Where can you find blue shards?
Where can you find blue shards?
Afaik all shards can be found in dust clouds, which appear in every cave in Unova. I think losing at the tournament is still faster. Not every cave, it appears most caves like Giant Chasm and Chargestone Cavern will give you Type-boosting Gems.
Where can I find shards in Pokemon Emerald?
Pokémon Ruby, Sapphire, and Emerald In Generation III, shards can be traded to the Treasure Hunter living on Route 124 individually for Evolution stones. In Hoenn, these items are found quite often underwater, many times held by certain species.
Where is dive emerald?
Go to the space station in the northeast corner of the island, where you will have to defeat Team Magma. Go to Steven’s house, in the northwest corner of the city, and he will give you HM08 Dive.
Where is the blue shard in Oras?
West of the trainer is a spot where light is filtering from above. Surface here and surf north to find a Blue Shard and the Pinsirite Mega Stone. Return to the underwater trench and go south to another Pokemon Trainer.
Where can I find a blue Shard in Pokemon Emerald?
U can i find blue shard at the sea use dive on dive spots known as the black parts and dive use your itemfinder all the time when u find a blue shard give it to the treasure hunter near mossdeep city then trade him the blue shard he will give u a water stone. hope this helps!
Where can I find the largest emerald in the world?
The Gachalá Emerald, an 858-ct (6.05 oz) uncut emerald from Colombia, resides in the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. The Empress Caroline, an 858-ct (6.05 oz) uncut emerald from Hiddenite, NC, is privately owned.
Where do you get the evolution stones in Pokemon Emerald?
There are other ways of obtaining stones though. You can find the Yellow, Red, Green, and Blue shards for the Treasure hunter. You can trade stones from Fire Red/Leaf Green to Pokemon Emerald. Theres a leaf stone on route 119. There’s a fire stone in that fire path thing.
Where did the name of the Emerald come from?
The earliest records of emeralds trace back 4500 years to Prisse Papyrus, the world’s oldest book. The name “emerald,” is a Persian word that simply means “green gem.” Make no mistake about it: there is nothing simple about emerald gemstones.