"Please take note of the nest migration number if you plan on doing egg research."
#PokemonGO: I just read through another egg analysis thread and the current circlejerk goes "man I got a ton of X out of my small area stops" with "you got no evidence for Y location drops X[monster] eggs because everybody has gotten every pokemon out of eggs". I think this is a void argument because with all the nest rotations, I have seen pretty much every non-ultra-rare pokemon spawn in a radius of less than 300m from my flat over the course of the last half year.Also to add that you dont get an ultra-rare from eggs of Y biome, is maybe more a matter of it being ultra-rare and less of a counterargument to the hypothesis of biome linked eggs.From my annecdotal experience... At the start of the halloween event everyone was hyped for getting 3 10km in a batch. I received them all in 3 consecutive stops along a small river I visited the first time (biome with duck, star, dratini and lots of karps at that time). Since I just cleared my egg inv due to incubator extra candy frenzy, I also got a lot of other eggs.The result of the hatchings afterwards were my first ever karp hatches (i was so depressed that everyone I knew already had his gyara and got basically no karps with lv29). And I got 2 consecutive Lapras, my first and last ones, plus my first chansey.tl;dr If you do research on eggs and their hatching, you should note down the stop it dropped and the current nest rotation.If the same stop drops you only A B C D in rotation9 and only E F G H in rot10, you might have not just pure randoms from A to H... via /r/TheSilphRoad http://ift.tt/2jpBmuU
"Please take note of the nest migration number if you plan on doing egg research."
Reviewed by The Pokémonger
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09:36
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