Accuracy: Difference between revisions

From Bulbapedia, the community-driven Pokémon encyclopedia.
Jump to navigationJump to search
mNo edit summary
(32 intermediate revisions by 17 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Accuracy''' is an aspect of moves that determine how often they can hit their target. Accuracy currently can be any number between 30% and 100%, usually in multiples of 5.
{{samename|in-battle stat|Statistic#Accuracy|Statistic → Accuracy}}
'''Accuracy''' (Japanese: '''めいちゅう''' ''accuracy'') is an aspect of moves that determine how often they can hit their target.


Many moves have an accuracy of "—%", indicating that they are exempt from accuracy calculations; usually because they affect no one but the user (and/or the partner in a [[Double Battle]]), or because they will never miss the target unless the target uses a move that grants invulnerability for the turn (such as {{m|Protect}}, or the first stage of {{m|Fly}} or {{m|Dig}}).
A move's base accuracy currently can be any number from 1-100, reflecting the probability of the move hitting as a percentage; moves' accuracy was not visible to the player until the Generation III games. While values from 1-100 for accuracy are possible, only values from 30-100 are used, and they are only used in multiples of 5.


Accuracy can be increased by [[Ability|abilities]] or [[held items]], such as {{a|Compoundeyes}} raising the user's accuracy by 30%, {{a|Victory Star}} raising a Pokémon's accuracy by 10%, and the {{DL|In-battle effect item|Wide Lens}} boosting accuracy by 10%.
Many moves have an accuracy of "—%", indicating that they are exempt from accuracy calculations. This is usually because they affect no one but the user (and/or the partner in a [[Double Battle]]), or because they will never miss the target unless the target uses a move that grants semi-invulnerability for a turn (such as {{m|Fly}} or {{m|Dig}}).


===Formula for accuracy and evasion===
Accuracy can be increased by [[Ability|Abilities]], [[held item]]s, and increasing the accuracy stat; {{a|Compound Eyes}} raises the Pokémon's accuracy by 30%, {{a|Victory Star}} raises a Pokémon's accuracy by 10%, the {{DL|In-battle effect item|Wide Lens}} raises the holder's accuracy by 10%, and the {{DL|In-battle effect item|Zoom Lens}} raises the holder's accuracy by 20% if the holder moves after its target. The accuracy stat can be increased by {{m|Acupressure}}, {{m|Hone Claws}}, {{m|Coil}}, {{a|Moody}}, and {{DL|Battle item|X Accuracy}}{{tt|*|Generation III onwards; in the first two generations X Accuracy simply makes Pokémon's moves ignore the accuracy check}}.
 
Accuracy can be decreased by {{Abilities}}, [[held item]]s, and [[move]]s. {{a|Hustle}} decreases the accuracy of the Pokémon's [[physical move]]s by 20%. The accuracy stat can be decreased by {{m|Flash}}, {{m|Kinesis}}, {{m|Mirror Shot}}, {{m|Mud Bomb}}, {{m|Mud-Slap}}, {{m|Muddy Water}}, {{m|Octazooka}}, {{m|Sand Attack}}, {{m|Smokescreen}}, and {{m|Secret Power}} when used in the sand, on plain terrain{{sup/4|DPPtHGSS}}, in [[puddle]]s{{sup/4|DPPtHGSS}}, and on rocks{{sup/6|XYORAS}}.
 
==Formula for accuracy and evasion==
The probability that a move will hit is calculated as follows:
The probability that a move will hit is calculated as follows:


[[File:Accuracy_calc.png]]
[[File:Accuracy calc.png]]


Where:
Where:
*''A<sub>base</sub>'' is the base accuracy of the move (in percent - e.g. a base accuracy of 95 is counted as 0.95),
*''A<sub>base</sub>'' is the base accuracy of the move (in percent - e.g. a base accuracy of 95 is counted as 0.95),
*''Accuracy'' is the current Accuracy stat of the user (in percent - e.g. raising accuracy by three stages raises this number to 2), and
*''Accuracy'' is the current accuracy stat of the user (in percent - e.g. raising accuracy by three stages raises this number to 2), and
*''Evasion'' is the current Evasion stat of the target (in percent - e.g. lowering evasion by two stages lowers this number to 0.6).
*''Evasion'' is the current evasion stat of the target (in percent - e.g. lowering evasion by two stages lowers this number to 0.6).
 
If P is greater than 1, the move will surely hit. In a Double or Triple Battle, it is possible for a move that targets multiple Pokémon to hit some and miss others—the probabilities are calculated individually for each Pokémon.
 
===Application of stat modifiers===
{| class="roundy" style="margin:auto; margin-bottom:15px; text-align:center; background:#FAFAD2; border:3px solid #000" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="3"
|+ '''Stage multipliers'''
|-
! Stage (accuracy)
| -6 || -5 || -4 || -3 || -2 || -1 || 0 || +1 || +2 || +3 || +4 || +5 || +6
|-
! Stage (evasion)
| +6 || +5 || +4 || +3 || +2 || +1 || 0 || -1 || -2 || -3 || -4 || -5 || -6
|-
! Gen I
| <sup>25</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>28</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>33</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>40</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>50</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>66</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>100</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>150</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>200</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>250</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>300</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>350</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>400</sup>/<sub>100</sub>
|-
! Gen II
| <sup>33</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>36</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>43</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>50</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>60</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>75</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>100</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>133</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>166</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>200</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>233</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>266</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>300</sup>/<sub>100</sub>
|-
! Gen III-IV
| <sup>33</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>36</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>43</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>50</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>60</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>75</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>100</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>133</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>166</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>200</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>250</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>266</sup>/<sub>100</sub> || <sup>300</sup>/<sub>100</sub>
|-
! Gen V+
| <sup>3</sup>/<sub>9</sub> || <sup>3</sup>/<sub>8</sub> || <sup>3</sup>/<sub>7</sub> || <sup>3</sup>/<sub>6</sub> || <sup>3</sup>/<sub>5</sub> || <sup>3</sup>/<sub>4</sub> || <sup>3</sup>/<sub>3</sub> || <sup>4</sup>/<sub>3</sub> || <sup>5</sup>/<sub>3</sub> || <sup>6</sup>/<sub>3</sub> || <sup>7</sup>/<sub>3</sub> || <sup>8</sup>/<sub>3</sub> || <sup>9</sup>/<sub>3</sub>
|}
In Generations I and II, accuracy and evasion stages are resolved separately and both multipliers applied to the move's accuracy to determine the final chance of a move hitting or missing. For example, a Pokémon with -1 accuracy using a move that has 100% accuracy on a target with +1 evasion would have a <sup>66</sup>/<sub>100</sub> * <sup>66</sup>/<sub>100</sub> ~= 43.56% chance of hitting in Generation I, or a <sup>75</sup>/<sub>100</sub> * <sup>75</sup>/<sub>100</sub> ~= 56.25% chance of hitting in Generation II. In Generation III, this was changed so that the stages of the two stats are now combined before determining the multiplier, with the evasion stage subtracted from the accuracy stage. Therefore, in the above situation, the attacking Pokémon would have a <sup>60</sup>/<sub>100</sub> = 60% chance of hitting.<ref>[http://www.dragonflycave.com/statstages.aspx Dragonfly Cave on stat stages mechanics]</ref>
 
Additionally, the combined stages are capped at -6 and +6 from Generation III onward, meaning that a Pokémon with minimum accuracy attacking a target with maximum evasion will have no lower than a <sup>33</sup>/<sub>100</sub> or 33% chance to hit. (For comparison, in Generation II, the attacker would only have a <sup>33</sup>/<sub>100</sub> * <sup>33</sup>/<sub>100</sub> ~= 10.89% chance of hitting.)
 
==1/256 miss glitch==
In the [[Generation I]] handheld games, even moves with 100% accuracy would miss once in a great while for seemingly no reason whatsoever. This was due to accuracy being internally stored as a single byte ranging from 0 to 255 (0 to FF in hexadecimal), and the probability of a move hitting being determined by comparing a randomly generated byte to the accuracy value, with the move hitting if it was less and missing if it was equal or greater. There was therefore a 1/256 chance of the random byte being equal to 255, which could never be less than even the highest possible accuracy value, causing moves labeled as being 100% accurate to miss 1/256 of the time and yielding an effective accuracy of about 99.6%. This bug also applied to secondary effects such as poison or paralysis,{{fact}} as well as [[critical hit]]s. (It was not possible to replace the "less than" check with a "less than or equal to" check, as this would enable any of these events with an accuracy value of 0 to succeed 1/256 of the time when the random byte was equal to 0.) {{m|Swift}} was unaffected, as its effect automatically skips all accuracy checks (including the invulnerability effects of {{m|Fly}} and {{m|Dig}}) and thus truly has 100% accuracy.
 
The bug was partially fixed in {{g|Stadium}} by allowing the move to hit if the random byte was either less than the accuracy value or exactly equal to 255; this fix effectively causes every move in the game to hit 1/256 more often. The fix did not apply to critical hits, which were still capped at a 255/256 probability. It was further fixed in [[Generation II]], which removed this extra check and instead allowed moves calculated to have 100% accuracy (after applying all modifiers) to skip the random byte generation entirely. However, this did not apply to {{m|Protect}}, which still has a 1/256 chance to fail when used for the first time. <!-- TODO: What about Stadium 2? --> All 1/256-related bugs were finally resolved in [[Generation III]], whose hardware gained the ability to more freely generate ranges of random numbers; move accuracies are stored as a number from 0 to 100, and the game performs a "less than or equal to" check on a random integer from 1 to 100.
 
==In the Pokémon Mystery Dungeon series==
{{incomplete|section|needs=How accuracy is represented in Gates to Infinity and information on Blazing, Stormy and Light}}
[[File:Move Summary PSMD.png|thumb|right|Accuracy indicated by a blue bar in Pokémon Super Mystery Dungeon]]
In the Pokémon Mystery Dungeon series until {{g|Mystery Dungeon: Gates to Infinity}}, accuracy was instead called "Hit Ratio" and displayed with a number of stars instead of a numerical value. More stars indicated a higher accuracy. For example, {{m|Scratch}} had a Hit Ratio of [[File:PMD Star IV.png]][[File:PMD Star IV.png]][[File:PMD Star IV.png]][[File:PMD Star IV.png]][[File:PMD Star IV.png]][[File:PMD Star IV.png]][[File:PMD Star IV.png]]. Hit Ratio did not always correlate with accuracy from the main series. For instance, some moves such as {{m|Scratch}} and {{m|Crunch}} which share the same accuracy in the main series had different Hit Ratios (or vice versa).
 
The term "accuracy" started to be used from {{g|Mystery Dungeon: Gates to Infinity}}.
 
In {{g|Super Mystery Dungeon}}, accuracy is displayed as a blue bar in the move summary. Unlike previous games, the [[Statistic|Speed]] stat is used as an accuracy modifier; the higher speed a Pokémon has, the more likely its moves will be to hit.


If P is greater than 1, the move will surely hit. In a 2-on-2 battle, it is possible for a move that targets multiple Pokémon to hit some and miss others - the probabilities are calculated individually for each Pokémon.
In the Mystery Dungeon series, there are several ways of increasing the accuracy of moves. Much like in the core series games, Abilities such as {{a|Compound Eyes}} boost the accuracy of moves. Additionally, beginning from Gates to Infinity, moves can be {{DL|Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Gates to Infinity|New mechanics|ranked up}} when they are used over time, which will also increase the move's accuracy. The increase is permanent and will carry over to other teammate's with the same move. Items such as {{DL|Gates to Infinity exclusive items|Items that affect moves|Accuracy Manual}}s{{sup/md|GTI}} or {{DL|Health drink|List of health drinks|Accuracy Drink}}s{{sup/md|SMD}} can also permanently increase accuracy. Certain [[emera]]s can also increase accuracy when added to [[looplet]]s.


===Trivia===
==References==
* In the [[Generation I]] games, even moves with a 100% accuracy would miss once in a great while for seemingly no reason whatsoever.  This was due to accuracy being internally calculated as a fraction of 256, when the highest internal accuracy a move could posess was 255 (FF in hexadecimal, and the highest value expressible in a single byte), yielding an accuracy of 99.6%.  This also applied to secondary effects such as poison or paralysis, but it was resolved in [[Generation II]].
<references/>
* It was not possible to view a move's accuracy in-game until [[Generation III]].


==See also==
{{-}}
*[[Stats#Accuracy|Accuracy stat]]
{{Project Games notice}}


[[Category:Moves|*]]
[[Category:Game mechanics]]


[[de:Attackengenauigkeit und Trefferchance]]
[[de:Attackengenauigkeit und Trefferchance]]
Line 30: Line 76:
[[it:Precisione]]
[[it:Precisione]]
[[pl:Accuracy]]
[[pl:Accuracy]]
[[zh:命中率]]

Revision as of 08:08, 7 July 2016

If you were looking for the in-battle stat, see Statistic → Accuracy.

Accuracy (Japanese: めいちゅう accuracy) is an aspect of moves that determine how often they can hit their target.

A move's base accuracy currently can be any number from 1-100, reflecting the probability of the move hitting as a percentage; moves' accuracy was not visible to the player until the Generation III games. While values from 1-100 for accuracy are possible, only values from 30-100 are used, and they are only used in multiples of 5.

Many moves have an accuracy of "—%", indicating that they are exempt from accuracy calculations. This is usually because they affect no one but the user (and/or the partner in a Double Battle), or because they will never miss the target unless the target uses a move that grants semi-invulnerability for a turn (such as Fly or Dig).

Accuracy can be increased by Abilities, held items, and increasing the accuracy stat; Compound Eyes raises the Pokémon's accuracy by 30%, Victory Star raises a Pokémon's accuracy by 10%, the Wide Lens raises the holder's accuracy by 10%, and the Zoom Lens raises the holder's accuracy by 20% if the holder moves after its target. The accuracy stat can be increased by Acupressure, Hone Claws, Coil, Moody, and X Accuracy*.

Accuracy can be decreased by Abilities, held items, and moves. Hustle decreases the accuracy of the Pokémon's physical moves by 20%. The accuracy stat can be decreased by Flash, Kinesis, Mirror Shot, Mud Bomb, Mud-Slap, Muddy Water, Octazooka, Sand Attack, Smokescreen, and Secret Power when used in the sand, on plain terrainDPPtHGSS, in puddlesDPPtHGSS, and on rocksXYORAS.

Formula for accuracy and evasion

The probability that a move will hit is calculated as follows:

File:Accuracy calc.png

Where:

  • Abase is the base accuracy of the move (in percent - e.g. a base accuracy of 95 is counted as 0.95),
  • Accuracy is the current accuracy stat of the user (in percent - e.g. raising accuracy by three stages raises this number to 2), and
  • Evasion is the current evasion stat of the target (in percent - e.g. lowering evasion by two stages lowers this number to 0.6).

If P is greater than 1, the move will surely hit. In a Double or Triple Battle, it is possible for a move that targets multiple Pokémon to hit some and miss others—the probabilities are calculated individually for each Pokémon.

Application of stat modifiers

Stage multipliers
Stage (accuracy) -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 +1 +2 +3 +4 +5 +6
Stage (evasion) +6 +5 +4 +3 +2 +1 0 -1 -2 -3 -4 -5 -6
Gen I 25/100 28/100 33/100 40/100 50/100 66/100 100/100 150/100 200/100 250/100 300/100 350/100 400/100
Gen II 33/100 36/100 43/100 50/100 60/100 75/100 100/100 133/100 166/100 200/100 233/100 266/100 300/100
Gen III-IV 33/100 36/100 43/100 50/100 60/100 75/100 100/100 133/100 166/100 200/100 250/100 266/100 300/100
Gen V+ 3/9 3/8 3/7 3/6 3/5 3/4 3/3 4/3 5/3 6/3 7/3 8/3 9/3

In Generations I and II, accuracy and evasion stages are resolved separately and both multipliers applied to the move's accuracy to determine the final chance of a move hitting or missing. For example, a Pokémon with -1 accuracy using a move that has 100% accuracy on a target with +1 evasion would have a 66/100 * 66/100 ~= 43.56% chance of hitting in Generation I, or a 75/100 * 75/100 ~= 56.25% chance of hitting in Generation II. In Generation III, this was changed so that the stages of the two stats are now combined before determining the multiplier, with the evasion stage subtracted from the accuracy stage. Therefore, in the above situation, the attacking Pokémon would have a 60/100 = 60% chance of hitting.[1]

Additionally, the combined stages are capped at -6 and +6 from Generation III onward, meaning that a Pokémon with minimum accuracy attacking a target with maximum evasion will have no lower than a 33/100 or 33% chance to hit. (For comparison, in Generation II, the attacker would only have a 33/100 * 33/100 ~= 10.89% chance of hitting.)

1/256 miss glitch

In the Generation I handheld games, even moves with 100% accuracy would miss once in a great while for seemingly no reason whatsoever. This was due to accuracy being internally stored as a single byte ranging from 0 to 255 (0 to FF in hexadecimal), and the probability of a move hitting being determined by comparing a randomly generated byte to the accuracy value, with the move hitting if it was less and missing if it was equal or greater. There was therefore a 1/256 chance of the random byte being equal to 255, which could never be less than even the highest possible accuracy value, causing moves labeled as being 100% accurate to miss 1/256 of the time and yielding an effective accuracy of about 99.6%. This bug also applied to secondary effects such as poison or paralysis,[citation needed] as well as critical hits. (It was not possible to replace the "less than" check with a "less than or equal to" check, as this would enable any of these events with an accuracy value of 0 to succeed 1/256 of the time when the random byte was equal to 0.) Swift was unaffected, as its effect automatically skips all accuracy checks (including the invulnerability effects of Fly and Dig) and thus truly has 100% accuracy.

The bug was partially fixed in Pokémon Stadium by allowing the move to hit if the random byte was either less than the accuracy value or exactly equal to 255; this fix effectively causes every move in the game to hit 1/256 more often. The fix did not apply to critical hits, which were still capped at a 255/256 probability. It was further fixed in Generation II, which removed this extra check and instead allowed moves calculated to have 100% accuracy (after applying all modifiers) to skip the random byte generation entirely. However, this did not apply to Protect, which still has a 1/256 chance to fail when used for the first time. All 1/256-related bugs were finally resolved in Generation III, whose hardware gained the ability to more freely generate ranges of random numbers; move accuracies are stored as a number from 0 to 100, and the game performs a "less than or equal to" check on a random integer from 1 to 100.

In the Pokémon Mystery Dungeon series

050Diglett.png This section is incomplete.
Please feel free to edit this section to add missing information and complete it.
Reason: How accuracy is represented in Gates to Infinity and information on Blazing, Stormy and Light
Accuracy indicated by a blue bar in Pokémon Super Mystery Dungeon

In the Pokémon Mystery Dungeon series until Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Gates to Infinity, accuracy was instead called "Hit Ratio" and displayed with a number of stars instead of a numerical value. More stars indicated a higher accuracy. For example, Scratch had a Hit Ratio of PMD Star IV.pngPMD Star IV.pngPMD Star IV.pngPMD Star IV.pngPMD Star IV.pngPMD Star IV.pngPMD Star IV.png. Hit Ratio did not always correlate with accuracy from the main series. For instance, some moves such as Scratch and Crunch which share the same accuracy in the main series had different Hit Ratios (or vice versa).

The term "accuracy" started to be used from Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Gates to Infinity.

In Pokémon Super Mystery Dungeon, accuracy is displayed as a blue bar in the move summary. Unlike previous games, the Speed stat is used as an accuracy modifier; the higher speed a Pokémon has, the more likely its moves will be to hit.

In the Mystery Dungeon series, there are several ways of increasing the accuracy of moves. Much like in the core series games, Abilities such as Compound Eyes boost the accuracy of moves. Additionally, beginning from Gates to Infinity, moves can be ranked up when they are used over time, which will also increase the move's accuracy. The increase is permanent and will carry over to other teammate's with the same move. Items such as Accuracy ManualsGtI or Accuracy DrinksSMD can also permanently increase accuracy. Certain emeras can also increase accuracy when added to looplets.

References


Project Games logo.png This game-related article is part of Project Games, a Bulbapedia project that aims to write comprehensive articles on the Pokémon games.