It makes me kind of sad to think that Pokémon Gois now a year old.
Actually sad is probably the wrong word -- more nostalgic, maybe. When I think back to July and August last year it seemed like absolutely everyone in the world was playing it: friends, colleagues, family, random people in the street.
You'd go out on your lunch break and you'd see people doing it: gleeful kids, surreptitious businessmen, strangers chatting to each other outside virtual gyms. The game created a frantic energy that makes this summer's fidget spinner craze look positively tiny in comparison.
SEE ALSO:7 things 'Pokémon Go' badly needs in 2017Anyway, it's now a year on and I'm still doggedly playing. So's my uncle. I introduced it to him last July, and he became even more obsessed with the game than me. He's now level 37, and I'm level 35.
Obviously the game is nowhere near the same as it used to be in the weeks that followed its release. But anyone who tells you it's "dead" clearly hasn't seen thriving Reddit communities like The Silph Road (which has almost a quarter of a million subscribers), or felt the renewed buzz of excitement when Niantic released a huge gym update a couple of weeks back.
Anyway, I'm not going to waffle on too much about why the game's still relevant. If the anniversary nostalgia has given you any urge at all to re-open the app, though, here are some of the cool new things you'll be greeted by.
Generation 2 was finally launched back in February, and saw over 80 new Pokémon get added to the game.
The big pink one above and on the left is Blissey, who'll you'll see a lot of in gyms nowadays (she may look friendly, but she's one of the toughest 'mon in the game now).
The most recent big update came a couple of weeks ago, and it introduced a bunch of awesome new stuff. One surprise addition was a handful of new items -- Golden Razz Berrys make Pokémon way easier to catch, Rare Candy can be fed to a specific Pokémon and turned into a candy of that type, and TMs -- a cool addition that anyone who played the Game Boy games will remember -- let you teach a Pokémon a new move.
Another thing anyone who played the Game Boy games will remember is gym badges. Since the gym revamp that came with the big June update, these can now be collected like medals. You can upgrade them to bronze, silver, and gold by attacking and defending gyms, and they can be spun like Pokéstops to give you items.
This is easily the coolest new thing Niantic has introduced to the game since its launch. Raids basically involve you and a team of up to 20 players taking on a super badass Pokémon that hatches out of a giant egg above a gym: if you beat the Pokémon, you get rewarded with the new items andyou get a one-off chance to catch a smaller version of the monster. It's a great incentive to chat to random people or play the game in a group, and all in all it's a huge step towards what Niantic initially promised in the game's trailer (remember that group of people in Times Square battling Mewtwo)?
Which finally brings us on to...
The introduction of Raids has finally introduced a game mechanic that make legendary Pokémon a real, near-future possibility. There are currently four Raid levels of difficulty, but there have been hints of a fifth "legendary" level in the pipeline, which will finally allow players to get hold of Pokémon like good 'ol Mewtwo. We don't know exactly when or how these legendaries will be introduced, but the beginning of real-world events like the upcoming Pokémon GO Fest Chicago could be just the place to kick things off...
OK: so ultimately the game is nothing like what it was last summer. It'll never be quite like that again.
But if you do have an itching to dust off that Pokédex, now is a better time than ever before.
TopicsGamingPokemon