However, the Bad Egg cannot be removed if a cheating device is not used. In Generation V, many glitches have been fixed that involves a Bad Egg such as that the game no longer freezes or corrupts. A normal Pokémon in the PC becomes identified as 'Bad Egg'. Bad Eggs can also occur when one uses a cheat device to catch Pokémon in the wild that are not found in the game, like Regice in Pokémon Pearl, or Mesprit in Pokémon SoulSilver. In Generation IV, bad Eggs are sometimes found by using a cheat to capture the opponent's Pokémon. The Elite Four in Generation III all have at least one Bad Egg in their party, when a cheat is utilized to capture their Pokémon. The Trainer Memo section of such Eggs' summaries invariably states that they are "A peculiar Egg obtained in a trade." Such Eggs do not actually hatch unless prompted by a cheat device. The string is used to identify Eggs that appear to have been corrupted. The Generation III games are the only games to actually make use of the term "Bad EGG". In these games, Bad EGG is called simply EGG. Sometimes, it is not possible to battle with a Bad EGG as its back sprite is undefined. Such Eggs don't have any data specifying what they are supposed to hatch into, so the Egg simply hatches into more Eggs. It is possible to, through the use of a cheat device, catch an Egg in the wild or turn a Pokémon the player character already owns into an Egg.
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