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Whatnot’s valuation doubles to $3.7B as livestream shopping gains popularity in US

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Livestream shopping in the United States has a ways to go to catch up with China’s booming $600 billion industry, but Whatnot’s new $260 million Series D round shows that shoppers stateside are increasingly embracing this way of buying and selling items.

The new investment was co-led by DST Global and returning investor CapitalG, and more than doubles the live shopping platform’s valuation to $3.7 billion, up from the $1.5 billion valuation in September 2021, when Whatnot raised $150 million. Also participating in the round were BOND and returning investors Andreessen Horowitz and YC Continuity.

Whatnot intends to use the capital infusion to continue developing its in-app live and social commerce marketplace and roll out additional categories for collectors, including diecast cars, stamps and action figures.

Grant LaFontaine and Logan Head founded the company in 2019 as a place where avid collectors could share their interests along with buying and selling things like rare Pokémon cards and Funko Pops.

It took the initial approach of the popular “card break” concept, where users buy unopened boxes of Pokémon or sports cards and others tune in to watch them reveal the contents live. That has evolved into other collectibles, including sneakers, trading cards, sports memorabilia and rare toys.

Growing demand led Whatnot to not only raise three rounds of capital in 2021 but see year-over-year sales grow over 20 times in 2021, with a more than tripling of its monthly sales so far in 2022, according to the company.

“This last year has been one of fast-paced growth largely attributed to the powerful community our platform is fostering,” CEO Lafontaine said in a written statement. “It’s been incredible to see how our app cultivates connections between people with shared hobbies, keeping them tuned in to our entertaining live streams even if they aren’t buying and providing a hub for anyone to browse and discover new interests. Building on this momentum, we have our sights set on expanding into more categories and creating new experiences for people with all types of passions and hobbies.”

Livestream shopping is just an $11 billion business in the United States so far, but is poised to reach $35 billion in sales by 2024. Fast growth with companies like Whatnot have venture capital investors seeking out other players and in the past year have poured hundreds of millions of dollars into companies like Popshop Live, Upmesh, buywithFirework and Drip.

Meanwhile, to meet some of that growth and offer new features, Whatnot acquired Pastel Labs, a company that builds products, for example, to capture user video testimonials.

The company also recently made additional hires across sales, marketing and engineering to continue improving the buying and selling experience, including Xinan Wu, previously at Citadel Securities, as head of infrastructure and Agnieszka Podsiadło, formerly with Lyft, as head of core product engineering.


Pokémon Go’s new ‘daily adventure incense’ will make you take a 15-minute walk

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The parent company to Pokémon Go, Niantic has been very clear over the years that it wants us to take a “stupid walk for our stupid mental health,” as the meme goes. This week, Pokémon Go is rolling out a “daily adventure incense,” which brings “rare” Pokémon to you, so long as you’re in motion. This functions like the incense item that’s been in the game for years, but you get one for free each day and it only lasts for fifteen minutes.

The augmented reality giant wants to pioneer what it calls the “real-world metaverse” or games and other apps that bring you out into the real world. Pokémon Go already incentivizes players to go on walks to hatch eggs, find new Pokémon and participate in raid battles. But daily adventure incense basically tells players that they can get rare Pokémon if they take a 15-minute walk around the block. This is especially helpful for players who live in rural areas and don’t have the luxury of opening their app to see several creatures spawn.

Pokémon Go’s definition of “rare” is a bit liberal here, though. Most of the spawns are pretty average, like Bidoof, Yanma or Rattata, but there’s a key exception. Some users have reported spawns of legendary Pokémon, like the Galarian forms of Articuno, Zapdos and Moltres (so far, after two days of adventure incense, I’ve just been building up my Bidoof army). These legendary spawns are actually relatively rare, and the Pokémon can, indeed, flee your attempt to capture it, leaving some people angry on social media.

But even if you don’t catch anything interesting, you still get a cute little graphic to share.

It’s hard for games like Pokémon Go, which are best played while walking around, to be completely accessible. Blind and low-vision users already have trouble playing augmented reality games, but the need to go on a 15-minute walk can feel alienating for disabled people who can’t walk easily, or (Bidoof forbid) people contagious with the coronavirus who should not be walking outside in public places.

But daily adventure incense is only a small part of the greater game. As long as this feature doesn’t gatekeep any exclusive Pokémon, it shouldn’t be too controversial — however, so far, it seems this is the only way to get the Galarian legendary birds. Then again, Niantic never locks any specific Pokémon for too long. Do you know how it feels to travel overseas and stock up on Asia-only Pokémon to trade, only for Niantic to just drop Farfetch’d and Torkoal into ordinary events? I do. So, it won’t be a surprise if these Pokémon show up in raids and research rewards sooner than later.

Pokémon Go has remained Niantic’s cash cow (or Miltank), earning over $1 billion in revenue last year. But Niantic hasn’t successfully replicated the six-year-old game’s success. In the midst of a greater market downturn, Niantic cancelled some projects and laid off 8% of its staff last month.

Wake up, new Pokémon just dropped

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Today’s “Pokémon Presents” livestream wasn’t as chock-full of news as previous announcements about the upcoming Nintendo Switch games “Pokémon Scarlet & Violet.” Last time, we learned that the generation 9 games will be the iconic franchise’s first real attempt at an open world RPG (“Legends Arceus” doesn’t count), and will also feature a multiplayer co-op mode.

But so far, the new Pokémon announced for the Paldea region — based off of the Iberian peninsula — just do not miss. Remember Lechonk? Remember Quaxly, which looks like a DALL-E recreation of Donald Duck?

We learned today that Pokémon can now “terastallize” — or, turn into Swarovski crystal-like versions of themselves — but what’s more exciting is this guy: Fidough. A fairy puppy who helps you cook. Excuse me?

Pokemon Scarlet Violet Fidough

Image Credits: The Pokémon Company

Get a load of Fidough’s Pokédex entry:

Fidough’s skin has elastic qualities and is both firm and soft at the same time. When these Pokémon become excited, they intimidate their opponents by puffing up their bodies to appear bigger. Fidough ferments things in its vicinity using the yeast in its breath. The yeast is useful for cooking, so this Pokémon has been protected by people since long ago.

Yes, this new friend can help you brew kombucha. And it can also fight battles for you. Great stuff, all around.

The only other new Pokémon we learned about is Cetitan, a “Tera Whale Pokémon” that lives in the snowy region of Paldea. Cetitan isn’t quite as exciting as Fidough, but we’ll give him a chance. Look how weird its mouth is!

Cetitan’s description reads:

Cetitan need to have tough muscles to be able to support their immense bodies, and physical attacks using their bodies have incredible power. They also migrate around the snowy regions, protected by a thick layer of fat.

The Pokémon Cetitan from Scarlet and Violet

Image Credits: The Pokémon Company

Finally, the livestream confirmed that like the Alola, Galar and Hisui regions, the Paldea region will feature variants of previously discovered Pokémon.

The first new variant is Paldean Wooper, which… honestly, I’m undecided whether this delights or horrifies me. It’s compelling, at the very least.

Paldean Wooper, a brown version of the pokemon

Image Credits: The Pokémon Company

Our formerly bright-blue, boisterous buddy now looks like it rolled in a vat of mud. That’s because… it did.

Cue the Pokédex entry:

In ancient times, Wooper lived underwater in the Paldea region. After losing in a struggle for territory, it seems they began living in bogs on land. To keep from drying out while living on land, they began to cover their bodies with a poisonous film. Their gills have hardened thanks to living on land for so long. Their bodies are heavy and they move slowly, but they can protect themselves by shooting powerful poisonous liquid from their gills.

So, now Wooper is a poison/ground type, as opposed to water/ground. At least now it won’t get completely obliterated by grass attacks, but… at what cost? A “struggle for territory”? Is Wooper okay?

Koraidon and Miraidon in Pokemon Scarlet and Violet

Image Credits: The Pokémon Company

Oh, also, apparently the legendary Pokémon Koraidon and Miraidon can turn into motorcycles and airplanes. Sure, I guess.

Daily Crunch: Unknown hacker drains millions of dollars from thousands of Solana hot wallets

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To get a roundup of TechCrunch’s biggest and most important stories delivered to your inbox every day at 3 p.m. PDT, subscribe here.

Christine is back from a week of making the world a better place, and now she’s here to help make this a better newsletter as well. Huzzah! — Christine and Haje

The TechCrunch Top 3

  • Where there was once sunshine has now faded to darkness: Thousands of Solana users found their wallets were drained of collectively around $8 million, Rita and Carly write. The hack is only affecting “hot” wallets, the pair report. Industry experts say this may have been a privacy key compromise. We’re sure there will be more on this later.
  • Ping finds itself in familiar territory: Ping Identity, a public enterprise identity management firm, has agreed to be acquired by the private equity firm Thoma Bravo, Ingrid reports. This is not Ping’s first exposure to PE involvement. It was majority-owned by Vista Equity, which retains a minority stake in the company. Thoma Bravo has been on a buying streak lately, also picking up both SailPoint and Anaplan this year.
  • Trading places: We go back to Rita, who writes about Salesforce taking a look at its presence in China. Among the changes are the closing of its Hong Kong office and the acceleration of Salesforce’s relationship with Alibaba, which includes helping companies establish a social commerce presence.

Startups and VC

L’Attitude Ventures announced today that it has closed on its first institutional fund, raising more than $100 million from several financial services heavyweights, including a “strategic anchor investment” from JPMorgan Chase, Mary Ann reports.

Playstudios, a publicly traded mobile gaming platform and developer, is venturing into the web3 world with a new blockchain division and investment fund. The gaming entity announced a $10 million investment vehicle, Future Fund, to back companies building rewarded play options, Jacquelyn reports.

Keepin’ the startup train rollin’:

Dear Sophie: How long am I required to stay at my current job after I get my green card?

lone figure at entrance to maze hedge that has an American flag at the center

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin/TechCrunch

Dear Sophie,

I’m a software engineer currently on an H-1B. My employer sponsored me for an EB-2 green card, and my application has been approved, but I’m still waiting for a decision on my application to register for permanent residence.

I want to leave my employer and do something completely different. Can I transfer my green card to another employer in a different field and position, or should I stick it out in my current position until I receive my green card?

If I should stick it out, how long should I stay with my current employer after I receive my green card?

— Craving Change

(TechCrunch+ is our membership program, which helps founders and startup teams get ahead. You can sign up here.)

Big Tech Inc.

Uber and Omio join forces in the UK so that users can book trains, coaches and bus travel, Natasha L reports. The ride-hailing giant sees this as a way to not only get into longer distance travel, but also to capture, or recapture, travelers moving between different forms of transportation. In other Uber news, it appears the company has now concluded its partnership with Indian food delivery firm Zomato, Manish writes.

Staying over in India for a moment, Manish also reports that the government is withdrawing its personal data protection bill. This was some legislation that privacy advocates and tech giants were not fans of, mainly because they felt it restricted how they managed sensitive information while also enabling the government to more easily access the same information.

Speaking of partnerships, Ticketmaster and TikTok now have one to provide users with a new way to discover and purchase event tickets, Aisha writes. This feature is initially for certain creators who can search for Ticketmaster events and add destination links to their videos. Ivan also reports that ByteDance might be gearing up for a global launch of TikTok Music.

You may also want to “byte” into these:

Nintendo announces new Zelda, Fire Emblem and Pikmin games

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This morning’s Nintendo Direct was full of upcoming game announcements, but one in particular stood out to fans: the long-awaited sequel to The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild is coming to the Nintendo Switch on May 12, 2023. The new game will be called The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom.

Breath of the Wild, released alongside the debut of the Switch in March 2017, is one of the console’s best-selling games to date, selling over 28 million copies. The long-awaited sequel was expected to come out this year, but the release date was pushed back after series producer Eiji Aonuma said that the team needed more time to “make this game’s experience something special.”

Nintendo Direct usually streams on a variety of international Nintendo YouTube channels, but the company’s U.K. channel did not stream today. According to the Nintendo U.K. Twitter account, the division chose not to livestream out of respect for the national period of mourning after the death of Queen Elizabeth II. After rumors circulated suggesting that the Nintendo Direct stream was delayed after the Queen’s passing, the title reveal of “Tears of the Kingdom” feels a bit on the nose.

Other headline moments of today’s stream include new installments for franchises like Fire Emblem, Pikmin and Mario. Fire Emblem Engage will come to the Nintendo Switch on January 20, while a new Pikmin game will debut on the Switch next year as well. Nintendo has already been playing around with the Pikmin IP, releasing the AR mobile game Pikmin Bloom last year with Niantic, the makers of Pokémon GO. In the land of our favorite Italian plumbers, new courses will soon arrive in Mario Kart 8 Deluxe, while Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope will be released on October 20 this year.

For the nostalgic gamers among us, the announcement of new Nintendo 64 games coming to Nintendo Online is especially exciting. Over the next year, we’ll be able to play games like the first three Mario Party games, GoldenEye 007 and Pokémon Stadium 1 + 2. Sure, new Breath of the Wild is cool, but have you played the Chansey egg game from Pokémon Stadium?

Nintendo announces new Zelda, Fire Emblem and Pikmin games by Amanda Silberling originally published on TechCrunch

Make your very own AI-generated Pokémon-like creature

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After nine generations of Pokémon, it can sometimes feel like the game developers are just pulling random words from a hat and seeing what they come up with. I still can’t decide if Klefki, the sentient keyring Pokémon, is a stroke of genius or madness.

Now, there’s an AI generator for that. Justin Pinkney, a machine learning researcher at Lambda Labs, created a “text to Pokémon” generator by fine-tuning Stable Diffusion, an AI image generator that functions in the same vein as DALL-E 2.

Pinkney trained the AI model on descriptions of Pokémon — for example, Bulbasaur is described as “a drawing of a green pokemon with red eyes,” while Caterpie is “a green and yellow toy with a red nose.”

On Twitter, Pinkney explained that once the model is fine-tuned, it will generate images in that style no matter what. In this case, that means cartoonish pocket monsters.

To use the generator for yourself, just link your GitHub account and get going. Then, you can toggle the number of image outputs, as well as the number of denoising steps and the scale of classifier-free guidance.

Because we are all the main characters of our own stories, thousands of people on Twitter inputted their own names to see what they would look like as a Pokémon. In case anyone was wondering, I am a red-haired spider that only has three legs. But when you input the names of celebrities, you get some really cursed images. For example, I have created a monster:

What’s even creepier is when you input the names of actual Pokémon and get an alternate universe version of characters you’ve loved since childhood. Take a look at these, in clockwise order: Pikachu, Bulbasaur, Charizard, Mew, Lucario and Sudowoodo.

The text to Pokémon generator is fun to poke around with, but fret not — The Pokémon Company will still shock and awe us at every turn with the increasingly bonkers (and still, often delightful!) new creatures they come up with. This morning, Pokémon fans got their next morsel of information before the long-awaited Pokémon Scarlet & Violet games come out in November: a beach-dwelling variation on Diglett called… Wiglett. It’s like the long furby of Digletts. Pokémon fans, we are in good hands.

Make your very own AI-generated Pokémon-like creature by Amanda Silberling originally published on TechCrunch

Pokémon Scarlet & Violet has a VTuber gym leader

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I didn’t know we needed a VTuber Gym Leader in the Pokémon universe. Then, we met Iono.

Last week, Pokémon released a 14-minute trailer about the upcoming Pokémon Scarlet & Violet games, which will mark the ninth generation of the iconic franchise’s main series installments. So this morning, when Pokémon unveiled another teaser for the upcoming games, some fans expected that they’d learn about more new Pokémon species as exciting as Wiglett or Farigiraf. Eager trainers woke up in the wee hours of the morning, waiting for the big reveal.

Instead, they got a three-minute video of a bubbly, electric-type trainer jumping around her set, asking her legions of fans at home to guess her partner Pokémon. The Pokémon Company describes her as an “influencer, streamer, and Gym Leader.” We stan a multihyphenate queen!

If Iono is as powerful as she is fashionable, then we’ll have a tricky gym battle on our hands. Unfortunately, these games are made for children, so you’ll probably be able to take her out with a solid ground Pokémon … just know even if you beat her in combat, she will likely destroy you with her runway walk, so who’s the real winner here?

Iono’s characterization screams “VTuber,” or “virtual YouTuber,” the Japanese streaming genre in which creators inhabit a virtual persona, who they animate by using AR face-tracking or motion capture suits. Since Iono already exists within an animated Japanese video game, it might be a misnomer to call her a VTuber — is she really a pink-and-blue-haired goddess with Magnemite clipped into her hair, rocking the oversized sweatshirt à la Ariana Grande or Billie Eilish? Or is she a different animated Pokémon character who is inhabiting the persona of virtual streamer within a game that is already virtual? Of course, the influencer gym leader has click baited us into waiting until “next time” to find out who her partner Pokémon is, but I’m more curious about whether she’s a virtual character within a virtual game or not.

This also begs the question of what video games Iono is streaming, and what games even exist in the Pokémon universe. In main series games, we usually find the latest Nintendo console in our character’s bedroom — we even encounter kids playing the GameBoy and using link cables to trade Pokémon. So, could Iono be as strong a Pokémon video game player as she is a Pokémon trainer? We know that Pokémon exists within the universes of other Nintendo franchises, like Splatoon and Animal Crossing. Is the reverse true, too?

Hopefully, our existential questions about the extent of the Nintendo universe will be answered when Pokémon Scarlet & Violet come out on November 18. For now, nope, we did not learn any new information about the Paldea region, except that there’s a town called Levincia where Iono intimidates her challengers with her shining, purple eyes and impeccable fashion sense. Deal with it.

Pokémon Scarlet & Violet has a VTuber gym leader by Amanda Silberling originally published on TechCrunch

I played a sneak peek of ‘Pokémon Scarlet,’ the franchise’s first open world game

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The ninth installment in the iconic franchise’s main series games, “Pokémon Scarlet & Violet” melds the best parts of “Pokémon Legends: Arceus” and “Pokémon Sword & Shield” to debut Pokémon’s first open world game, out November 18.

I know what you’re thinking. “Legends: Arceus,” which came out earlier this year, was often described as an open world game despite not quite resembling hits like “Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild.” But from the hour-and-change that I got to play “Pokémon Scarlet,” the open world claims seem legit. That is, you can run around and you don’t hit any invisible barriers — but then again, Nintendo designated a very specific corner of the map for these early playthroughs, and I was too busy trying to sniff out brand new Pokémon to put my Koraidon into high-gear and sprint toward the deepest depths of Paldea.

Speaking of which: Koraidon and Miraidon, the legendaries that appear on the covers of “Pokémon Scarlet & Violet,” function differently than past legendaries. Usually, the Pokémon that grace the artwork of new games are over-powered beasts like Kyogre, Dialga or Zacian, which you finally capture after several hours of gameplay. But from very early in the game, you join forces with your game’s chosen legendary, who you can use for transportation. In “Legends: Arceus,” players could ride Pokémon like Braviary, Basculegion and Sneasler to fly, swim, climb or just move faster. Koraidon and Miraidon function the same way, except you don’t have to annoyingly toggle between Pokémon. I guess these legendaries are simply more skilled than poor old Ursaluna.

So, what’s new in “Pokémon Scarlet & Violet”? To be honest, the demo I played seemed to be specifically designed to not give much more away than what’s already been shown in trailers. But I can reveal one very key piece of information. As previously announced, you can make sandwiches with your Pokémon, similar to camping and making curry in “Sword & Shield.” And unfortunately, yes — you can, indeed, feed Lechonk a ham sandwich. I’m so sorry.

Image Credits: Nintendo

Three different story routes

Paldea is inspired by the Iberian peninsula (Portugal and Spain) — a bit more exciting than the time when Pokémon based “Black & White” off of New York City and gave us Trubbish, a literal trash bag Pokémon. Instead, we get cuties like the little piggy Lechonk, a play on lechon, the Spanish word for cooked pork (that’s why it was so awful that I fed Lechonk a ham sandwich, he is literally a pig, ham comes from pigs, I already apologized, I don’t know what you want from me.)

Because it’s an open world game, players can choose the order in which to explore “Pokémon Scarlet & Violet.” There are three story routes, which can be explored in any order: Victory Road, Path of Legends and Starfall Street.

Victory Road is your standard Pokémon storyline — you battle gyms, get badges and challenge the Elite Four. Simple enough. But you also have to complete some side quests in order to get the gym leader to challenge you. The grass-themed gym in Artazon, an art-themed town, requires the player to play hide and seek with a horde of Sunflora.

This is where the non-linear storyline might get tricky — if you’ve already explored other storylines, will you simply just eviscerate Brassius’ Sudowoodo? Then again, we’re adults playing a game for children. If you want a real challenge from the gym battles, just play a Nuzlocke run.

Image Credits: Nintendo

The Path of Legends route resembles the boss battles in “Legends: Arceus,” only less frustrating. In “Legends: Arceus,” you had to throw balls of the Pokémon’s favorite food (?) at it while avoiding its ferocious attacks. In the new games, you just battle a particularly strong Pokémon. But the large Klawf that I faced scampered off before I fully drained its health, and I was told not to run after it in my demo, so hey. Maybe we’ll still have to throw food at Pokémon after all. I’m not looking forward to it.

Then, there’s Starfall Street, which occupies the “defeat the bad guys!” part of your standard Pokémon story. We first encounter Team Star at a base that’s not too far from Artazon. You have to ring the doorbell to go inside — I accidentally flew over it on my Koraidon, and Team Star did not take kindly to that. Then, you complete another pre-battle challenge: you have 10 minutes to defeat thirty Pokémon, like Vulpix, Torkoal and Houndoom.

In past games, KO-ing 30 Pokémon that quickly would be difficult. But “Scarlet & Violet” lets you “auto battle” wild creatures, which makes the process of grinding to level up a bit less strenuous. Is this a quality of life improvement, or does it take away the rite of passage of raising your Pokémon? Eh, we already moved past that once the Exp. Share became so overpowered.

One inarguably helpful quality of life improvement is “auto heal,” which applies items from your bag to heal a Pokémon back to full health. Gone are the days of feeding your Hoppip three different potions to recover 60 HP. Like other recent games, you can also change your party Pokémon on the go.

Image Credits: Nintendo

When you defeat those 30 Pokémon, Team Star’s Mela challenges you to a battle against her surprisingly bulky Torkoal, which sits atop the Starmobile, a giant car that wouldn’t be out of place at a pride parade. Even Game Freak is attuned to the disco ball trend!

But here’s where it gets trippy. Once you defeat the Torkoal, you can fight the Starmobile. I’ll leave it at that, for legal reasons.

Key new features in ‘Pokémon Scarlet & Violet’

I’ll admit: I do not care about Mega Pokémon, or Dynamax Pokémon, or whatever else we’ve been led to believe is the next frontier of battling our silly little guys (shiny mega Gengar is badass, though). But surprisingly enough, Terastal Pokémon are actually useful, adding a new element to the strategy of Pokémon battling.

When your Pokémon terastalizes, it takes on a new type. So, for example, Gym Leader Brassius’ Sudowoodo turns from a rock type to a grass type. Not a strategic move for Brassius, who’s probably facing off against a fire-type Pokémon like Pawmi or Fuecoco. But imagine throwing a Pikachu into battle, only for your opponent to throw out a Golem — if you can terastalize into a water type, for example, maybe you can win that matchup!

Image Credits: Nintendo

Pokémon don’t always have the same tera form. So, one Pikachu might turn into a grass type, while another might become a fire type. But the tera forms aren’t assigned completely at random — if you encounter a Pokémon in a raid den, there’s a higher chance that it will have a rarer tera form.

Online raid battles were introduced in “Sword & Shield,” but the battle system in “Scarlet & Violet” is far more engaging. It’s a similar format — four trainers battle a rare, powerful Pokémon — but the updated system is no longer turn-based. So, if your fellow trainers are taking too long to cheer you on or attack the boss, it won’t be as annoying. Soon enough, you can catch that cool tera form.

First impressions

As a Pokémon fan, I am absolutely delighted by “Pokémon Scarlet.” Give me more games! I like the little pocket monsters!

As someone whose job it is to think about games critically… it’s a bit more complex. If you loved “Pokémon Sword & Shield” and “Pokémon Legends: Arceus,” then you’ll love “Pokémon Scarlet & Violet,” even if it feels a tad repetitive. But if you already thought that the graphics from “Sword & Shield” sucked, or that Charmander is a class traitor since it was the only Kanto starter to initially appear in the game), you might be less excited. But would it soften the blow if I told you that I don’t think Charmander is going to make an appearance in Paldea (yet)?

This the problem with Pokémon. Game Freak and Nintendo know that no matter what they make, people will buy it, because we are simply pawns of the Pikachu machine. So, why not churn out as many games as quickly as possible? But as we pay Big Eevee™ $60 a pop for each and every game, we just might wonder how good “Scarlet & Violet” would be if the new installment had one more year to develop.

I played a sneak peek of ‘Pokémon Scarlet,’ the franchise’s first open world game by Amanda Silberling originally published on TechCrunch


Get a load o’ this guy! (There’s a new ghost dog Pokémon called Greavard)

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I cannot feasibly write a new post on TechCrunch dot com every time a new Pokémon is announced. I did skip over Bellibolt, the electric frog Pokémon that generates power from its big belly. But you know what’s even better than the partner Pokémon of a VTuber gym leader? Greavard. So here we are, writing a post to tell you about this haunting, good boy. I promise, any editor who is reading this, I did not spend more than 20 minutes on this important update in technology news.

Coming to “Pokémon Scarlet and Violet,” Greavard is like a cross between a Litwick (the candle Pokémon that debuted in “Pokémon Black and White”) and a bearded collie, as one Twitter user delightfully illustrated for us here:

In other words, Greavard is a ghost dog. In other other words, according to the Pokémon Company, Greavard is a “lovable subsurface lurker.” That’s either a really great or really terrible Tinder bio, and I can’t decide which, so don’t blame me if you scare off your future wife.

Why “subsurface”? According to the video, it looks like Greavard appears in the wild like a little candle on the ground, submerging its body beneath the surface — maybe the name “Greavard” is supposed to combine “graveyard” and “grief,” and this ghost dog is trying to reunite with a new owner to shower with love? Let’s not dwell on that for too long. But when you approach the shining candle, Greavard will jump out of the ground while “letting out a spooky cry that would startle most unsuspecting people — though it doesn’t appear to do this with ill intent,” the Pokémon Company says.

“Greavard has such a friendly and affectionate personality that paying it even the slightest bit of attention will make it so overjoyed that it will follow Trainers wherever they go. Of all the Pokémon residing in the Paldea region, it is known to be especially easy to befriend,” the press release reads.

But of course, because Pokédex entries are haunting and horrifying, this ghost dog has some pretty dark undertones.

“Greavard will slowly and inadvertently absorb the life-force of those around it, so it’s best not to play with it too much. What’s more, it also has powerful jaws that can shatter bones. A single bite from Greavard can be grievous — so Trainers are advised to approach it with caution,” it says.

I don’t know what to make of that, but I’m definitely catching a Greavard who will become best friends with my Lechonk. I think he’s just a good boy who needs a belly rub in the afterlife. He cannot hurt me.

“Pokémon Scarlet & Violet” will be released for the Nintendo Switch on November 18. We played a sneak preview of the game and wrote about it here.

Get a load o’ this guy! (There’s a new ghost dog Pokémon called Greavard) by Amanda Silberling originally published on TechCrunch

In Pokémon GO, you can now capture superbig or supersmall friends

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For some reason, Niantic added a feature to Pokémon GO in which sometimes Pokémon can be HUGE and sometimes they’re tiny. This feels like a relatively useless feature that doesn’t really change gameplay at all, but I mean, sure, I will take a tiny Poochyena, please and thank you!

Rolling out now, the Pokémon Poochyena, Mightyena and Mawile can appear in size XXS or XXL. Why those three Pokémon only? I don’t know, ask Professor Willow. In reality, it is probably to create a sense of excitement that they can draw out as they slowly roll out, uh, small Pikachu and big Eevee. Or, as they appear in-game, Pokémon that’s far from camera and Pokémon that’s close to camera.

Image Credits: Niantic

We’ve already had sizes of Pokémon since the game first came out in 2016 — usually this was used for horrible Reddit jokes in which people would nickname their Pokémon after certain body parts, then screenshot the appraisal screen, in which the Professor would say, “Your [body part] is huge!” if the Pokémon was of a larger size. You know what I mean. You can’t nickname Pokémon with that language anymore, but as a consolation, now there is a feature in the Pokédex that shows you the size ranges of Pokémon that you have caught. When you catch a new smallest or largest Pokémon for each species in your Pokédex, you will get a fun little pop-up congratulating you.

You’ll know if you’ve come across a superbig or supersmall guy in the wild because, uh, their sizes will be different. And there will be little animations that tell you this. Personally, I think these animations are a bit similar to those that appear when you find a shiny Pokémon in the wild, and a large Mawile simply is not as exciting as a shiny one, but hey, I didn’t design the game. If I did, I would have a shiny Mawile.

In Pokémon GO, you can now capture superbig or supersmall friends by Amanda Silberling originally published on TechCrunch

Pokémon partners with Netflix to launch stop-motion series ‘Pokémon Concierge’

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The Pokémon Company is collaborating with Netflix to launch a new stop-motion animated series called “Pokémon Concierge.”

The series follows a concierge at the Pokémon Resort, where Pokémon visit as guests.

We have a group of experts here in Japan who are passionate about finding and developing original stories from Japan that can excite audiences all over the world,” said Netflix vice president of Asia Pacific content Minyoung Kim. “With this title, we’re excited to marry an entirely new storyline that expands the Pokémon universe with groundbreaking stop-motion animation.”

This news was announced in the Pokémon Company’s annual Pokémon Day livestream on Monday. The date, marking the release of the first Pokémon games in Japan in 1996, now serves as an opportunity for the mega-franchise to share what fans can look forward to over the next year.

“Pokémon Concierge” is produced in collaboration with Dwarf Animation Studio. In the brief preview, fans saw a Psyduck waddling along a beach — a Japanese-language voiceover explains that Pokémon are the guests at this resort. Though we didn’t see any other Pokémon, a hyperrealistic, 3D Pikachu sat beside Pokémon Company president Tsunekazu Ishihara as he opened the stream. Some fans thought this was a nod to an announcement about another “Detective Pikachu” movie, but it seems more likely that this was connected to the Netflix news.

The Pokémon Company and Netflix did not share details about when the series will premiere. Currently, Netflix viewers can watch the longtime Pokémon anime series.

Pokémon partners with Netflix to launch stop-motion series ‘Pokémon Concierge’ by Amanda Silberling originally published on TechCrunch

Pokémon GO gets integration with Scarlet & Violet, plus Pokémon Sleep update

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On Monday’s Pokémon Presents livestream, the company behind the hit megafranchise announced an integration between its latest main series games, Pokémon Scarlet & Violet, and the Niantic-produced mobile hit Pokémon GO. The Pokémon Company also shared a long-awaited update on its sleep-tracking app, Pokémon Sleep.

Already in Pokémon GO, players can obtain regional variants of the butterfly Pokémon Vivillon by collecting in-game postcards from other trainers around the world. Now, Pokémon GO players can send those postcards into their Pokémon Scarlet & Violet games on the Nintendo Switch, which will cause that specific Vivillon variant to spawn. Then, on the Pokémon GO side, this will trigger the Pokémon Gimmighoul to appear in its roaming form. Normally, Gimmighoul can be caught as a Pokémon that lives inside of a treasure chest, which is also part of its body (yes, it’s weird, don’t ask), but in roaming form, it’s just a silly little grey guy with a golden coin. The Pokémon can evolve into Gholdengo after trainers collect 999 Gimmighoul coins.

This integration is similar to the link between Pokémon GO and the Nintendo Switch games Let’s Go Pikachu & Eevee. Like Gimmighoul, the only way to catch a Meltan in Pokémon GO is to connect the game to your console, which triggers a mystery box event. Meltan evolves into Melmetal, a very useful and powerful Pokémon for PvP battling.

Pokémon Scarlet & Violet will also soon be compatible with Pokémon Home, a subscription-based mobile app that allows players to transfer Pokémon across games. Once that integration is up and running, players will be able to transfer their roaming form Gimmighoul to their Scarlet & Violet games, making it the only way to use the Pokémon in that form.

Speaking of Pokémon Scarlet & Violet: Yes, we now know for sure that there will be a DLC. However, the first part of the expansion content “The Hidden Treasure of Area Zero” won’t be available until fall, with a second part following in winter. When Scarlet & Violet was released, riddled with glitches, we saw how bad things can get when Pokémon staff are rushed to churn out new games — so as far as I’m concerned, they can take all the time they want.

In other mobile Pokémon news, the Pokémon Company finally shared an update about Pokémon Sleep, an app that the company has been teasing since 2019.

“The idea behind Pokémon Sleep is to be a game that makes you look forward to waking up in the morning,” said Pokémon Company COO Takato Utsunomiya. That sounds a little bleak!

The game takes place on a small island, where we encounter a big Snorlax, along with Pokémon sleep researcher Professor Neroli (how do I get that job?). If you leave your phone by your pillow as you sleep, the game will record your sleep and analyze it — of course, we don’t know yet whether or not this data is actually accurate or useful.

Image Credits: The Pokémon Company

Your sleep will be characterized as dozing, snoozing or slumbering, and Pokémon that sleep the same way you do (… according to this sleep researcher fellow) will gather around your Snorlax. The app will be available on iOS and Android this summer.

To tie Pokémon GO and Pokémon Sleep together, the Pokémon announced the Pokémon GO Plus + accessory (no, that’s not a typo, and yes, it is pronounced “plus plus”). Like the existing Pokémon GO Plus, the gadget can spin Pokéstops and catch Pokémon for you in Pokémon GO. The new device also tracks your sleep and can sing you lullabies in a Pikachu voice, if that’s your thing. This device, available for purchase on July 14, will later allow players to bring their sleep data into Pokémon GO for special bonuses.

We don’t know yet if Pokémon Sleep will be a paid app, or if it will have in-app purchases. But Pokémon GO has been hugely successful, even if it doesn’t feel as culturally ubiquitous as it was in 2016. In June, the game surpassed $6 billion in all-time revenue.

Pokémon GO gets integration with Scarlet & Violet, plus Pokémon Sleep update by Amanda Silberling originally published on TechCrunch

Pokémon GO will raise the price of remote raid passes

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Pokémon GO is raising the price of remote raid passes, the mobile game announced today. Players used to be able to buy one pass for 100 coins (about $1) or three passes for 250 coins (about $2.50), but the cost of these items will nearly double to 195 coins for one pass, or 525 coins for three passes. Players will now be able to participate in only five raids per day.

Raid battles are a key component in Pokémon GO, requiring players to meet up at a set location in real life to battle an extra strong or rare Pokémon. When much of the world went into lockdown during the COVID-19 pandemic, remote raid passes were initially introduced to enable people to participate in raid battles from afar…and to give its parent company Niantic another income stream. As of last year, Pokémon GO surpassed the milestone of $6 billion in revenue from in-app purchases. 

“We believe this change is necessary for the long-term health of the game, and we do not make it lightly,” the Pokémon GO team wrote in a blog post. “We feel this is a necessary step toward our goal of preserving and improving the unique experience of playing Pokémon GO.”

Niantic’s AR-based mobile games are designed to encourage users to explore the world around them, and remote raid passes may seem to contradict that mission — there’s less reason to meet up with other players outside when you can play the game from home. But the feature also made the game more accessible to people who may have mobility issues or other limitations that prevent them from going out to catch ’em all.

Niantic made significant changes to Pokémon GO at the beginning of the pandemic, like making it easier to interact with PokéStops or gyms from afar. The game also tried to roll back that feature in August 2021, which prompted Pokémon GO influencers to threaten a boycott of the game. Niantic ended up scrapping that plan after the backlash.

As one of the most profitable mobile games ever, Pokémon GO itself isn’t particularly desperate for cash. But it seems like Niantic could be facing headwinds. The company was valued at $9 billion in November 2021, when the company openly bashed Meta and declared it would build a “real-world metaverse,” but like many tech companies, the company conducted layoffs last year and canceled four projects.

Pokémon GO plays a vital role in Niantic’s growth beyond its contributions as a cash cow. Niantic’s plans to build its “AR metaverse” rely on its trove of AR location data, which Pokémon GO has been instrumental in building — players get in-game bonuses if they scan real-life locations in AR. Players don’t need to share AR scans to play Pokémon GO, but perhaps they’re more likely to do so if they’re playing the game outside of their home.

Pokémon GO will raise the price of remote raid passes by Amanda Silberling originally published on TechCrunch

The new Pokémon app will put you to sleep

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Gotta catch ’em all! Catch all those Zs, that is.

Now available in the U.S., Pokémon Sleep is an app that “turns sleep into entertainment.” Thankfully, the app does not imbue your brain with sonic waves that make you dream of Hypno, a Pokémon that gave me vivid nightmares as a child. Instead, you simply place your phone next to your pillow while you sleep, and when you wake up, you can see how you slept.

Of course, what differentiates this from the oodles of other sleep tracking apps is that there are Pokémon involved. When you start the game, you meet Professor Neroli, a Pokémon sleep researcher (we applaud the amount of funding available in the Pokémon universe to support academics, but are nonetheless surprised that this field of study exists). He gives you some sort of sleep device to fill the plot hole we’re all wondering about, which is how our human sleep is supposed to relate to the sleep of Pokémon. It turns out that if you go to bed before your set bedtime, you get in-game rewards.

This sounds like an app made by a sleep-deprived engineer whose kids love Pokémon, but don’t love going to bed at an appropriate hour. Unfortunately, when I was a kid, I probably would’ve accepted Pokémon rewards to go to sleep, so long as those rewards did not involve Hypno, who remains quite creepy in my book, but hey, at least Mimikyu didn’t exist back in my day.

Aside from a partner Pikachu, you start off the game with a big ol’ sleepy Snorlax. The more you sleep, the more “drowsy power” your Snorlax gets, and that power helps you meet even more Pokémon. If you connect a Pokémon GO Plus — a device that connects to your phone to help you catch more Pokémon in Pokémon GO — you can get a Pikachu that has a sleeping cap. And then in Pokémon GO, you’ll get a Snorlax with a sleeping cap.

The app might seem like it came out of left field, but the Pokémon Company has been promoting it for more than four years — at Pokémon GO Fest events as early as 2019, you could catch Unown that spelled out “SLEEP.”  But in practice, Pokémon Sleep seems like an elaborate ploy to sell more Pokémon GO Pluses and/or some Pokémon engineers just got really creative in the pursuit to make their kids go to bed. If it works, though, go figure!

Cramorant is back, baby

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The Pokémon Presents livestream on Tuesday morning was pretty mid. We knew that the Pokémon Scarlet & Violet DLC (downloadable content) was coming, and I still refuse to learn what Pokémon Café ReMix is, why they’re turning Tatsugiri into sushi, and how to reconcile the ethics of eating Pokémon in-universe. N64’s Pokémon Stadium 2 coming to Switch is nice, but the biggest surprise among today’s load of announcements? Cramorant is back, baby.

In an anticipated announcement, the Pokémon Company revealed that the first installment of the Pokémon Scarlet & Violet DLC, The Hidden Treasure of Area Zero, will be released on September 13. As usual, the trailer for the expansion reveals some key plot points — in this upcoming installment, The Teal Mask, we’ll journey to Kitakami, a mountain town that’s hosting its annual festival. But more importantly, in a split-second clip from the trailer, we learn that Cramorant lives in Kitakami.

Cramorant was introduced in the previous main series Pokémon games, Pokémon Sword and Pokémon Shield, and became a quick fan favorite because it’s weird as hell. Based off a cormorant, Cramorant has a special ability called Gulp Missile, and to put it succinctly, this means that sometimes it tries to eat Pikachu. If you use surf or dive in battle with less than half of your Cramorant’s HP, you will become the silliest Pokémon in the game, and yes, that’s including Dudunsparce.

The great literature of the Pokédex entry reads as follows: “This Cramorant has accidentally gotten a Pikachu lodged in its gullet. Cramorant is choking a little, but it isn’t really bothered.” Cramorant’s shiny variant is orange, which fans theorize is a reference to a not-super-anomalous occurrence in which seagulls fall into vats of curry.

So, naturally, some of us Pokéfans were gutted when Cramorant didn’t seem to make the cut to appear in Pokémon Scarlet & Violet. To add insult to injury, the Paldea region is based off the Iberian peninsula, a region that, according to a very quick Wikipedia search, does indeed have cormorants.

Thankfully, the Pokémon Company has rectified its mistake. When The Teal Mask hits the Nintendo eShop on September 13, we will reunite with this absolutely bonkers bird. And maybe, just maybe, the game will finally allow us to change our clothes.


They made a scary matcha Pokémon

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A new Pokémon just dropped, and it’s literally a chipped teapot of matcha. It is called Poltchageist, and yes, that’s a portmanteau of “poltergeist” and “matcha.” It’s ghost tea.

Yes, Pokémon has already made this joke before, when they introduced Polteageist in the Pokémon Sword and Shield games, which take place in the Britain-inspired Galar region. But of course, the British aren’t the only ones who love tea — the preparation of matcha is a centuries-old cultural ritual in Japan. So, when the upcoming Pokémon Scarlet and Violet DLC takes us to the Japanese-inspired Kitakami region, why wouldn’t we encounter . . . sentient, haunted matcha?

Per Poltchageist’s Pokédex description:

Poltchageist takes up residence in old houses where it is sometimes known to patch up broken objects. Its Ability, Hospitality, allows Poltchageist to restore a small amount of its ally’s HP when it enters a battle. . . . After a target is sprinkled with some of Poltchageist’s powdery body or eats food dusted with it, Poltchageist drains their life-force and absorbs it as energy.​

Image Credits: The Pokémon Company

As if life-sucking matcha isn’t creepy enough, the Pokémon Company released a video about the legend of this Pokémon, which is apparently told as a spooky story to local youth.

So, there once was a tea master who was so committed to perfecting the art of the tea ceremony that no one wanted to hang out with him anymore, because he was constantly yelling at everyone about raising their tea bowls too high, or talking while making tea. He then died while saying, “Regret is a bitter sip!” which are some pretty hardcore last words. This grumpy old tea master’s tea caddy was passed down from generation to generation, but then it came back to life as a grass and ghost type Pokémon. It flew away to haunt grumpy tea drinkers, then murdered a woman with its matcha powder for texting at the table?

Now, according to Pokémon lore (which is consistently this bonkers), parents tell their kids in the Kitakami region that if they don’t finish their food, they will face the wrath of Poltchageist.

We’ll have to see what new Pokémon horrors await us in this supposed children’s game when the first part of the Scarlet and Violet DLC, The Teal Mask, comes out on September 13. At least Cramorant is coming back.

After 50,000 hours, this AI can play Pokémon Red

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Almost 10 years ago, the online phenomenon “Twitch Plays Pokémon” convened over a million people to play Pokémon Red at the same time, with each player’s keystrokes registering as commands for the one pixelated avatar. Now, like a Magikarp growing into a Gyarados, the evolution of technology begs a new question: can AI play Pokémon? […]

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Gamers flock to Palworld’s ‘Pokémon with guns’ despite copyright qualms

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When Palworld made its inauspicious debut in a teaser a year or so back, few thought this strange, blatant Pokémon ripoff would be anything but a quickly forgotten oddity. But after its Early Access release last week, the game has broken records and sold millions — reflecting the pent-up demand for a truly modern Pokémon-type […]

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Pokémon Company says it intends to investigate Palworld

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The Pokémon Company said Thursday it has not granted any permission to “another company,” referring to viral new game Palworld-developer Pocketpair, to use Pokémon intellectual property or assets and “intends to investigate and take appropriate measures” against the fast-growing survival game operator. The statement is Pokémon Company’s first acknowledgement of Palworld’s fast-growing survival title, which […]

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Pokémon resets some users’ passwords after hacking attempts

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The Pokémon Company said it detected hacking attempts against some of its users and reset those user account passwords. Last week, an alert was visible on Pokémon’s official support website that said, “Following an attempt to compromise our account system, Pokémon proactively locked the accounts of fans who might have been affected.” As of Tuesday, […]

© 2024 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.





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