Friday, January 31, 2020

New Mythical Pokemon For Sword & Shield Will Be Revealed Next Month

February 27 marks the anniversary of Pokemon Red and Green's release in Japan, and The Pokemon Company is once again commemorating the occasion with a big reveal. Last year, the series' latest installments, Sword and Shield, were officially unveiled on Pokemon Day, and this year, we'll get our first look at a brand-new Pokemon for the games.

Serebii reports that The Pokemon Company will unveil a brand-new Mythical Pokemon on February 27. This special monster will appear in Sword and Shield as well as the upcoming Pokemon film, titled Pokemon the Movie: Coco. Additionally, the company will kick off a new Max Raid event in Sword and Shield that day, as well as a special event in Pokemon Go.

No further information about the new Pokemon has been revealed so far, but Serebii notes that the monster is separate from Urshifu and Calyrex, the two new Legendaries being introduced in Sword and Shield's Isle of Armor and Crown Tundra expansions. Those are slated to launch this June and fall, respectively.

In the meantime, a new Max Raid event is now underway in Sword and Shield. While Gigantamax Alcremie spawn rates have returned to normal, you are now more likely to encounter its pre-evolved form, Milcery, in Max Raids until February 16. Many of these Milcery will be able to Gigantamax when they evolve. Additionally, you can receive Ribbon and Star Sweets as rewards for completing Milcery Raids, allowing you to evolve the Pokemon into new variants.

A new freebie for the games is also available now. You can claim 10 free Heal Balls via Mystery Gift until March 31. To receive the balls, select Mystery Gift from your game's menu and enter the code G1GAGRANF1NALE. You can see all the other Pokemon Sword and Shield freebies up for grabs right now in our roundup.

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    ‘Pokémon Sword’ And ‘Shield’ Sales Reveal A Truth About Gamer Rage

    Pokemon Sword and Shield

    Credit: Game Freak

    Remember #Dexit? It was a whole thing. Without going too much into it: Pokémon fans were angry that Pokémon Sword in Shield would be the first in the long-running franchise not to support every Pokémon from every game, and threatened to boycott. We stopped hearing much about that shortly after the game released, as tends to happen, but now we at least have some numbers to indicate why: everyone was playing an absolute ton of Pokémon Sword and Shield. Nintendo just released earnings figures, and the two games come in with a whopping 16.06 million units sold, a massive figure for a storied franchise that is clearly enjoying one of its most popular moments in its history. The boycott, as everyone could have guessed, did not materialize.

    Here’s the thing about boycott threats like this one: they mean the exact opposite of what they say. When you see such intense controversy swirling around a game, more often the not, what it means is that there is a huge amount of attention being paid to an upcoming title. The more intense the controversy, the more attention being paid.

    NPD analyst Mat Piscatella has tweeted about this in the past, saying that a threat of a boycott is a reason to boost forecasts, not cut them:

    This isn’t the case absolutely, 100% of the time: Star Wars Battlefront 2’s controversies actually had a big negative impact on earnings, though that was a more complicated situation with Disney’s involvement and the game’s last minute microtransaction changes. I suppose some could point to Battlefield 5, but there were a lot of other non-boycott reasons why that title underperformed.

    But with something like Pokémon Sword and Shield, it’s easy to see how this actually shakes out. Nobody in a position to care about something like a limited Pokédex is actually going to boycott that game, at least not in numbers greater than rounding errors. These are the hardest-core fans of a franchise, and they’re just not going to skip the new titles. Most likely, these are the sorts of players that are not going to skip either new title. But the boycott still indicates the intensity of anticipation, just through the negative lens through which social media is so good at putting over entertainment.

    So next time you see a threat of a boycott, pay attention, but not for the reasons you think. If people are threatening to boycott the Breath of the Wild sequel because Zelda is a playable character(or something), tick those forecasts up a bit.

    Thursday, January 30, 2020

    What Pokémon can teach us about conservation and climate change

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  • What Pokémon can teach us about conservation and climate change New, 1 comment

    Gotta save 'em all

    By Eleanor Cummins Jan 30, 2020, 11:59am EST Illustration by Dami Lee and Alex Castro Share this story
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  • There's a moment in the live-action movie Detective Pikachu when the ground beneath our heroes' feet is crumbling. As they slip and slide, Pikachu, voiced by Ryan Reynolds, yells to no one in particular, "At this point, how can you not believe in climate change?" It's a good quip — one of a million small jokes that's easily missed. But it's also one of the first times that Pokémon, the most lucrative media franchise of all time, addressed the climate crisis. It certainly won't be the last.

    Fans appreciate Pokémon for its camp humor, adorable monsters, and emphasis on the quest for excellence. But for more than two decades, Pokémon has also delivered a crash course in environmental science. Like a professor par excellence, it's addressed ecological vulnerability and land management, extinction and de-extinction, the plight of endangered species and the dangers of invasive ones, and, most recently, the real costs of climate change. There's a lot more to Pokémon than just catching 'em all.

    Pokémon was an eco-conscious project from its conception. Nineties kids know the origin story well. Satoshi Tajiri was born in Japan in 1965. He was an avid insect collector — the other kids called him "Dr. Bug." At the time, Tajiri's hometown still had rural pockets, but as the Tokyo metropolitan area subsumed outlying villages, plants and animals gave way to concrete and skyscrapers. Decades later, when he first played with a Game Boy, he saw an opportunity to ensure a new generation of urban kids could experience the simulated joys of taxonomy and tromping through the wilderness. In 1996, Tajiri's company, Game Freak, released the first games in his fantastical universe of Pocket Monsters, better known as Pokémon.

    Today, there are eight generations of Pokémon games and, depending on how you count them, about 900 individual monsters. They've spawned dozens of video games, 24 movies, and more than 1,000 episodes of television. Along with trading cards, Croc Jibbitz, and other merchandise, the franchise has grossed over $92 billion in total revenue.

    In many ways, the Pokémon universe still resembles that of Tajiri's childhood. There are patches of tall grass full of unknown creatures, dark forests, and rushing rivers — all imbued with a sense of aliveness that cultural anthropologist Anne Allison called "techno-animism" in her book Millennial Monsters: Japanese Toys and the Global Imagination. While there are ghost pokémon and sentient ice cream cones, many pocket monsters mimic real-world biodiversity: Caterpie, with its bright orange osmeterium, is clearly the caterpillar form of the eastern tiger swallowtail. Pikachu, an electric mouse, is based on the actual pika, a teeny mammal that's more closely related to rabbits than rats. Vileplume is a grumpy corpse lily, Sandslash is a superpowered pangolin, and Drowzee is a neon-lit Malayan tapir.

    But where other games like Animal Crossing restrict themselves to a preindustrial idyll, the untamed fantasyland of Pokémon exists side by side with the scientific quagmires of the modern world. Mewtwo, a giant purple alien-cat, was "created by a scientist after years of horrific gene splicing and DNA engineering experiments." Mewtwo has appeared in numerous installments of the franchise, typically in pursuit of revenge on humanity. In the latest games, Sword and Shield, Koffing "floats into garbage dumps, seeking out the fumes of raw, rotting trash." Its evolved form, Weezing, which can appear as a two-headed smokestack, reportedly emerged "during a time when droves of factories fouled the air with pollution." It goes without saying where these garbage dumps and factories came from.

    Just as Pokémon has mimicked the real world, it's influenced it, too. In 2002, researchers reported that more children knew pokémon species than real ones like badgers or oak trees. "[I]t appears that conservationists are doing less well than the creators of Pokémon at inspiring interest in their subjects," the authors concluded. Some scientists have since risen to the challenge. In 2019, researchers evaluated a Pokémon-style card game called Phylo, which is designed to increase awareness about earthly animals and the challenges they face. The researchers found that people who played Phylo had more fun and remembered a more diverse range of species than those who simply viewed a PowerPoint.

    Though Pokémon presents its fans with an opportunity to think through myriad ethical dilemmas and environmental issues, it rarely resolves those challenges in an optimal way. This "tension" between "a yearning for nature and a desire to contain it" has been implicit in the show from the beginning, writes Jason Bainbridge of the University of Canberra. While Pokémon producer Masakazu Kubo has argued the franchise is about the "harmony" between pokémon and people, even the biggest fans know it's really an unending stream of content based on the adventures of unchaperoned and underaged through-hikers refining their skills in fantastical dog fighting. Even if a pokémon and its trainer truly collaborate, the pokéball — a red, black, and white cage that is used to capture and contain new monsters — gives the humans the upper hand. Without the pokéball, Bainbridge writes, there would be no "pocket" monsters — just a world full of wild magical bei ngs.

    These mirror some of the fundamental disagreements of the modern conservation movement, says Leejiah Dorward, a conservation scientist who published an influential paper on Pokémon Go, the AR-enabled smartphone game, in 2016. "Pokémon leans toward this worldview that wildlife is there for our exploitation and use," he says. "That exploitative view is really in the Western conservationist model." But, increasingly, conservationists are advocating for biodiversity for the sake of biodiversity. Instead of catching 'em all (a slogan that applies equally to Pokémon and President Theodore Roosevelt), we should protect wildlife and admire it from a respectful distance — less Ash Ketchum and more Todd in Pokémon Snap.

    But for many of these species, time is running out. Recently, the 24-year-old Pokémon franchise has begun to grapple with the very real perils of climate change. In Detective Pikachu, it's that one-liner from Pikachu. But in Sword and Shield, it's much more serious. Corsola, a second-generation coral-like Pokémon, has been bleached by rising ocean temperatures. It's been replaced by a ghost-type descendant, Cursola. Where the original reef was pink and smiling, the creature we have now is shock white with watery red eyes.

    If Pokémon has taught us anything about the environment, then we know that the time for action is long overdue.

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    Pokemon Go: January 2020 Field Research List

    January 2020 is here, which means a new batch of Field Research tasks is now live in Pokemon Go. Unlike the more story-driven Special Research quests, Field Research tasks are distributed through PokeStops. The first task you complete each day will net you a stamp, and each time you collect seven stamps, you'll achieve a Research Breakthrough, which will unlock special rewards like an encounter with a rare Pokemon.

    Last month, the Research Breakthrough reward was an encounter with a Legendary Pokemon, but Niantic is offering a different reward for January 2020. Each time you achieve a Research Breakthrough this month, you'll get a chance to catch a Lapras that knows Ice Beam or Ice Shard. This marks the first time you could get the Pokemon with either move since 2018.

    As previously mentioned, you can receive Field Research tasks at PokeStops, and the ones you get will be randomly taken from a larger pool. You can see the updated list of Pokemon Go's Field Research tasks along with the possible rewards they dole out below, courtesy of The Silph Road.

    There's plenty more happening in Pokemon Go this month. The Legendary Pokemon Heatran is returning to five-star Raids from January 7 to February 4, while the Hatchathon event runs until January 16. The first Community Day of 2020 is also set for Sunday, January 19, although Niantic hasn't revealed what the featured Pokemon will be yet.

    Catching Tasks Field Research Task Rewards Catch 5 Pokemon with Weather boost Poliwag or Vulpix encounter; 200 Stardust, 3 Razz Berries, 1 Pinap Berry, or 5 Poke Balls Catch 10 Pokemon with Weather boost 500 Stardust, 6 Razz Berries, 2 Pinap Berries, or 5 Great Balls Catch 3 Normal-, Water-, or Ice-type Pokemon Dewgong encounter Catch 3 different species of Ice-type Pokemon 3 Rare Candies Catch 5 Fire-type Pokemon Snorunt encounter Catch 10 Pokemon Magikarp encounter; 200 Stardust, 3 Razz Berries, 1 Pinap Berry, or 5 Poke Balls Catch 10 Normal-type Pokemon 500 Stardust, 6 Razz Berries, 2 Pinap Berries, or 5 Great Balls Use 5 Berries to help catch Pokemon 500 Stardust, 6 Razz Berries, 2 Pinap Berries, or 5 Great Balls Catch a Dragon Pokemon Dratini encounter; 1,500 Stardust, 3 Rare Candies, 2 Gold Razz Berries, or 10 Ultra Balls Catch a Ditto 1,500 Stardust, 3 Rare Candies, 2 Gold Razz Berries, or 10 Ultra Balls Battling Tasks Field Research Tasks Rewards Defeat a Team Go Rocket Grunt Sneasel encounter Battle in a Raid Swinub encounter; 200 Stardust, 5 Nanab Berries, 5 Potions, or 2 Revives Battle in a Gym Mankey encounter; 200 Stardust, 5 Nanab Berries, 5 Potions, or 2 Revives Battle another trainer 3 times Shellder encounter Win a Gym battle Bulbasaur, Charmander, or Squirtle encounter; 500 Stardust, 10 Nanab Berries, 3 Super Potions, or 4 Revives Battle in a Gym 5 times Machop encounter; 500 Stardust, 10 Nanab Berries, 3 Super Potions, or 4 Revives Use a super-effective Charged Attack in 7 Gym battles Electabuzz encounter; 1,000 Stardust, 1 Rare Candy, 3 Hyper Potions, 6 Revives, or 1 Max Revive Win 5 Raids Aerodactyl encounter Win a level 3 or higher Raid Kabuto or Omanyte encounter; 1,000 Stardust, 1 Rare Candy, 3 Hyper Potions, 6 Revives, or 1 Max Revive Win 3 Gym battles Jynx encounter; 1,000 Stardust, 1 Rare Candy, 3 Hyper Potions, 6 Revives, or 1 Max Revive Use a super-effective Charged Attack in a Gym battle 500 Stardust, 10 Nanab Berries, 3 Super Potions, or 4 Revives Win a Raid 500 Stardust, 10 Nanab Berries, 3 Super Potions, or 4 Revives Win 3 Raids 1,500 Stardust, 3 Max Potions, 8 Revives, or 3 Max Revives Throwing Tasks Field Research Task Rewards Make 3 Great throws Gastly, Anorith, or Lileep encounter; 200 Stardust, 3 Razz Berries, 1 Pinap Berry, or 5 Poke Balls Make 5 Nice throws Voltorb encounter; 200 Stardust, 3 Razz Berries, 1 Pinap Berry, or 5 Poke Balls Make 3 Nice throws in a row 500 Stardust, 2 Pinap Berries, 5 Great Balls, or 2 Ultra Balls Make 3 Great throws in a row Onix encounter; 1,000 Stardust, 1 Rare Candy, 9 Razz Berries, 3 Pinap Berries, 10 Poke Balls, or 5 Ultra Balls Make 3 Great curveball throws 1,000 Stardust, 1 Rare Candy, 9 Razz Berries, 3 Pinap Berries, 10 Poke Balls, or 5 Ultra Balls Make 3 Great curveball throws in a row 1,500 Stardust, 1 Rare Candy, 9 Razz Berries, 3 Pinap Berries, 10 Poke Balls, or 5 Ultra Balls Make 5 Great curveball throws in a row Spinda encounter Make an Excellent throw 500 Stardust, 2 Pinap Berries, 5 Great Balls, or 2 Ultra Balls Make 3 Excellent throws in a row Larvitar encounter Make 5 curveball throws in a row 500 Stardust, 6 Razz Berries, 2 Pinap Berries, or 5 Great Balls Make 2 Nice curveball throws in a row 200 Stardust, 3 Razz Berries, 1 Pinap Berry, or 5 Poke Balls Hatching Tasks Field Research Task Rewards Hatch an Egg Exeggcute encounter; 200 Stardust, 3 Razz Berries, 1 Pinap Berry, or 5 Poke Balls Hatch 3 Eggs Magmar encounter; 1,000 Stardust, 1 Rare Candy, 9 Razz Berries, 3 Pinap Berries, 10 Poke Balls, or 5 Ultra Balls Hatch 5 Eggs Chansey encounter Hatch 7 Eggs Alolan Vulpix encounter Misc. Tasks Field Research Task Rewards Transfer 3 Pokemon Lotad encounter Trade a Pokemon Glalie encounter Evolve a Pokemon Cubchoo or Eevee encounter Power up Pokemon 5 times Bulbasaur, Charmander, or Squirtle encounter Send 10 Gifts to friends Clamperl encounter Spin 10 PokeStops or Gyms 200 Stardust, 3 Razz Berries, 1 Pinap Berry, 5 Silver Pinap Berries, or 5 Poke Balls Buddy Tasks Field Research Task Rewards Take a Snapshot of your Buddy Snover encounter Earn 5 Hears with your Buddy Stantler encounter

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    Wednesday, January 29, 2020

    'Pokemon Go' online battle feature starts rolling out

    Late last year, Niantic promised Pokemon Go players a feature called "Go Battle League" that would finally give them a way to fight other trainers worldwide. Now, the developer has started rolling out Go Battle League, and it will make its way to players based on their trainer level. You may have to wait a bit longer to get it, because Niantic temporarily paused its release "to ensure a smooth feature launch and prevent server issues." But when you do get the feature, you'll be able to fight against other trainers at the Go Battle League preseason events.

    The preseason leagues -- namely, the Great League, the Ultra League and the Master League -- will allow Niantic to observe how people are playing and make adjustments for the first season of competitive play. It could help the company determine the ideal season length and rating threshold for ranks, among other things.

    Related: Pokemon Go: A complete beginner's guide (TechRadar) 

    To be able to play in the leagues, you'll have to walk five kilometers to earn your entry and unlock five online matches. You can do that three times a day, if you want to battle as many trainers as possible and don't mind the exercise. However, you can also use your PokeCoins to pay your way in via the Battle Now feature if you can't complete a five kilometer walk. The farther you are to the goal, the higher the price is. You'll also be able to encounter Pikachu Libre, a type of Pikachu that wears a lucha libre costume, when you play in the Go Battle League.

    Niantic says it will provide updates as soon as it's able regarding the feature's rollout, so you may want to keep an eye on Pokemon Go's social media channels for future announcements.

    Niantic

    Tuesday, January 28, 2020

    ‘Temtem’ is in early access, but it’s already the best ‘Pokemon’ clone ever made

    For the life of me, I could never figure out why there weren't more shameless Pokemon ripoffs floating around. Sure, there are other games that have creatures you can catch, evolve, and battle, but few, if any, feature the exact same formula that made Pokemon so popular (and so addictive) in the first place.

    Temtem, a game that entered early access on Steam last week, is the ripoff I've been waiting for all these years. The game wears its influence on its sleeve, and by copying everything that makes Pokemon what it is, developer Crema was able to make slight adjustments and alterations along the way to improve the formula and freshen it up for the 21st century. It might not look as nice quite as Pokemon Sword and Shield, but in many ways, Temtem is the true evolution of the franchise many fans have been waiting for since the late '90s.

    On its face, Temtem is Pokemon by everything but its name. To start, your mom wakes you up on the day you are to become a Temtem tamer, and the local professor gifts you with your first Temtem so that you can begin your journey. Along the way, you will level up your Temtem by battling untamed Temtem in the wild and other tamers you meet on the routes between towns. And you can grow your party by catching untamed Temtem with TemCards.

    If this sounds familiar, it's probably because you've played a Pokemon game at some point in the last 20 years. But where the latest games in the Pokemon franchise failed to push the concepts forward in any meaningful way other than graphically, Temtem tore some of the foundational elements of the series to the ground and reworked them to make them better. For example, there are no random number generators (RNG) in Temtem battles. In other words, every time you use an attack, it's guaranteed to hit for the same amount of damage, and every time you attempt to apply a status effect (like poison or sleep), it will be applied for a set number of turns.

    Removing those elements of chance from Temtem battles makes them far more strategic and less random. If you go into a fight prepared, and you understand the type differences between the Temtem that will give you an advantage in certain matchups, you have a great chance of succeeding.

    Image Source: Humble Bundle

    The other significant change is the stamina system. In Pokemon, your creature's moves can be used a set number of times before you need to heal it at a Pokemon Center. In Temtem, any of the four moves a Temtem has equipped can be used an infinite number of times, but they each consume a set amount of a Temtem's stamina. If a move costs 25 stamina and a Temtem has 20 stamina remaining, it can use the move, but will end up doing 5 points of damage to itself (20 stamina – 25 stamina), and will be exhausted the next turn.

    These changes have completely revitalized my interest in the formula where Sword and Shield failed to grab me like I hoped they would. Temtem is genuinely challenging, and while it requires more grinding than modern Pokemon titles, the thrill of defeating a truly difficult dojo leader is something I haven't experienced since I played the original Pokemon games as a kid. And I've only seen a fraction of what Temtem has to offer.

    Temtem is still in early access, there are kinks being worked out every day, and only about 50% of the content that will be included in the final release has made its way into the current build, but I cannot wait to see how this game evolves over the next year or so as Crema adds new creatures, new islands, and new features. Plus, Temtem is technically an MMO, with countless other players running around the open world battling and exploring on their own terms, and I'm excited to see how that component changes my experience as I build up a competitive team.

    Temtem is available now in early access on Steam for $34.99.

    Image Source: Humble Bundle

    Jacob started covering video games and technology in college as a hobby, but it quickly became clear to him that this was what he wanted to do for a living. He currently resides in New York writing for BGR. His previously published work can be found on TechHive, VentureBeat and Game Rant.

    I Took Pokémon’s Personality Quiz 50 Times

    I'm pretty sure I know what Pokémon I am. Somewhere in the Slowpoke/Bulbasaur range? Kinda stout, kinda cute. On the slower side—but good Pokés all around. I also know enough to know that I'm not like my favorite Pokemon, Gengar, but would happily play as any of that evolutionary line. While I don't necessarily think I embody their spirits, if I got them on a quiz I would be OK with that.

    I've taken many "which Pokémon are you?" quizzes over the years, and I've even subjected myself to one of those popular slot-machine-style instagram filters. (I got Exeggutor. Not the worst result for random chance). And that's why I know that Pokemon Mystery Dungeon Rescue Team DX's quiz, which asks you eight questions to determine what Pokémon you are, is total bullshit.

    Skitty? Freaking Skitty? Absolutely not.

    My very first go around in Mystery Dungeon's opening, I was sad to learn that of the hundreds of Pokémon available, you could only be one of 16 in this game, and none of them are Slowpoke. When I got Skitty, an atrocious cat thing that I never liked (Meowth gang 4 lyfe), I immediately decided to retake the quiz. My wife sent me this horoscope meme to make me feel better.

    The second time around, I noticed there were a few different questions, which instantly raised a red flag. How could this quiz be accurate when the questions it was throwing at me were random? I decided the only way to get an accurate reading was to document every question (and result) for a total of 50 attempts, and then put them in a spreadsheet.

    What follows are some of my thoughts as I gathered this information.

    Attempt 4: Mudkip

    I really don't like Mudkip. Yes, it's cute enough, and its funny little muttonchop fins are endearing enough, but I've been on the internet for way too long. Ever since that old "I heard you leik Mudkips" incident, I haven't been able to separate this seemingly sweet and calm Pokémon from an Old Meme. It's not Mudkip's fault, but no, I don't like Mudkips.

    Attempt 10: Mudkip

    Hey, remember how I said I don't like Mudkip? Well, 5 out of the last 10 results were Mudkip with the Calm nature. Natures are the way this game sums up the personality type of each Pokémon, and so far Mudkips have all been Calm. I'm now past doubting the quiz—and onto doubting myself. Is there something I've been missing out on for holding this long standing grudge against Mudkip? Could this cute water starter be my true Pokésoul?

    Attempt 12: Mudkip

    OK, this is getting ridiculous. I was asked to "Grab any finger on your left hand." How is this indicative of anything personality related? The quiz is rigged! I'm a pretty calm person, or at least I can be. Underneath, I'm usually a raw nerve of a dozen different anxieties, but I think most people might call me calm. Maybe there's something to this quiz? Still don't understand how grabbing a finger has any bearing on that.

    Attempt 23: Bulbasaur

    A new twist emerges: it seems that your nature isn't necessarily correlated to the Pokémon you get. When we did this quiz on Waypoint Radio for Rob, he got the "Hardy" nature, but was a Pikachu. On this attempt, I got Hardy, and it was paired with Bulbasaur, the Pokémon that I think I embody the most in this game. Maybe it was all random?

    Attempt 24: Mudkip

    Another Calm Mudkip. If this is random, then the universe decided to mess with me.

    Attempt 29: Psyduck

    There's a question in here that asks how you would talk to your country's leader. There was no option for telling him to fuck off, so I picked the next closest thing: "WHATEVER!!!" I expect the game will get the wrong impression of me from this answer.

    Attempt 41: Cubone

    It's been five quizzes since I last saw a Mudkip. I'd come to expect them more often than that, so I was surprised when I got the "lonely" nature for the first time. Was I missing Mudkip now? Did I yearn for the sense of stability that came from getting the same result over and over?

    Attempt 50: Cyndaquil

    At the end of this little experiment, I've gotten every Pokémon possible on this quiz save one. But there's some clear outliers. I got Cyndaquil and Bulbasaur five times each, but the 15 times I got Mudkip stuck out like a sore thumb. That's when I thought back to the image my wife sent me, and remembered that in Astrology you don't just have one sign, but multiple. As it turns out, people are complicated!

    I asked Astrology Editor and fellow Pokémon fan Sara David about the difference between your sun sign and your rising sign. Could I possibly have multiple Pokémon that make up a fuller image of my inner self?

    Your sun sign (which is the horoscope sign most people are familiar with and read their horoscopes for) represents your will, identity, and ego. It best describes your overarching personality and the values that drive you, while your rising sign is more about the way you express yourself and come across to others. Our astrologer Annabel calls your rising sign "the mask" you wear and present to the world, that more closely correlates to your appearance and external personality."

    Finally, something that makes sense to me. Maybe Mudkip is just my rising sign, and Bulbasaur is my sun sign! The game kept giving me Mudkip because that's the mask I was presenting when answering the game's questions! I was really a Bulbasaur, like I always knew!

    Content with that justification, I chose Bulbasaur, at which point I learned that you also choose your partner in this game. The whole experiment, and all this hemming and hawing seemed to coalesce in this choice, a final distillation of the answer the game had been given me over and over. I chose Mudkip because I felt bad for betraying that part of myself, for hiding from some nugget of my truth to the point that I concocted this ridiculous experiment.

    Screenshot from Pokemon Mystery Dungeon Rescue Team DX, Bulbasaur and Mudkip stand side by side, under them a text box reads

    Yes, these two will do just fine.

    Maybe someday I would even come to actually like Mudkip. For now, I'm good with just taking the step of associating with one. Knowing yourself is a lifelong process, and this game helped me take another tiny step forward, so for that I'm grateful.

    This article originally appeared on VICE US.

    Monday, January 27, 2020

    Pokemon Fans Celebrate Rookie Mom Who Dominated Local Tournament

    A tweet about a Pokemon TCG tournament has gone viral thanks to the surprising performance of a mom named Pam (via ComicBook.com).The tweet thread from @CarolineDirectr tells the story of how she invited her mother Pam to join in on her weekend Pokemon tournament at Core TCG in Pasadena, CA -- a pre-release for the new Sword and Shield set. Pam sheepishly asked her daughter if it was okay for her to watch the Pokemon tournament, but Caroline went one further and taught her how to play so she could be a part of the competition.

    What Caroline likely didn't expect was for her mother to not only beat her when they were pitted against each other in the third round of the tournament but to continue doing well enough to finish in the Top 8. The tournament had upwards of 40 competitors. The final photo shows Pam alongside the other top finishers gleefully holding up her prizes.

    Pam the Pokemom's Pokemon Journey

    The story is incredibly sweet in how it shows Pam as just a mom who wants to have fun joining in on her daughter's game but isn't too familiar with Pokemon -- "She was calling Raichu 'Rikkuhchu' and Salandit 'Sizzle' all while owning her opponents," Caroline tweeted -- yet that didn't stop her from stomping the competition and coming away from the tournament with a handful of booster packs. Clearly, Pam is a natural.

    The tweets caught on with Pokemon fans and earned Pam a heap of praise and admiration. Much was made of Pam's smiling competitive game-face, the last thing her opponent's saw before their ultimate defeat.

    The new Sword and Shield expansion is ushering in some big rule s changes for the TCG, including the removal of Fairy typing from the game. The Sword and Shield video games are expanding with two DLC packs, which will bring numerous Pokemon to the Galar region.

    Joshua is Senior Features Editor at IGN. If Pokemon, Green Lantern, or Game of Thrones are frequently used words in your vocabulary, you'll want to follow him on Twitter @JoshuaYehl and IGN.

    Teacher 'Pokemon cards' helping build teacher/student relationships at Port Chester HS

    a group of people looking at a phone: Principal Mitchell Combs congratulating junior Brandon Molano on his victory. © Joseph De Carlo Principal Mitchell Combs congratulating junior Brandon Molano on his victory.

    On paper, Jeffery Kravitz's job is to make sure students at Port Chester High School learn history. But in his mind, that's not the magic of being a teacher. 

    "There's so much to know about each kid," he said. "My goal no matter what, 365 days a year, is to cultivate that relationship, and to make this place closer."

    Last year, Kravitz, then a senior adviser for the class of 2019, started talking with senior Eli Taylor-Lemire about how to make Port Chester High a more close-knit place. Their chat led to Stumped, a game that encourages students to meet as many teachers as possible and, by answering teachers' trickiest questions, help build a tighter high school community. 

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    Taylor-Lemire brought in Tommy Ross, then a sophomore, to create Stumped. They are both self-taught code writers with a talent for web design. Kravitz, not a technology guy himself, played the role of cool teacher, full of ideas, passion and encouragement.

    "This team that came together, we're like mad scientists," Kravitz said.

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    Port Chester students played their second round of Stumped the week before their midterms. Over 500 students and 63 teachers participated. 

    Connections are built like this: If a student logged into a Stumped website answers an academic question correctly, they "unlock" a teacher. The student has to find that teacher, who asks them three more academic questions in person. If the student answers correctly, they get a card with a code, a point value and the teacher's face on it.

    Kravitz called them "teacher Pokemon cards."

    'Really builds a connection'

    Students who accumulate the most points make a Stumped leaderboard displayed in the high school's main hallway. The student with the most points wins $100.

    During the recent round, 70% of Q&A interactions were between students and teachers meeting for the first time.

    a group of people that are talking to each other: Port Chester High School students check the Stumped standings. (Submitted/Joseph De Carlo) © Joseph De Carlo Port Chester High School students check the Stumped standings. (Submitted/Joseph De Carlo)

    "It really builds a connection," said Ross, now a junior. "I feel I'm very close with a lot of my teachers, and I think that helps me perform in the classroom. If I'm a freshman and I meet 40 new teachers my first Stumped round, when I have those teachers going forward, the connection is already there." 

    Taylor-Lemire, now a freshman at NYU, said that Stumped has helped students with disabilities and students with limited English proficiency to more quickly become part of the school community.

    "Seeing that was very rewarding for all of us as well," he said.

    Junior Brandon Molano won the latest round. He collected 32 cards, including Principal Mitchell Combs' coveted card, worth 60 points. There were only three in the game. 

    "I met new teachers from last year, and I'm close to those teachers now," Molano said. "That helped me find out how I could solve their riddles. I came in third last year so I had that drive, I had to get first."

    The Stumped team plans another round next year, and they are in talks with other schools about expanding the game. Kravitz said that Stumped has done a lot to impact the culture of Port Chester High, so they are hopeful it could do the same for high schools around the region, or even the country.

    "There's never been a better time to be able to fix your own communities through technology," Taylor-Lemire said. "I hope Stumped also inspires other students to come up with their own solutions for how they can make their school community better."

    Twitter: @sdgrosserode

    This article originally appeared on Rockland/Westchester Journal News: Teacher 'Pokemon cards' helping build teacher/student relationships at Port Chester HS

    Sunday, January 26, 2020

    This Sexy Ball Girl Cosplay from Pokemon Sword and Shield is the Stuff of Dreams and Nightmares

    January 25, 2020 5:44 PM EST

    Fans of the recent entry in the Pokemon franchise, Pokemon Sword and Shield, are divided about Ball Guy: a seemingly benevolent man who gifts the player with different Pokeballs throughout the game. Some think of him to be truly friendly with good intentions, while others believe he has more sinister motives. This gender-bending cosplay, called Ball Girl, somehow combines both of these:

    gamefreak, Nintendo, Nintendo Switch, Pokemon, Pokemon Shield, Pokemon Sword, Pokemon Sword and Shield, Switch, the pokemon company, cosplay

    Also, is it just me or does the second pose against the wall look way more… seductive? Regardless it's a strangely adorable cosplay and the cosplayer really sells it with their endearing enthusiasm. The detail in the costume is fantastic as well and I am oddly in love with those boots. Check out the cosplayer chriscrossplay's Instagram here and the photographer mercwithacamera's here.

    In the recent Nintendo Direct two new expansion packs for Pokemon Sword and Shield, called Isle of Armor and the Crown Tundra, were announced with plenty of details. The former will launch in June 2020 and the latter sometime in Fall 2020. A remake of Pokemon Mystery Dungeon: Rescue Team DX for Nintendo Switch was also revealed and you can check out our preview of the demo here. Finally the new Pokemon Home service is set to drop in February and will be available for both the Switch and mobile devices.

    According to the latest NPD data, the latest installment in the long running series has the highest launch month dollar sales in Pokemon franchise history. And for the month of November, Sword was the third best selling game, the double pack including both titles ranking at fourth place, and Shield being in fifth place. However, if you combined those sales then total it would bring them to the number two spot.

    In other recent news, Pokemon Sword and Shield are already the eighth best-selling Nintendo Switch games of all time at six million units sold during its launch weekend alone. Check out pictures of the game's launch event held at Nintendo NYC. And in not so cheery recent news, Pokemon Company International is looking to sue leakers who spread around pictures of their then unreleased official strategy guide.

    Pokemon Sword and Shield released for Nintendo Switch on November 15th. Meanwhile check out our in-depth review for the game here, in which the News Editor states that "Pokemon Sword and Shield are a lot of fun, even if the series is experiencing growing pains with the transition to home consoles." You can purchase Sword here and Shield here.

    This post contains affiliate links where DualShockers gets a small commission on sales. Any and all support helps keep DualShockers as a standalone, independent platform for less-mainstream opinions and news coverage.

    January 25, 2020 5:44 PM EST

    Saturday, January 25, 2020

    "Pokémon: The First Movie" Will Get A CGI Reboot On Netflix As "Mewtwo Strikes Back"

    If you were a fan of the Pokémon saga in the mid '90s and early 2000s — seriously though, who wasn't! — chances are you've seen the epic cinematic adventure that was Pokémon: The First Movie. Now, over 20 years after its original release, Netflix will be rebooting the film with a new look for a more tech-savvy generation of Pokéfans.

    Releasing under its original title from when it debuted in Japan circa 1998, Mewtwo Strikes Back: Evolution will see Ash, Misty, Brock, Pikachu and the mysteriously ominous Mewtwo each getting a CGI makeover, along with the rest of the Pokéworld, for an updated rendition of the film. The plot will remain the same, and it will be released to coincide with Pokémon Day 2020 which happens annually on February 27. While nothing can quite compare to the classic 2D graphics from Ash and the gang's Indigo League days, there's something really interesting about seeing Mewtwo's origin story reworked with realistic-looking visuals that is sure to get new and old fans of the iconic manga series excited all over again like it's 1999. 

    Watch the trailer for Mewtwo Strikes Back: Evolution below, which will air on Netflix starting on February 27:

    Friday, January 24, 2020

    Temtem: What Pokemon Can Learn From The MMO

    After a period of alpha testing, the Pokemon-inspired MMO Temtem is now available in early access on Steam for $35. Developer Crema has stated the early access version includes about 50% of the game's content and that it expects the early access period to run until mid-2021. We recently spent some time with the closed alpha, and you can read on for our early impressions.

    Temtem, an upcoming MMO inspired by Pokemon, is still very much a work-in-progress. In its current state, there are still balance issues to be fixed, facades of buildings that need filling out, and more work to do to get the game fully up and running. But already, Temtem has revealed some clever twists on the Pokemon formula--and more than just letting you battle alongside friends.

    Like every core Pokemon game, in Temtem, you start with a titular creature and head out on a journey to battle and collect more of them. In the recent closed alpha, I was able to join up with a friend almost immediately after getting my first Temtem, and it was seamless and easy to explore and battle together in real-time (though we used Discord for voice chat). The sheer novelty of doing Pokemon-style double battles alongside another human player, rather than controlling both creatures on the field yourself, was exciting--it's something that Pokemon players have wanted for some time, and it's one of the big features that Temtem offers as a direct competitor.

    And Temtem handles it well, too, in terms of battling. Most Temtem battles are 2v2, as opposed to Pokemon, which largely has you in one-on-one situations during the story. You have a six-Temtem party of your own, and in a co-op battle, you each can use only the first three Temtem from that party with one in battle each at a time. You get to coordinate with your buddy as to what Temtem you want in your combined party, any strategy ideas, and then how you execute each turn--in short, it gets you engaged in teamwork. You can also switch out one of your Temtem during battle in favor of your friend's, though they'll control both monsters at once.

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    Some Temtem have moves that really capitalize on this coordination. While Pokemon have support moves that can boost each other in double battles, there are currently no moves in Pokemon that get a boost just because of who your partner is. In Temtem, however, some moves have "synergy" effects when the right Temtem is in battle with you. For example, there's one move called Urushiol that gets a power and effect boost if your partner is a Toxic type. While you could use synergy by yourself, it was fun to both discover these kinds of moves and execute on a strategy with a friend.

    Temtem still needs to be balanced further, but so far, it is also way harder than any recent Pokemon game, even when you're playing with someone else. Part of that is certainly because I don't yet know what all the Temtem are, how their types work, or any of the intricacies of the game, but we were really on the verge of death around halfway through Temtem's equivalent of Route 1. Understanding synergy (or any of the type matchups, even) was not advanced but essential knowledge even in the beginning, which was a refreshing challenge.

    The main downside to co-op, like in any game that has a non-zero amount of dialogue, is that it's hard to coordinate when you're chatting and when you're reading. I ended up clicking through quite a bit of dialogue just so my friend wouldn't get bored waiting for me, and we barely explored the towns or talked to NPCs. It made me wish that Temtem had strayed from Pokemon's formula significantly here, since running around the tall grass and battling in co-op works well, at least in concept.

    So yes, it would be awesome to battle alongside a friend in Pokemon. But more than that, I would love to see Pokemon adopt Temtem's synergy mechanic, which could potentially add a fresh dimension to competitive Pokemon battles that doesn't rely on going bigger and stronger--like Dynamax and even Z-Moves and Mega Evolutions before it. Double battles are my favorite format, and I also just love to see Temtem embracing it as the default, while adding a bit more challenge to suit the depth of strategy that doubles affords. Whether Temtem can fully capture my heart the way Pokemon has remains to be seen.

    Temtem currently available in early access on Steam.

    Niantic announces real-world events for its Pokémon and Harry Potter games

    Niantic's real-world events for 2019 were so successful that they generated $249 million in tourism revenue across Chicago, Dortmund and Montréal. That's what the company has revealed in a new events website, which it launched alongside its festival lineup for 2020. Niantic has several events in store for Pokémon Go, Harry Potter: Wizards Unite and Ingress players across the globe in the coming months.

    Pokémon Go fans can look forward to four festivals in the first half of the year, starting with one that coincides with the Taiwan Lantern Festival in Taichung from February 6th through the 9th. Next is a Safari Zone event, where players can catch region-exclusive Pokémon, in St. Louis from March 27th to 29th. Tickets for the event will be available starting on January 24th. Liverpool players are also getting a Safari Zone event from April 17th through the 19th, with tickets going on sale starting on January 31st. The last entry in the Pokémon Go calendar is another Safari Zone event in Philadelphia from May 8th through the 10th.

    Meanwhile, Harry Potter fans can look forward to the second Harry Potter: Wizards Unite Fan Festival. It doesn't have a date yet, but the first one took place over Labor Day weekend last year. Finally, Niantic has three international events planned for Ingress players. Perpetua Hexathlon is happening on February 29th, while Lexicon Hexathlon is scheduled for April 25th. Both events will take place across multiple locations in Europe, North America and Asia Pacific. There's also Requiem Anomaly Munich, which is happening on May 9th.

    In addition to revealing the economic impact of its real-world events, Niantic also dropped other relevant stats. The developer said it hosted more than 2.7 million attendees across 77 festivals held in 32 countries and that they walked 6.5 million kilometers together. Since its new website was created specifically for officials interested in bringing Niantic's events to their cities, we might see more get added to its festival calendar for the year.

    All products recommended by Engadget are selected by our editorial team, independent of our parent company. Some of our stories include affiliate links. If you buy something through one of these links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

    Thursday, January 23, 2020

    'Pokemon: Mewtwo Strikes Back—Evolution' Release Date on Netflix: When Does 'Pokemon' Remake Premiere?

    Pokémon fans old and new, get prepared to make this famous GIF a reality as Pokémon: Mewtwo Strikes Back—Evolution is coming to Netflix.

    According to the Pokémon website, the latest instalment of the franchise will be an animated CGI film called Mewtwo Strikes Back—Evolution and will premiere as a Netflix original on February 27, 2020.

    The film sees Ash Ketchum, a wannabe Pokémon master, and his partner Pikachu get invited to an island for a legendary battle with genetically modified Pokémon, Mewtwo. The legendary Pokémon was created from a fossil of the Mythical Pokémon, Mew, and wants revenge on humanity after discovering his creators want to use him for destruction.

    Of course, Ash, Pikachu and their friends Misty and Brock, get caught up in Mewtwo's rampage, as well as the group's adversaries Jessie, James and a talking Meowth, also known as Team Rocket. To complicate matters further, Mew turns up and battles Mewtwo in a legendary showdown that ends up in tragedy.

    In a news release, Emily Arons, senior vice president of international business at The Pokémon Company International, said: "The ubiquitous reach and expert team at Netflix make them the perfect partner to bring this special animated movie to kids and fans around the world.

    "Netflix is the ideal platform to help us execute a global simultaneous launch of an animated Pokémon movie on Pokémon Day, a special moment dedicated to celebrating the worldwide Pokémon fan community."

    The plot might sound familiar to many Pokémon fans. That is because this CGI animation is a reimagining of Pokémon: The First Movie, originally released in North America in 1999. It grossed ‎$172.7 million at the box office, following the success of the Pokémon original animated series, also known as Pokémon: Indigo League, and the Pokémon: Red / Blue game by Nintendo for the retro '90s Gameboy.

    Key character art from "Pokemon: Mewtwo Strikes Back—Evolution"

    Since its inception in 1995, Pokémon has grown into an international sensation, sprouting video games, animated series, films, trading card games, mobile games such as Pokémon Go and live-action films such as Detective Pikachu.

    According to Kantan Games, the Pokémon Company's net profit jumped 50 percent in one year (2018/2019) to $124 million. It is also considered one of the successful media franchises currently around today, with the company currently making $1.5 billion per year, according to publication License Global.

    According to the Pokémon website, the new movie has been a major hit in Japan, where it debuted last year—it became one of the top-grossing films during its opening weekend.

    Pokémon: Mewtwo Strikes Back—Evolution will premiere on Netflix on February 27, 2020.

    Pokemon Adidas Shoes, Shirts and Jackets Unveiled, You'll Need to Catch 'Em All

    Adidas has announced a new partnership with Pokemon. The popular clothing company will be releasing a series of products based on the franchise, including shoes, shirts and jackets. Adidas has partnered with many popular brands in the past, including Star Wars, Marvel, Dragonball Z, and they even made some products to honor The Waterboy at one point. Now, they can add Pokemon to the list.

    The Adidas collection features styles for both adults and youths. A great deal of the design of the collection draws inspiration from the classic lo-fi 8-bit graphics that fans will be familiar with from the early games released in the late 90s. Bernhard Serr, VP Product Core Apparel and Accessories at Adidas had this to say in a statement.

    "Streetwear is about making statements, wearing the newest and freshest pieces to show your style and to get yourself noticed. We're delighted to collaborate with Pokemon to create this unique new sport-inspired line that takes cues from the prolific gaming franchise. The collection is sure to be a must-have for Pokemon Trainers across the globe, young and old."

    The line includes several different shoe varieties, as well as some different shirts that feature various Pokemon and even a "Pokemon Trainer" jacket. The youth collection includes Adidas Advantage and Hoops Mid 2.0 shoes, a Pokemon trainer tee and classic black tracksuit featuring Pokémon inspired graphics. The adult footwear collection includes an updated version of the Adidas Phosphere shoes, a pixelated Pokemon tee and tapered cuff pants. Colin Palmer, Vice President of Marketing at The Pokemon Company International had this to say in a statement.

    RELATED: Detective Pikachu Review: Pokeman Fans Rejoice, Everyone Else Not So Much"This collaboration between Pokemon and Adidas sees two of the world's biggest brands combine to create a unique clothing capsule for Pokemon Trainers. Together, we've reimagined timeless Adidas staples, giving them a classic but distinc tly Pokemon refresh to create a stylish new line that will enable fans to look the part while levelling-up their love of Pokemon games."

    It's shaping up to possibly be a big year for Pokemon. Not only do fans have some new threads to get their hands on, but it was recently revealed that the Pokemon: The First Movie remake will be making its way to Netflix next month. This follows a big year in 2019, which saw the release of the live-action Detective Pikachu, as well as a couple of new games, Pokemon: Let's Go, Pikachu and Pokemon: Let's Go, Eevee.

    Pokemon started in 1995 with a pair of games for the Game Boy and has since blossomed into a massive, multi-billion dollar franchise that includes movies, TV shows, games, trading cards and more. To date, more than 20 movies, 1,000 anime episodes and over 28 billion trading cards have been produced. The franchise has generated more than $90 billion since its inception. The Pokemon collection is available now from Adidas.

    Pokemon Adidas images #1Pokemon Adidas images #2Pokemon Adidas images #3Pokemon Adidas images #4Pokemon Adidas images #5Pokemon Adidas images #6Pokemon Adidas images #7

    Wednesday, January 22, 2020

    The Latest ‘Pokémon’ Anime Movie Has A Distinct ‘Tarzan’ Vibe About It

    The latest 'Pokémon' anime movie seems to use elements from 'Pokémon 4Ever'.

    The Pokémon Company

    The latest Pokémon anime movie Coco looks to follow on from the other recent remakes and has a distinctly Tarzan vibe about it.

    Fans have already noticed in the teaser trailer (shown below) that this movie features what looks like the altar from the fourth Pokémon movie, Pokémon 4Ever.

    So this continues the trend of recent Pokémon movies borrowing elements from film entries earlier in the series.

    This is no bad thing, as Pokémon has grown and expanded over the years as a series and newer players have joined the fanbase in the time since.

    That means there is a lot of lore and backstory for these newer fans to catch up on, so retelling some of these elements makes a fair bit of sense.

    Either way, this looks decent in an animation sense, even from the short teaser trailer, so that’s definitely good news at least.

    Not to mention the whole boy swinging through the trees Tarzan-style being an interesting update.

    Whether Celebi or Suicune will make an appearance though is anyone’s guess.

    Pokémon the Movie: Coco is released in theaters on July 10 in Japan.

    Follow me on Twitter, Facebook and YouTube. I also manage Mecha Damashii and do toy reviews over at hobbylink.tv.

    Read my Forbes blog here.

    Tuesday, January 21, 2020

    Netflix To Release Animated Movie ‘Pokémon: Mewtwo Strikes Back — Evolution’; Watch The Trailer

    Click here to read the full article.

    Netflix has landed the next animated feature in the uber-popular Pokémon franchise. The streamer and the Pokémon Company International made the announcement today that Po kémon: Mewtwo Strikes Back—Evolution will debut February 27 on Netflix around the world outside of Japan and Korea.

    Watch the international trailer below.

    More from Deadline

    The pic is said to feature a new CGI style to animated Pokémon movies and is inspired by one of the most popular stories in the long-running franchise. When researchers discover and exploit a fossil of the Mythical Pokémon Mew, they unleash a creation that goes against the very laws of nature: Mewtwo, a legendary Pokémon intended for use as a tool of destruction. But as Mewtwo becomes aware of its own dubious origin, it begins to resent its human creators and seeks revenge—and Ash, Pikachu, and their friends find themselves at the center of its rampage! With the future of the Pokémon world at stake, will our heroes be able to overcome Mewtwo's challenge…and will Mewtwo be able to find a new meaning for its life?

    "The ubiquitous reach and expert team at Netflix make them the perfect partner to bring this special animated movie to kids and fans around the world," said Emily Arons, senior vice president of international business at The Pokémon Company International. "Netflix is the ideal platform to help us execute a global simultaneous launch of an animated Pokémon movie on Pokémon Day, a special moment dedicated t o celebrating the worldwide Pokémon fan community."

    Here is the trailer:

     

     

     

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    View photos

    This LEGO Lover Is Wowing Fans with His Pokemon Sculptures

    When it comes to Pokemon, fans will do just about anything to honor their top picks. From Pikachu to Squirtle and beyond, the title has more than 800 pocket monsters under its belt. Now, one aspiring Pokemon Trainer has shared their tribute to the franchise, and they did so with some stunning DIY projects that turned them into a LEGO Master.

    Over on Reddit, fans got to take a peek at the work which Ddave_ has been doing on his own time. The netizen posted a photo of him at his local LEGO convention, and it was there they showed off their custom Pokemon builds.

    As you can see down below, the user went all out for this convention. Not only did they bring four different Pokemon to the event, but Ddave_ even channeled his inner Ash Ketchum. The Pokemon Trainer is dressed in a blue vest with red sneakers, but they've foregone Ash's hat for a more styled look.

    Of course, the main attractions here are the Pokemon. The netizen gave fans a look at his own Pikachu, Geodude, Eevee, and Ditto. The pint-sized Pokemon are pretty big considering their custom builds, and two of them come with their own Poke Ball.

    I built Pokemon out of LEGO for my local LEGO convention. from r/pokemon

    As you can imagine, Pokemon fans are drooling over the builds whether they're into LEGO or not. These spot-on builds prove you can use the building blocks for just about anything, and Pokemon is no exception. The brands may not have a licensing deal set up, but fans like Ddave_ aren't letting that stifle their creativity. So if this LEGO Master could tackle Vaporeon next, well - I would be oh-so grateful!

    What Pokemon would you want to make a LEGO set of? Let me know in the comments or hit me up on Twitter @MeganPetersCB to talk all things comics and anime!

    Pokemon: The Series, is now airing new episodes weekly in Japan, but unfortunately is still not officially licensed for an English language release as of this writing. There's also a brand new film on the way to Japan this Summer, Pokemon the Movie: Coco.

    Monday, January 20, 2020

    Pokemon GO Piplup Community Day: How To Get Yourself A Shiny Empoleon

    Pokemon GO

    Niantic

    Another Pokemon GO Community Day is upon us, and this time we are after the gen 4 starter and one of the more iconic later-gen Pokemon out there, Piplup. The event starts at 11 AM and runs until 2 PM in your local time, though 3 PM to 6 PM if you're in the southern hemisphere instead.

    You are looking to amass as many Piplup as you can during this Community Day because the ultimate prize, of course, is to get a powerful, one of a kind, shiny Empoleon by the time the day is over.

    The Empoleon evolution move today is Hydro Cannon, meaning that it's going to be extra powerful if you can manage to evolve one by the end of the day. Which should not be terribly hard given all the Piplup you're about to catch.

    As for the shinies, the official shiny rate on Community Day for the featured Pokemon is 4.1%, or 1 in every 24 encounters should be with a shiny Piplup. As such, you're going to have to play the odds by catching as many of them as you physically can within the three hour time period, as you're going to want to evolve your highest IV shiny by the end of the event to make sure you snag that shiny, Hydro Cannon Empoleon.

    Shiny style fans are going to be a little let down with what the final versions of shiny Piplup, Prinplup and Empoleon look like, as they're just slightly altered shades of blue rather than anything too wild. Still, it's something any collector is absolutely going to want to have.

    Your best bet is to make sure you have both lures and incense running as much as possible during this event, as both of those will spawn additional Piplups as they are beholden to the Community Day increased appearance rate. Remember, by the end of the day you can sort your best Piplups by putting in 4* in the search string to see if you have any 100% IV ones. 3* gets you 80% or above which is still pretty good.

    This is definitely one of the better Community Day choices in a while, so make sure you take full advantage during the three dedicated hours. This is not a double-day event like some of them have been, so make the most of today while you can.

    Follow me on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. Pre-order my new sci-fi novel Herokiller, and read my first series, The Earthborn Trilogy, which is also on audiobook.

    ‘Pokémon GO’ Piplup/Empoleon Community Day: Start/End Times, Special Move, Shiny And Bonus

    Pokemon GO

    Credit: Niantic

    When is it? This one is a little more complicated, taking into the account that Pokémon GO is a global game played outside under wildly different circumstances. Niantic typically adjusts the time for winter and summer, taking into account weather and sunlight. The only problem is that those things are different for different places, and today’s timing attempts to take this into account. For that reason, there are two Community Day times, one for the Northern and one for the Southern Hemisphere:

  • Northern Hemisphereâ€"Sunday, January 19, 2020, from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. in your local time zone
  • Southern Hemisphereâ€"Sunday, January 19, 2020, from 3:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. in your local time zone
  • The Pokémon: Piplup is an ace starter, one of the best. Meta-wise they’re not all that useful, but just look at that jaunty little beak. Piplup also suffers from a common malady, however, where creatures just sort of lose their charm as they evolve. Such is the case with Prinlup and Empoleon, neither of whom I can really vouch for. Empoleon just feels like a mess to me, like some kind of cut character from Hannibal.

    The Move: Any Empoleon evolved up to two hours after the event ends will now hydro cannon, a perpetually useful charged Water-type attack. This appears to be the best Charged attack you can get for your Empoleon, so go ahead and grab it.

    Shiny: The Shiny version of this family all follows the same rule: a kind of lighter blue that looks either a little more dignified or a little washed out, depending on your perspective. I like it, even if it doesn’t mean that I like Empoleon’s design any more.

    Extra Bonus: In addition to increased Pokémon Spawns, we’re also getting 1/4 hatch distance for all eggs, so shell out some cash if you want to take full advantage and get a chance at those new regionals.

    Sunday, January 19, 2020

    'Pokémon Go' Community Day: Shiny Piplup, Start Time & Everything You Need to Know

    The first Pokémon Go Community Day of 2020 is about to begin, and fans of the Water-type starter, Piplup might want to boot up the popular mobile game.

    On Sunday, Piplup will show up more often in the overworld, and trainers will have a chance to not only catching a rare Shiny Piplup but also obtain an exclusive move for the penguin Pokémon.

    If you want to take full advantage of Piplup Community Day in Pokémon Go, here's everything you need to know including the start time.

    POKEMON GO COMMUNITY DAY START TIME

    The Piplup Pokémon Go Community Day event begins Sunday, January 19 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. local time if you're in the Northern Hemisphere (that's Europe, North America, etc.) while the Southern Hemisphere will take place between 3-6 p.m. local time.

    SHINY PIPLUP

    Shiny Piplup will make its Pokémon Go debut this Sunday. The Shiny variant of the Water-type starter has its blue coloring change into a lighter shade of the same color.

    As with other Shiny Pokémon in the popular mobile game, trainers will need to encounter a Pokémon to determine if they've found its rare variant or not. The rate at which Shiny Pokémon appear is increased during the event times.

    HYDRO CANNON

    The exclusive event move for this Community Day is Hydro Cannon, the powerful Water-type attack.

    This is the same move that the other Water-type starters (Squirtle, Totodile and Mudkip) received during their respective Community Day events. To have your Piplup learn Hydro Cannon, simply evolve a Prinplup (Piplup's evolved form) into Empoleon during the event hours.

    IN-GAME BONUSES

    Like past Community Day events, Lures will last three hours instead of the usual one, but the best in-game bonus this time around is the reduced Egg hatch distances.

    During the three-hour event window, Eggs will take a quarter of the distance to hatch compared to normal. As a reminder, only Eggs that were popped into an incubator after the event has begun will see their distance reduced. If you have an Egg incubating before Community Day, you'll have to wait until that Egg hatches properly to begin taking advantage of the reduced distance.

    Here are the new Egg distances during this weekend's Community Day:

    2km -> .25km

    5km -> 1.25km

    7km -> 1.75km

    10km -> 2.5km

    Are you excited for the next Pokémon Go Community Day? Which of the Sinnoh region starters is your favorite? Let us know in the comments section.

    Pokemon Fan Creates Cursed Mewtwo x Oddish Crossover

    When fans think of fusion when it comes to anime, they probably gravitate mostly toward series such as Dragon Ball Z, that offers fighters with a few different options in terms of uniting two unique people into one. Fans however have been able to use technology to make the possibilities endless, fusing together characters from the same anime series, or sometimes across universes. One fan decided to take a look into the world of Pokemon and fuse together two of the least likely pocket monsters to hang out in the forms of Oddish and Mewtwo!

    Mewtwo, of course, is far more powerful than Oddish, often touted as one fo the most powerful Pokemon that have ever been introduced to the franchise. First appearing in the initial Pokemon animated movie, Mewtwo was a genetic experiment that was created using the DNA of the ancient pocket monster, Mew. While the first animated film of the series was released many years ago, a recent re-make in the form of Pokemon The Movie: Mewtwo Strikes Back Evolution is still waiting for its day in the sun to be released in North America!

    Reddit User MandriII shared this amazing, unsettling fusion between Mewtwo and Oddish, taking the latter mostly harmless pocket monster and merging it with the all powerful former threat to humanity to create a creature that we can only dub as "Mewdish":

    A friend challenged me to fuse Mewtwo and Oddish... The result is horrific :O from r/pokemon

    When Mewtwo was first born, it didn't look too kindly on humanity, having basically been tortured by its creators as said humans were looking to learn from their genetic experiment. Thanks in part to the influence of Ash Ketchum and Pikachu, Mewtwo let go of its rage toward mankind and instead found a place for himself and the other cloned pocket monsters of the world to live.

    Pokemon fusion isn't entirely foreign to the franchise, as the dim witted creature known as Slowpoke evolves into a fusion with the pocket monster Shelder, creating the "fusion" of Slowbro!

    What do you think of this disturbing Pokemon fusion? Feel free to let us know in the comments or hit me up directly on Twitter @EVComedy to talk all things comics, anime, and Pokemon!

    Pokemon: The Series, is now airing new episodes weekly in Japan, but unfortunately is still not officially licensed for an English language release as of this writing. There's also a brand new film on the way to Japan this Summer, Pokemon the Movie: Coco.

    Saturday, January 18, 2020

    Pokemon: Twilight Wings, a Sword and Shield anime, debuts on YouTube

    Pokemon Sword and Shield hit Nintendo Switch in November. It's getting a pair of expansions later this year, and now you can see its UK-inspired Galar region in anime form. The first episode of Pokemon: Twilight Wings hit YouTube on Wednesday.

    If you've played Sword and Shield, you'll recognize characters like dapper Chairman Rose; his intense second-in-command, Oleana; and Galar Pokemon Champion Leon. But the real fun is spotting all the different Pokemon who show up.

    Now playing: Watch this: Nintendo Switch Lite: 1 month later

    5:06

    It's a bit odd that the Pokemon Company went with American voice actors for the English dub, since the game's script uses so many Britishisms that I imagined all the characters having UK accents. Regardless, the animation in this six-minute episode (which is set before the game) is slick.

    The anime "will show in detail the dreams of Galar's residents, the realities they face, the challenges they must overcome, and the conflicts they must resolve," according to the official site. That suggests we'll jump to new characters each episode, and we may not see series protagonist Ash Ketchum at all.

    Friday, January 17, 2020

    Pokemon Go: Where to spend Piplup Community Day in the Bay Area

    "Pokemon Go" kicks off 2020 with Piplup as the star of its January Community Day.

    The Penguin Pokemon will have Hydro Cannon as its exclusive move for the event. That means players must evolve Piplup to its final form, Empoleon, within two hours of the end of Community Day. The event itself is from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Jan. 19. During that time, more Piplups will be available in the wild with a strong change of its shiny form showing up for trainers. The bonus for the event will be a quarter egg-hatching distance. That takes a huge chunk of walking out of the equation.

    Players should save up those 10km, 7km and 5 km eggs to take advantage of the bonus. What's notable is that new Unova Pokemon have been added to the game and several new pocket monsters can now be found in eggs. In the 5km category, trainers will have a chance to hatch Roggenrola, Tympole, Trubbish, Karrablast, Joltik and Shelmet. In the 10km, players have a chance to get rare Pokemon such as Tirtouga, Archen and Axew. Timburr, which can also be found in raids, is also a possibility in 10km eggs.

    Along with the bonuses, players should also expect extras such as special research tasks and perhaps Team Go Rocket battles.

    Hydro Cannon makes the Piplup line a better water-type Pokemon, but it isn't something that will define the meta. Thankfully, the shiny version stands out. It's an icier blue and it will make fans of the Penguin Pokemon happy.

    With that said, here are the communities holding events for January's Community Day. All information was culled from their respective Discord groups. According to the weather reports, Sunday is expected be partly cloudy with 10 percent chance of rain in some places.

    The Pokemon Community Day for January. (Courtesy of the Berkeley-Albany Pokemon Go Discord) 

    Berkeley: If you're in the East Bay, the UC Berkeley campus is one of the best spots to catch pocket monsters. Plenty of players in the community will be circling the campanile. Expect the Pokestops around the area to also be lured up.

    El Cerrito: If you can't make it to Cal, the El Cerrito Plaza is a great alternative. The site has plenty of parking and is accessible via BART. The area is full of Pokemon and has covered walkways if one wants to some shelter from the weather. There's no group holding an event at the site, but players can expect to see a few trainers around the area.

    Pinole: The group North510 CRHP will be hosting a Piplup Community Day at Fernandez Park from 11 a.m to 2 p.m. Expect 3-hour lures, a tent, water and snacks.

    Fremont: The Team Rocket Pokemon Go group will hold its event at Lake Elizabeth Park. The group will lure the area up from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

    San Francisco: If you're in city, there are a few spots to hunt for Pokemon. The first is on the Embarcadero from roughly the Ferry Building to the Cupid's Span sculpture. If trainers are looking for another area, they can head over to the Aquatic Park near Pier 39. Another area to check out would be Golden Gate Park.

    Downtown Mountain View: The area along Castro Street from the Embarcadero to the Villa is a great place to play.

    South Bay: The South Bay community is more spread out and I haven't been to a Community Day in any of the cities there. These sites are mentioned in the Pokemon Go: San Jose Discord but I haven't verified them.De Anza College (Cupertino)Central Park (Santa Clara)Oakridge Mall (South San Jose)San Jose State University (Downtown San Jose)Overfelt Gardens (East San Jose)

    If you know of any popular spots or gatherings for Pokemon Community Day, please email me at gcacho@bayareanewsgroup.com.

    Pokemon Go Bringing Latios And Latias Back For A Raid Weekend Event

    Pokemon Go's January Community Day is coming up this weekend, but that's not the only event to look forward to soon. Niantic has announced the Legendary Pokemon Latios and Latias will return for a limited time next weekend for a special Raid event.

    Beginning at 1 PM PT / 4 PM ET on Friday, January 24, the two Legendaries will appear around the world in five-star Raids, giving you another opportunity to catch them. Latios and Latias will leave the game again at the same time on Monday, January 27. You can read more about the event on the Pokemon Go website.

    Latios and Latias are both Dragon/Psychic types, meaning they're each weak to Ice, Dark, Fairy, Ghost, and Bug Pokemon, so you'll want to bring along monsters like Mamoswine, Tyranitar, and Togekiss when challenging them. Other Dragon types also have an advantage, particularly Dragon Legendaries like Rayquaza.

    In the meantime, Pokemon Go's January Community Day takes place this Sunday, January 19. The featured Pokemon this month is Piplup, the Water starter from Pokemon Diamond and Pearl, and if you can evolve it all the way into Empoleon up to two hours after the event ends, it'll learn the powerful Water attack Hydro Cannon.

    The Legendary Pokemon Heatran is also back in Raids until February 4, and some new Gen 5 Pokemon are now appearing around the world. You can catch up on other recent Pokemon Go news below.

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