, but their event data has been deleted.
The Magma Hideout maps used in Ruby and unused in Sapphire are also unused in Emerald, as well as the Contest Hall, Seafloor Cavern, Cave of Origin, and the unused Lilycove City Poké Mart maps from Ruby and Sapphire. The unused duplicate landmark names for Meteor Falls, Fiery Path, and Jagged Pass also remain.
Magma Hideout 6F unused eastern section
Battle Frontier unused warp
Battle Frontier unused house (no NPC event data)
The landmark name for the version-based evil team hideout from Ruby and Sapphire is now unused; Pokémon caught in the old Magma Hideout or Aqua Hideout preserve their caught location, but it is rendered as HIDEOUT (Japanese: アジトHideout) like in Ruby and Sapphire.
The quirky landmark C4 from FireRed and LeafGreen is now unused and was renamed to SPECIAL AREA (Japanese: あかみどりとくしゅRed & Green Special).
Navel Rock and Birth Island have their own landmarks for Emerald as IDs D3 and C8, respectively, whereas the original IDs from FireRed and LeafGreen are AE and BB. This distinction may be important as there is no known distribution of the Aurora Ticket for Japanese Emerald, meaning that Deoxys caught in Emerald's Birth Island could be treated as illegitimate if their language byte is set to Japanese.
To do: How is such a Deoxys recognized by modern Pokémon games and services like Bank? |
Emerald added an optional rival fight in Rustboro City. In the released game, you cannot walk out the city without triggering a cutscene with the rival that registers the rival in your PokeNav and prompts for a fight. You can get around this line of triggers only by teleporting back to Petalburg by never using the Pokémon Center in Rustboro and then using Teleport or by blacking out; in which case you never run into your rival. Perhaps because of this potential situation, there is another trigger in front of the doorway into Mr. Briney's house, and this will trigger a different cutscene with the rival (where the rival exits Mr. Briney's house) which also registers the rival and offers the same battle as the Rustboro cutscene. However, due to a programming oversight, the trigger in front of Mr. Briney's house is never activated, so this cutscene is left unused in the map scripts.
Unused Graphics
Sprites
Littleroot Town boy from Ruby and Sapphire
Shiny Celebi
Because the only way to obtain it legitimately was through distributions, none of which allowed for a Shiny, the Shiny version of Celebi was left unobtainable through normal means. It can still be seen when a Shiny Ditto or Mew Transforms into Celebi, however.
Tilesets
Tileset 16
Tileset 22
Tileset 57
Unused Weather
The unused weather from Ruby and Sapphire remain so in Emerald.
Unused Wild Held Items
Some Pokémon when found in the wild has a chance of holding an item. But many Pokémon can only obtained via evolution or other means, so catching a Pokémon with these items in the wild is impossible.
# | Pokémon | Held Items | Note |
---|---|---|---|
012 | Butterfree | (5%) Silver Powder | |
015 | Beedrill | (5%) Poison Barb | |
022 | Fearow | (5%) Sharp Beak | |
027 | Sandslash | (5%) Quick Qlaw | |
035 | Clefairy | (5%) Moon Stone (50%) Leppa Berry | |
036 | Clefable | (5%) Moon Stone (50%) Leppa Berry | |
038 | Ninetales | (50%) Rawst Berry | |
046 | Paras | (5%) Big Mushroom (50%) Tiny Mushroom | |
047 | Parasect | (5%) Big Mushroom (50%) Tiny Mushroom | |
058 | Growlithe | (100%) Rawst Berry | |
059 | Arcanine | (100%) Rawst Berry | |
061 | Poliwhirl | (5%) King's Rock | |
062 | Poliwrath | (5%) King's Rock | |
064 | Kadabra | (5%) TwistedSpoon | |
065 | Alakazam | (5%) TwistedSpoon | |
068 | Machamp | (5%) Focus Band | |
075 | Golem | (5%) Everstone | |
079 | Slowpoke | (5%) King's Rock | |
080 | Slowbro | (5%) King's Rock | |
083 | Farfetch'd | (5%) Stick | |
085 | Dodrio | (5%) Sharp Beak | |
090 | Shellder | (5%) Big Pearl (50%) Pearl | |
091 | Cloyster | (5%) Big Pearl (50%) Pearl | |
094 | Gengar | (5%) Spell Tag | |
104 | Cubone | (5%) Thick Club | |
105 | Marowak | (5%) Thick Club | |
110 | Weezing | (5%) Smoke Ball | |
113 | Chansey | (5%) Lucky Egg | |
117 | Seadra | (5%) Dragon Scale | |
121 | Starmie | (5%) Star Piece (50%) Stardust | |
122 | Mr. Mime | (5%) Leppa Berry | |
124 | Jynx | (100%) Aspear Berry | |
126 | Magmar | (100%) Rawst Berry | |
143 | Snorlax | (100%) Leftovers | |
147 | Dratini | (5%) Dragon Scale | |
148 | Dragonair | (5%) Dragon Scale | |
149 | Dragonite | (5%) Dragon Scale | |
151 | Mew | (100%) Lum Berry | Available though a limited event in Japan |
161 | Sentret | (5%) Oran Berry | |
162 | Furret | (5%) Sitrus Berry (50%) Oran Berry | |
171 | Lanturn | (5%) Yellow Shard | |
173 | Cleffa | (5%) Moon Stone (50%) Leppa Berry | |
186 | Politoed | (5%) King's Rock | |
199 | Slowking | (5%) King's Rock | |
200 | Misdreavus | (5%) Spell Tag | |
208 | Steelix | (5%) Metal Coat | |
215 | Sneasel | (5%) Quick Claw | |
230 | Kingdra | (5%) Dragon Scale | |
238 | Smoochum | (100%) Aspear Berry | |
240 | Magby | (100%) Rawst Berry | |
242 | Blissey | (5%) Lucky Egg | |
250 | Ho-oh | (100%) Sacred Ash | Available though a limited event in America & Japan |
251 | Celebi | (100%) Lum Berry | |
267 | Beautifly | (5%) Silver Powder | |
269 | Dustox | (5%) Silver Powder | |
284 | Masquerain | (5%) Silver Powder | |
295 | Exploud | (5%) Chesto Berry | |
301 | Delcatty | (5%) Leppa Berry | |
306 | Aggron | (5%) Hard Rock | |
315 | Roselia | (5%) Poison Barb | Was available in Ruby/Sapphire |
317 | Swalot | (5%) Big Pearl | |
323 | Camerupt | (100%) Rawst Berry | |
332 | Cacturne | (5%) Poison Barb | |
337 | Lunatone | (5%) Moon Stone | Was available in Sapphire |
356 | Dusclops | (5%) Spell Tag | Was available in Ruby |
362 | Glalie | (5%) Never-Melt Ice | |
372 | Shelgon | (5%) Dragon Scale | |
373 | Salamence | (5%) Dragon Scale | |
374 | Beldum | (5%) Metal Coat | |
375 | Metang | (5%) Metal Coat | |
376 | Metagross | (5%) Metal Coat | |
385 | Jirachi | (100%) Star Piece |
Altering Cave
As with FireRed and LeafGreen, Mareep, Aipom, Pineco, Shuckle, Teddiursa, Houndour, Stantler, and Smeargle were also meant to replace the Zubat found in Altering Cave after using Mystery Gift.
The event distribution was probably scrapped because these Pokémon can be obtained from Pokémon Colosseum and Pokémon XD: Gale of Darkness. They are also found in Emerald on the extended area of the Safari Zone (except Smeargle, which is found in Artisan Cave instead).
Development Text
Multiple cases of miscellaneous development text are present in the ROM.
Emerald Editor Download
Build Dates
Japan |
---|
US/Europe |
France/Spain |
Italy |
Germany |
Regional Differences
e-Reader Support
Similarly to Japanese FireRed and LeafGreen, Japanese Emerald contains e-Reader support and its Mystery Gift system uses it in addition to the Game Boy Advance Wireless Adapter, specifically for the Pokémon Battle Card e+ Emerald set that changes the NPC Trainers encountered in Trainer Hill. When in Wireless Adapter mode, its Japanese name is ふしぎなおくりもの (focus on the giver), while in e-Reader mode, its Japanese name is ふしぎなもらいもの (focus on the receiver); both names translate to Mystery Gift in English.
Like Ruby and Sapphire, Japanese Emerald also supports the Mystery Event system (ふしぎなできごと), which requires the e-Reader. It was used for the Eon Ticket distribution between December 9, 2006 and January 5, 2007 for Ruby, Sapphire, and Emerald in Japan.
Overseas, Emerald only supports the Wireless Adapter mode of the Mystery Gift system from FireRed and LeafGreen, although it still contains code for Mystery Event and the e-Reader mode of Mystery Gift.
To do: Confirm this last part. |
Player's House
Japanese Emerald has a minor audio oversight where the moving Vigoroth incorrectly use Machoke's cry, which was fixed in Western Emerald. These Pokémon were changed from Machoke in Ruby and Sapphire, where they play their correct cry.
Faraway Island
The Old Sea Map is an event item that allows the player to board the S.S. Tidal from Lilycove City to access Faraway Island and subsequently catch Mew. However, as it was only distributed in Japan during Pokémon Festa 2005, the item is unobtainable in Western Emerald, thus rendering the associated content unused.
To do: Other unused content beyond the item icon should be here, too. |
Sootopolis City
There is a NPC in Sootopolis City who would host battles using Mystery Gift, leaving only the NPC and the stairs blocked by trees.
To do: Check whether it's Mystery Gift or Mystery Event in Japanese Emerald. |
Trick House Puzzle Room 4
JapaneseEnglish |
---|
In the international versions, the layout of Trick House Puzzle Room 4 was altered to make two passageways wider. The first boulder was also removed; in the Japanese version, it's a beginner's trap since the player can block the narrow passageway if they push the boulder to the right.
Despite the change, it's still possible for the player to get trapped in the Trick House in both the Japanese and international versions.
Aqua Hideout Dive Glitch
In Japanese Emerald, due to a bug, it is possible to Dive in the deep water tiles found on Aqua Hideout B2F after saving and rebooting the game. Because the water is not programmed to lead anywhere, the game throws the player back to warp 0 in entry 0 of map group 0, which is Petalburg City.
This was fixed in Western Emerald by not allowing the player to Dive in any circumstances.
Special Wallpaper Layout
To do: Add pictures. |
In Emerald, players can unlock custom wallpapers by giving special codes to Walda's father in Rustboro City. In the international versions, the ribbon background and the cross, bolt, and Plusle symbols were removed.
Pokemon Emerald Map
The Pokémon series | |
---|---|
Generation I | Red, Green, & Blue • Yellow Hey You, Pikachu! • Trading Card Game • Pinball • Picross Snap (Demo) • Stadium (Japan) • Stadium (International) • Puzzle League • PokéROM |
Generation II | Gold & Silver (Prototypes) • Crystal (Prototypes) Card GB2 • Puzzle Challenge • Pinball Mini • Stadium 2 (International) Suuji o Tsukamaeyou! |
Generation III | Ruby & Sapphire (German Ruby Debug Version) • FireRed & LeafGreen (Prototype) • Emerald (Prototype) Mystery Dungeon: Red Rescue Team & Blue Rescue Team Pinball: Ruby & Sapphire • Channel • Colosseum • XD • Trozei! • Ranger • Dash Masters Arena • Team Turbo • Poké Ball Launcher |
Generation IV | Diamond & Pearl (Prototypes) • Platinum • HeartGold & SoulSilver • Battle Revolution • My Pokémon Ranch Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Darkness & Time • Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Sky • Ranger: Shadows of Almia • Ranger: Guardian Signs PokéPark Wii: Pikachu's Adventure • Rumble |
Generation V | Black & White • Black 2 & White 2 Trading Card Game Online • Learn with Pokémon: Typing Adventure • Conquest • Mystery Dungeon: Gates to Infinity Pokédex 3D • Rumble U |
Generation VI | X & Y • Omega Ruby & Alpha Sapphire Bank & Transporter • Shuffle • Super Mystery Dungeon Pokkén Tournament (Wii U) • GO |
Generation VII | Sun & Moon • Ultra Sun & Ultra Moon • Let's Go, Pikachu! & Let's Go, Eevee! Detective Pikachu • Magikarp Jump |
Generation VIII | Sword & Shield (Prototypes) HOME (iOS/Android) • Mystery Dungeon: Rescue Team DX (Prototype) |