Friday 29 July 2016

How to Hatch Pokémon Eggs and Have a Great Run at the Same Time






 While Pokémon Go is great for interval workouts, it’s not always easy to play while you’re on a nice long run: the app under-counts the distance you travel, and sometimes turns off unexpectedly. Don’t let that stop you, though: you can still good workout in while you hatch some eggs—it just takes a few tweaks.
 
Running, after all, should be an efficient way to hatch eggs in Pokémon Go. A two-kilometer egg calls for fifteen minutes of easy jogging (or less, if you’re fast). But when I took the app on a few runs, I stopped dozens of times to catch pokémon and to check if my egg had hatched yet. It took me forever to finish what was supposed to be a short run. And while intervals are great, I had meant to run a steady pace workout that day. Oops.

Figure Out the Best Way to Play on the Run

Besides hatching eggs, you may want to also catch Pokémon and collect supplies at stops. If you’re okay with these distractions, here’s how to use them without having to stop and walk:
  • Tap on a stop while it’s still in the distance, and spin it when you’re next to it. That way you don’t have to tap and spin in quick succession.
  • Don’t bother popping the bubbles. It’s a cute animation, but once you spin the stop, those items are in your inventory whether you pop their little floating bubbles or not. You can just hit the “x” at the bottom of the screen, and move on.
  • Tap on a Pokémon that you want to catch later. The little guy will stay on your screen no matter where you go, so you can catch him while you’re running, or even wait until you get to your next water break. You can’t catch anything else in the meantime, though, so choose wisely.
  • Turn off AR (the real-world camera view) if you plan to catch pokémon while you’re running. With a little practice, it’s not too hard to chuck pokéballs on the move—just be extra careful about real-life hazards while your eyes are glued to the phone.
 Honestly, the hardest part of playing Pokémon Go on the run is ignoring the little buzzes that mean a creature is nearby. If you don’t intend to run intervals, consider jogging in an area with very few pokémon—the opposite of what you’d normally do.

Make Your Pokémon Go Running Plan

Consider how your Pokémon game plan fits in with your running plan. Will you stop every few kilometers to swap out eggs? Do you need to pause at pokéstops or is it more important to keep up a fast pace without taking breaks?
Once you figure out whether and how often you’re okay with stopping, check out your egg inventory. How long will it take you to hatch what you’ve got? Here’s a handy chart if you’re not used to thinking in kilometers:
  • 2.0 km - 1.2 miles
  • 5.0 km - 3.1 miles
  • 10.0 km - 6.2 miles
 If you run with an app like Nike+ or Runkeeper, and get updates on your distance every mile, consider changing your settings so you get updates every kilometer. Also, build in a buffer: eggs will probably take longer to hatch than they’re supposed to, because Pokémon Go doesn’t track distance as accurately as fitness apps.

Understand How Pokémon Go Measures Distance

You’ll probably have to run a lot farther than two kilometers to hatch a two-kilometer egg. That’s because the app doesn’t use step counters and it doesn’t continually ask GPS satellites where you are. Instead, players are figuring out, the servers note your distance every now and then. They’ll draw a straight line between your current location and your last location. That distance is what you get credit for. If you traveled that distance too fast, the game figures you were in a car and doesn’t count it.
Since your distance is measured in straight lines, it will match best to your real-world movements if you travel in straight lines. If you run laps on a track, for example, the app might see you twice in roughly the same spot without realizing you ran a couple of laps in the meantime. We know, we’ve suggested that small movements can register distance, but that’s a hypothesis that doesn’t seem to be panning out. The best way to get the app to track your miles is to:
  • Run in a straight line, not a zigzag or looping course
  • Interact with the app when you change direction, to nudge it to check your position. One way to do this is tapping on a pokéstop or gym (even if it’s in the distance) so the app has to figure out if you’re within range.
Even if you follow these tips, you might find that the app doesn’t measure your distance perfectly. So if you want to hatch a five-kilometer egg, understand that your run might have to be six kilometers.

Keep the App Running While You Are

Pokémon Go only tracks distance that you travel while the app is open on your phone. You can’t start the app and then turn off your screen to go for a run; you have to find a way to keep the app open the whole time.
That means you have to be very careful about not pressing the screen. An armband may be the best way of carrying the phone, to avoid the possibilityof a body part or headphone cord accidentally closing the app. Pokémon Go Extender, for Android, solves this problem in another way: it uses the phone’s proximity sensor to detect when the phone is in a pocket, and turns off screen presses. The app is free, but that feature requires a $1.49 in-app purchase. I’ve found it’s impossible to dedicate a given run to the game and to my fitness—I have to decide which is more important. On some days, I figure I’m playing the game first, and getting in a run as a side effect. On others, I put a five-kilometer egg in an incubator, stick the phone in my pocket, and focus on getting in a killer workout.

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