From Bulbapedia, the community-driven Pokémon encyclopedia.
A Pinap Berry (Japanese: パイルのみ Pairu Fruit) is a type of Berry introduced in Generation III. In Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee!, the Pinap Berry also has two variants: the Silver Pinap Berry and the Golden Pinap Berry.
Locations
Growth and harvest
Generation III
A Pinap Berry will mature from a planted seed to a full-grown, fruit-bearing tree in 4 hours, with 1 hour per stage. A Pinap tree will yield 3-6 Berries.
Generation IV
A Pinap Berry will mature from a planted seed to a full-grown, fruit-bearing tree in 8 hours, with 2 hours per stage. A Pinap tree will yield 2-10 Berries.
Generation VII
A Pinap Berry will mature from a planted seed to a full-grown, fruit-bearing tree in 24 hours. A Pinap tree will yield 4-12 Berries.
Uses
In-battle
In Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee!, when used from the Bag on a wild Pokémon, it increases the chance of getting more item rewards for catching Pokémon. The effect wears off if and when the wild Pokémon breaks out of a thrown Poké Ball.
Berry Blending
Berry Crushing
At 100% performance, this Berry will contribute 140 units of powder.
Poffin Cooking
At 100% performance, a Pinap Berry can produce a Level 13 (maybe higher) Spicy Poffin when cooking alone.
Artwork
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Dream World artwork
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Models
In spin-off games
A Pinap Berry in Pokémon GO
The Pinap Berry was added to Pokémon GO on February 16, 2017. Using a Pinap Berry on a wild Pokémon will make it give twice as much Candy if it is caught. The Berry's effect lasts until the wild Pokémon breaks out of a thrown Poké Ball. Feeding a Pinap Berry to a Gym defender increases its motivation by the same amount as a Razz Berry does.
- See also: Silver Pinap Berry→Pokémon GO
Description
Games
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Description
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GO
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Feed this to a Pokémon to make it drop more Candy.
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Acquisition
Pinap Berries can be obtained starting at level 18. They are also rewarded for leveling up every 4 levels starting at level 21. Pinap Berries have also appeared in limited-time boxes in the Shop.
In addition, Pinap Berries can be repeatably obtained from
In the anime
A Pinap Berry in the
anime
Pinap Berries debuted in Mallow and the Forest Teacher!, where they were used by Abe and a wild Oranguru to make Pinap Juice.
A Pinap Berry appeared in SM064 at the nest of a group of wild Passimian.
In the manga
A Pinap Berry in Pokémon Adventures
In the Pokémon Adventures manga
In Problematic Probopass and Mad Magnezone II, a Pinap Berry was seen among the many Berries that Cyrus's Probopass's Mini-Noses dug out of Lax's fur while trying to retrieve Cyrus's camera.
Trivia
Names
Language
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Name
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Origin
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Japanese
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パイルのみ Pairu no Mi
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From パイナップル pineapple
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English
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Pinap Berry
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From pineapple
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French
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Baie Nanana
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From ananas, pineapple
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German
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Sananabeere
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From Ananas, pineapple
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Italian
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Baccananas
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From ananas, pineapple
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Spanish
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Baya Pinia
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From piña, pineapple
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Korean
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파인열매 Pine Yeolmae
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From 파인애플 pineapple
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Chinese (Mandarin)
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凰梨果 Huánglí Guǒ*
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From 鳳梨 fènglí (pineapple; lit. "phoenix pear") and 鳳凰 fènghuáng (phoenix)
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黃旺梨 Huángwànglí*
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From 黃梨 huánglí, 旺來 wànglái, and 鳳梨 fènglí (different names for pineapple)
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Chinese (Cantonese)
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凰梨果 Wòhnglèih Gwó
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From its Mandarin name
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Polish
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Pinap Jagoda
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From its English name
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Brazilian Portuguese
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Fruta Caxí
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From abacaxi, pineapple
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Vietnamese
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Quả dứa
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From trái dứa, pineapple
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