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Pokémon GO
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Pokémon GO
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N. America:
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July 6, 2016[1]
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Japan:
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July 22, 2016[2]
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Europe:
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July 13, 2016
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Australia:
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July 6, 2016[3]
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Pokémon GO is a mobile augmented reality-based game in the Pokémon series, released in 2016. The game was developed in collaboration between Nintendo, Niantic, and The Pokémon Company. The project initially started as "Pokémon Challenge", an April Fools' Day prank made in collaboration with Google. Several "field tests" were also conducted in several regions leading up to the final release.
Accompanying the release of the game is Pokémon GO Plus, a peripheral developed by Nintendo that alerts players to in-game events.
Blurb
Venusaur, Charizard, Blastoise, Pikachu, and many other Pokémon have been discovered on planet Earth!
Now’s your chance to discover and capture the Pokémon all around you—so get your shoes on, step outside, and explore the world. You’ll join one of three teams and battle for the prestige and ownership of Gyms with your Pokémon at your side.
Pokémon are out there, and you need to find them. As you walk around a neighborhood, your smartphone will vibrate when there’s a Pokémon nearby. Take aim and throw a Poké Ball… You’ll have to stay alert, or it might get away!
Search far and wide for Pokémon and items
Certain Pokémon appear near their native environment—look for Water-type Pokémon by lakes and oceans. Visit PokéStops, found at interesting places like museums, art installations, historical markers, and monuments, to stock up on Poké Balls and helpful items.
Catching, hatching, evolving, and more
As you level up, you’ll be able to catch more-powerful Pokémon to complete your Pokédex. You can add to your collection by hatching Pokémon Eggs based on the distances you walk. Help your Pokémon evolve by catching many of the same kind.
Take on Gym battles and defend your Gym
As your Charmander evolves to Charmeleon and then Charizard, you can battle together to defeat a Gym and assign your Pokémon to defend it against all comers.
It’s time to get moving—your real-life adventures await!
Gameplay
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This section is a stub. You can help NintendoWiki by expanding it.
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Technical details
Media:
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Digital download (mobile)
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Download size:
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iOS: 110 MB Android: 58 MB
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System requirements:
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iOS: iOS 8 or later (iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch) Android: version 4.4 or later
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Supported features:
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Internet connectivity (in-game purchases)
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Input / compatible controllers:
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Touchscreen
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Updates
Like Miitomo before it, the iOS and Android releases of Pokémon GO have received separate updates.
iOS
Version Number
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Date Released
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Description
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1.0.1
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July 12, 2016
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Players no longer need to sign in again after a forced log out, added stability when signing in with a Pokémon Trainer Club account, fixes the Google account scope, fixes crashing issues.
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1.0.2
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July 13, 2016
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Fixes issues when signing in with a Pokémon Trainer Club account.
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1.0.3
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July 20, 2016
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Text fixes
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Android
Version Number
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Date Released
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Description
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0.29.2
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July 13, 2016
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Added support for devices running Android N Development Preview and Intel x86.
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0.29.3
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July 20, 2016
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Text fixes
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0.31.0[4]
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July 30, 2016
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Adds the option to change one's avatar appearance in-game, removes the "footprint" tracking system, adds a new menu to the Pokémon status screen, adds new images for achievement medals, fixes issues with displaying certain map features, improvements to memory issues, move damage adjustments, animation adjustments, text fixes.
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External links
References