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Pokémon Go celebrates 10 years with Times Square gathering as players still 'try to catch 'em all'

Pokémon Go marks 10 years since launch with Times Square event, having been downloaded over a billion times.

UK

Pokémon Go celebrates 10 years with Times Square gathering as players still 'try to catch 'em all'

Hundreds of gamers gathered in New York's Times Square on Thursday to battle a giant Mewtwo – a reference to the original trailer for Pokémon Go published more than a decade ago. The event marked the mobile game's 10th anniversary, a milestone for an app that has been downloaded more than a billion times across iOS and Android devices, with millions still logging on each day.

Released in 2016, Pokémon Go quickly became one of the biggest mobile game launches in history, using GPS and augmented reality to overlay digital creatures onto a live view of the real world through a smartphone's camera. It sparked a craze that saw people flock to parks, waterfronts and shopping malls in the hope of catching Pokémon.

Pokémon Go marks 10 years since launch with Times Square event, having been downloaded over a billion times.

“By allowing you to take your mobile phone out into the world to discover virtual creatures, Pokémon Go helped realise the millennial dream of becoming a Pokémon Trainer,” said Matthew Reynolds, editor of Pokémon news website One More Catch.

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Michael Steranka, vice president of product at the game's publisher Scopely, said the experience has always been about bringing people together. “Pokémon Go will always start with community – we think we're only scratching the surface here,” he said. “We often receive wedding invites from players who met through Pokémon Go... because it's been such an integral part of their relationship.”

The game's popularity has endured. It has hosted major live events in more than 60 countries, averaging more than 400,000 attendees a year since the first Go Fest in 2017. Scopely estimates players have explored over 100 billion kilometres while playing – roughly 334 round trips between the Earth and the Sun.

UK content creator j0beats, who runs one of Twitch's biggest channels dedicated to the game, regularly travels to events like the one in New York to meet fellow players. “People always think it's crazy that you travel all over just to catch some pixels,” she said.

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For Steranka, the community aspect remains central. “We think we're only scratching the surface here,” he said, hinting at what's next for a game that has already brought millions together for a decade.

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