Twenty-five years after Pokémon first began delighting children and adults alike, the phenomenon is still capturing hearts, with smartphone craze Pokémon Go enjoying record success in virus-hit 2020.

The augmented-reality game raked in $1 billion in just the first 10 months of last year – its most lucrative yet – according to market tracker Sensor Tower, and experts see no sign that interest is flagging as the world’s highest-grossing media franchise evolves.

Video: AFPTV/AFP

“The characters themselves are so appealing, and the mechanics of the actual video and card games are so well executed that it has this very timeless quality,” said Brian Ashcraft, an author who writes about Japanese pop culture.

Dan Ryan, a 29-year-old who works in London’s finance sector, has been a fan nearly his whole life and is not shy about his hobby, even with colleagues.

A woman looks at goods of Pokémon video game characters at a Pokémon store in Tokyo on February 26, 2021.A woman looks at goods of Pokémon video game characters at a Pokémon store in Tokyo on February 26, 2021.

“They know I disappear every Thursday to go and play Pokémon cards, they see me come in with my Pikachu jacket, and they see my Pokémon mugs,” he told AFP.

A man plays the Pokémon Go video game with three smartphones at the same time in Tokyo.A man plays the Pokémon Go video game with three smartphones at the same time in Tokyo.

He admits he spends “too much money” on rare Pokémon cards, whose prices have boomed as virus lockdowns push people towards indoor pursuits, with some in mint condition going for over $500,000 in recent weeks.

Pokémon is inspired by the childhood tradition of collecting bugs – popular during Japan’s hot and humid summer holidays – and part of its enduring appeal is its simple goal: to catch them all.

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Hundreds of round-eyed “pocket monsters” inspired by everything from mice to dragons can be caught and trained to full strength in battles.

The winning concept has sold countless toys, film tickets and more than 30 billion Pokémon cards since the first black-and-white Game Boy titles were released in Japan in 1996.

The Pokémon logo is seen at a Pokémon store in Tokyo.The Pokémon logo is seen at a Pokémon store in Tokyo.

‘Pika-pika’ 

Atsuko Nishida, who designed the electric mouse Pikachu, once said she modelled it on a round Japanese sweet called a daifuku.

Her fellow designers, who had asked Nishida to draw a cute monster, liked the creature and urged her to make it even more adorable.

“I thought it would be nice to have it store electricity in its cheek pouches. At the time I was really into squirrels, (which) store food in their cheeks,” she told a Japanese newspaper.

The character’s signature pronouncement “pika-pika” – meaning shiny and sparkly in Japanese – only added to the bright yellow creature’s powers of attraction.

For ZoeTwoDots, a Pokémon Go vlogger and livestreamer with nearly 200,000 YouTube subscribers, a childhood obsession has become her full-time job.

The 27-year-old Australian finds other fans mostly supportive, “which I think is incredibly rare, especially because gaming has that toxic stereotype”.

Her favourite Pokémon? “Togepi. It’s just a happy little egg. It’s quite literally, nothing can bother this.”

The game’s nature imagery, varied characters and focus on building a collection are central to its success, said Jason Bainbridge, executive dean of the University of Canberra’s arts and design faculty, who has written extensively about Pokémon.

But there have also been controversies along the way.

An anime episode in the 1990s caused several seizures among Japanese children –which some deemed a case of mass hysteria.

And magician Uri Geller recently dropped a 20-year legal battle against Nintendo, which partly owns Pokémon. He had accused it of using his likeness to create Kadabra, a psychic Pokémon holding a spoon.

Hunting on Tokyo’s streets 

While real-life 25th-anniversary celebrations are off the cards due to the coronavirus pandemic, a virtual concert featuring US rapper Post Malone –described as a lifelong Pokémon fan – is planned.

And Bainbridge says Pokémon could be around for another 25 years if it keeps adapting.

“Pokémon Go really revived the franchise, at a point when we all knew what Pokémon was, but all of a sudden... we all wanted to do it again,” he said of the game released in 2016.

The game allows players to roam the outside world throwing Pokéballs to capture monsters that pop up on their phone screens.

It has caused real-life mishaps from car crashes to clifftop falls, but it’s still easy to find players on Tokyo’s streets waiting for “wild” Pokémon to appear.

“It feels like you are catching the Pokémon, for real,” said Tsuyoshi Aihori, 22, who was on the hunt in Tokyo’s Akihabara gaming district on a weekday afternoon.

He plays around five hours a week and at a recent promotional event, “I played from dawn to dusk and caught 400 or 500 Pokémon,” he told AFP.

“I ran out of Pokéballs.”

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