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Pokémon Go live events

Since its release in 2016, multiple real-life events and gatherings based on the augmented reality (AR) mobile game Pokémon Go have been held by its developer Niantic Labs outside of unofficial player gatherings. Typically, the events involve increased in-game rewards for participating players and are often held in cooperation with local organizations or governments.

The common repeating events are the Pokémon Go Fest held annually, the Pokémon Go Safari Zone which has been held in multiple countries, and the monthly "Community Day" events. Player counts for the larger events range from thousands up to two million players in one event.[1] Due to large concentrations of players all using their mobile phones in such events, the large gatherings have resulted in incidents and network disruptions, which have resulted in a lawsuit against Niantic.

Niantic estimated that Pokémon Go live events in 2019 generated about $249 million in tourism revenue: $120 million in Chicago, $71 million in Montreal, and $56 million in Dortmund.[2]

Background edit

Pokémon Go edit

 
A gathering of Pokémon Go players in Düsseldorf, Germany, in August 2016

Pokémon Go (or Pokémon GO) is an augmented reality mobile game developed by Niantic Labs, based on the Pokémon franchise of Game Freak which began to release in July 2016. The game centers around catching various Pokémon creatures by navigating the in-game map based on the player's actual location and nearby landmarks.[3] Shortly after its release, the game went viral, breaking multiple records and being installed on millions of devices within weeks of its initial release.[4] With the game's massive initial player base, landmarks would gather crowds of players taking advantage of the "Pokéstops" which provide player with items, to the point where certain landmarks such as the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and the Arlington National Cemetery explicitly requested players to not play the game within the grounds.[5] On the other hand, the traffic generated by the game was capitalized on by some local businesses.[6]

During the first weeks after the game's release, multiple events and gatherings organized by the players happened across the world. Examples include a single gathering in Sydney days after the game's launch which attracted over 2,000 players,[7] and a Facebook-based bar crawl in San Francisco for the game collected thousands of responses and a significant number of attendees.[8] Another player gathering at Chicago's Millennium Park gathered around 5,000 players.[9] A zoo in Bristol, which held a Go event, received more attendance than its capacity and had to turn away players.[10]

Several months after release, the player count for the game declined, losing some one-third of its peak of 45 million active users by mid-August 2016.[11] Niantic held the first in-game event – where different Pokémon are encountered in the game and players receive increased rewards – on Halloween of 2016, and the revenue generated by the game spiked during the period.[12] Go had several more in-game events that year, including on Thanksgiving Day and Christmas.[13][14] In one November 2016 event, Niantic increased the spawn rate of the otherwise rare Pokémon Lapras in areas affected by the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami, intended to help recover tourism in the area.[15]

Shortly after Go's release, during an interview with Recode, Niantic CEO John Hanke stated that Niantic intended to hold official events, due to their experience with their previous game Ingress. He stated that the intent of the events for Go would be to have "people coming together, having an event that moves you through an interesting part of the city so it's part walking tour, part competition, and then having a big get-together at the end where we're announcing winners [and] leaderboards." He also added that the lack of events in the early stages of the game was to ensure that Niantic could handle the expected large crowds in such events.[16]

Ingress events edit

Prior to the release of Go, Niantic had developed and released a similar AR game called Ingress. A component of Ingress is a series of real-life events held directly by Niantic across multiple cities. Its first post-beta event series, held in 2013, spanned over 9 weeks and involved 39 cities worldwide.[17] The Pokémon Company (TPC) CEO Tsunekazu Ishihara was also an Ingress player, which according to Hanke eased cooperation between Niantic and TPC for Go.[18]

One type of Ingress events is known as "Anomalies", where gathered players in a specific location attempt to control the landmarks to score points for their factions, with clear victory objectives.[19] Anomalies can have attendances of upwards of 1,000 players,[20] and Hanke noted in the 2016 Recode interview that an event in Japan gathered over 10,000.[16] Additionally, Ingress also holds monthly "First Saturday" events and #NL1331 meetups (involving a mobile van).[21]

Pokémon Go Fest edit

2017 edit

 
Players in Grant Park during Pokémon Go Fest 2017

In June 2017, Niantic announced a new "Pokémon Go Fest" event, which was held in Chicago's Grant Park on 22 July 2017 as the game's first official real-life event.[22] Tickets to the event, priced at US$20, were sold out within fifteen minutes of its release for sale, despite the details of the event not having been revealed then. Scalpers were reported to have attempted to resell the tickets through resellers for inflated prices.[23] Later, it was revealed that players worldwide and players at Grant Park would contribute towards a catching target, which would unlock rewards.[24]

On the date of the event itself, The Chicago Tribune estimated that 20,000 players attended, some having traveled across the United States or even from abroad.[25][26] During the event itself, however, mobile networks in the park overloaded, resulting in the attendees being nearly unable to play the game. Niantic acknowledged the issue by around 2 p.m., and its CEO Hanke was booed when speaking on stage in front of the players.[27] In an attempt to alleviate the network pressure, Niantic extended the in-game event area to two miles outside of Grant Park, and continued the event throughout the weekend. The event in Grant Park was ended on 5 p.m. local time, two hours before it was scheduled.[26] Multiple media outlets called the event a "disaster".[26][27][28] A spokesperson from Niantic remarked that the company's staff were "horrified" with the outcome of the event.[29]

Immediately after the event, Niantic refunded the tickets of the attendees, in addition to giving their accounts US$100 worth of in-game currency and the legendary Pokémon Lugia, meant to have been released during the event.[26] Niantic released a blog post by Hanke the following day, blaming both technical issues with the game – which was resolved according to the post – and network oversaturation due to insufficient availability of mobile cell sites. Also according to the blog post, 7.7 million Pokémon were captured by players in Downtown Chicago during the ensuing weekend.[30] In a 2018 interview with The Guardian, Hanke remarked that "the first six hours of [Pokémon Go Fest] were among the most challenging of my professional life."[31]

Later on, a Go Fest attendee Jonathan Norton filed a class action lawsuit to the Circuit Court of Cook County against Niantic.[32] The lawsuit was settled after Niantic agreed to pay US$1.575 million to compensate for non-ticket fees such as accommodation and transportation.[33]

2018 edit

Despite the outcome of the 2017 Go Fest, Niantic announced a second Go Fest to be held again in Chicago, at Lincoln Park, on 7 May 2018. Unlike the previous Fest, the event was held across two days – 14 and 15 July.[34] The area allocated for the event was larger, with attendees being limited to one of the two days, and additional temporary cellular network facilities were provided by major providers.[35] Like in 2017, tickets for the event sold out rapidly, with tickets running out on the official website within half an hour and scalpers reselling the tickets for increased prices.[36]

During the event, Lincoln Park was decorated with props resembling various biomes which could be found in the game. As part of the event, Pokémon which are normally rare or only found in other parts of the world spawned in the area.[37] Attendees were also given a chance to complete "Research Quests" in-game in order to encounter the Mythical Pokémon Celebi.[38] According to Niantic, 21,000 people attended the event in Lincoln Park with an additional 180,000 players in Chicago.[39] The event was seen as largely successful, with relatively few technical difficulties in contrast to the 2017 event.[37][40]

2019 edit

A third Go Fest event was announced on 4 April 2019. The 2019 event, unlike the preceding ones, were to be held in three separate cities – Chicago (Grant Park, held between 13–16 June), Dortmund (Westfalenpark, held between 4–7 July) and Yokohama (Yamashita Park, Rinko Park and Akarenga Park, held between 6–12 August).[41][42] In the lead-up to the events, Niantic held a "Pokémon Go Snapshot Challenge", centered around the game's augmented reality camera feature, with the contest's main prizes being trips to the Go Fest events.[43] Tickets for the Chicago event were distributed through a random drawing which followed in-game registration.[44]

Niantic reported around 60,000 attendees to the Chicago event.[45] The reported player count in Dortmund was 85,000 in the Westfalenpark across the four days,[46] and 150,000 players participated in Yokohama.[47]

2020–2023 edit

In 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic which limited the capacity for in-person gatherings, Niantic opted for a fully online Go Fest, holding the event worldwide and enabling players to participate in the event at home. It was held on 25–26 July 2020.[48]

The 2021 Go Fest was held on 17–18 July, with a lower ticket price of $5.[49] With the pandemic's impact having lessened in parts of the world, the 2021 Go Fest involved at-home events still, but also a number of real-life gatherings in 21 cities across the United States and Europe. Unlike events in 2017–2019, which saw Niantic set up many Pokémon themed builds across the parks, the 2021 events were described as having "a lighter touch", with the locations intended to be more spread out. Each of the 21 locations were still staffed by Niantic personnel.[50][a] A special "raid egg" display was set up at Maggie Daley Park in Chicago, in reference to the first Go Fest held in the city.[52]

The global part of the 2022 Go fest was held 4–5 June with a finale event 27 August.[53] A pink flower around the logo hinted that the mythical Pokémon Shaymin would make its Pokémon Go debut.[54] It was officially confirmed later.[55] There were also in-person events in three cities in different weekends: 1–3 July in Berlin, 22–24 July in Seattle, and 5–7 August in Sapporo.[citation needed]

The 2023 Go fest had three cities with in-person events, 4–6 August in London and Osaka, and 18–20 August in New York City, as well as a global event 26–27 August.[56]

Pokémon Go Safari Zone edit

 
A gel bracelet handed out to attendees of the 2017 Safari Zone at CentrO in Oberhausen, Germany, signalling both attendance of the event and affiliation to one of the three ingame teams (here: Team Instinct)

On 12 July 2017, Niantic announced "Safari Zone" events across several cities in Europe at shopping centers operated by Unibail-Rodamco, held in August and September 2017.[57] The events, where otherwise region-limited Pokémon could be found among others, required registration and had a player limit – for example, the event in Amsterdam was limited to 2,000 players,[58] though unregistered players would still be able to play with increased rewards within the city.[59] However, due to the failure of the 2017 Go Fest event, Niantic delayed some of the Safari Zone events to fall that year.[60]

Later in 2017, another Safari Zone event was held in Tottori Prefecture, Japan, at the Tottori Sand Dunes between 24 and 26 November. According to the local government, 89,000 people attended the event which generated around US$16 million in travel and tourism revenue. In the leadup to the event, Niantic brought several influencers in a tour around Japan as a campaign which was named Pokémon Go Travel.[61]

The Summer 2018 iteration of the Safari Zone – announced in conjunction with the 2018 Go Fest as part of a "Summer Tour" – involved a Safari Zone event in Dortmund's Westfalenpark on 30 June and 1 July, and another event in Yokosuka, Japan on 29 August – 2 September.[62][63] The Dortmund event attracted some 170,000 players across the city, thrice the expected amount, with some players reporting network issues during the 2-day event.[64]

Yokosuka's 2018 Safari Zone event, held in three parks, took up large portions of the city, with speakers playing Go's in-game music and businesses handing out Pokémon merchandise.[65] Niantic reported that 65,000 players went to one of the three parks and that 200,000 users played in Yokosuka during the event.[66]

A Safari Zone event was held in Chiayi County of Taiwan between 26 February and 3 March 2018, during the Chiayi Lantern Festival. In total, around 200,000 players went to Chiayi – which had a population of around 500,000 – for the event.[67][68] Between 1 and 5 November 2018, another Safari Zone event was held in Tainan, Taiwan. While initially expected to have 200,000 attendees, the event ended up gathering 560,000 participants, with 80,000 during the last day (a Monday) alone. Around one-tenth of the figure were players from overseas, mainly from Japan and Hong Kong. The event, which generated an estimated NT$ 1.5 billion for the local economy, was the result of a cooperation between Niantic and the local government, though the former did not receive royalties.[69]

The first Safari Zone event of 2019 was held in Porto Alegre, Brazil on 25 January. 130,000 players registered to join the event, though only 25,000 were granted tickets. The event was largely conducted alongside the banks of the Guaíba River.[70][71] Niantic later also announced another Safari Zone, held between 18 and 22 April at Sentosa, Singapore.[72] 125,000 tickets were issued, 20 percent of those to non-Singaporeans.[73] After the event concluded, Niantic reported an attendance of 95,000 players.[74] Between 20 and 22 September 2019, another Safari Zone event was held in Montreal, Canada, with an attendance of approximately 45,000 players. Tickets for the event were sold out in four hours.[75] Another Taiwanese Safari Zone, held in New Taipei City between 3 and 6 October 2019, saw 100,000 players in the first day and 150,000 in the second, with the city's tourism and travel department estimating a NT$100 million profit generated by the event for local businesses, with around 40 percent of the attendees coming from outside Taiwan.[76]

For 2020, Safari Zone events were scheduled to be held in St. Louis (27–29 March), Liverpool (17–19 April), and Philadelphia (8–10 May).[77] However, all three Safari Zone events were postponed due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, with ticketholders receiving the Safari Zone experience in their own locales during the originally scheduled dates.[78] The new dates were 15–17 October 2021 for Liverpool, 29–31 October for Philadelphia, and 12–14 November for St. Louis.[79] 20,000 players attended the in-person event at Sefton Park, in Liverpool,[80] with thousands also attending the events at Tower Grove Park, St. Louis[81] and Fairmount Park, Philadelphia.[82]

In 2022 there were scheduled Safari Zone events in Seville, Spain 13–15 May at Alamillo Park,[83] in Goyang, South Korea 23–25 September at Ilsan Lake Park,[84] in Taipei, Taiwan 21–23 October at Daan Forest Park,[85] and in Singapore 18–20 November in Gardens by the Bay.[86]

Community Days edit

Community Days are monthly worldwide in-game events where certain Pokémon species spawn in large amounts.[87] An evolution of the featured Pokémon can learn an exclusive event move which is generally stronger than its normal moves. There are also bonuses like more rewards or time for certain activities. Community Days are intended to draw players together especially in major cities,[88] and the events drew crowds in hotspots such as Seattle's Green Lake and Brighton and Hove's Hove Park.[89][90]

The first Community Day was "Pikachu day" on 20 January 2018. In January 2022, Niantic introduced Community Day Classic, a second Community Day bringing back a previously featured Pokémon and the three hour event duration seen pre-pandemic, but with the bonus benefits introduced because of it.[91] The April Day Community Day also reverted to a 3-hour total duration.[92]

As of Bellsprout on 20 April 2024, 68 Pokémon have been featured (ten of them twice and one thrice): Abra, Axew, Bagon (2), Beldum, Bellsprout, Bulbasaur (2), Chansey, Charmander (3), Chespin, Chikorita, Chimchar, Cyndaquil, Deino, Dratini (2), Duskull, Eevee (2), Electabuzz, Fennekin, Fletchling, Froakie, Gastly, Alolan Geodude, Gible, Grubbin, Hoppip, Larvitar (2), Litten, Litwick, Machop, Magikarp, Magmar, Mareep (2), Mudkip (2), Noibat, Oshawott, Pikachu, Piplup, Poliwag, Porygon (2), Ralts, Rhyhorn, Roggenrola, Roselia, Rowlet, Sandshrew (both Alolan and Kantonian), Seedot, Shinx, Slakoth, Slowpoke, Snivy, Spheal, Squirtle (2), Starly, Stufful, Swablu, Swinub (2), Teddiursa, Tepig, Timburr, Togetic, Torchic, Totodile, Trapinch, Treecko, Turtwig, Weedle, Wooper, Galarian Zigzagoon.[93]

Date Pokémon featured Event Move Ref
20 January 2018 Pikachu Surf
24 February 2018 Dratini (1) Draco Meteor
25 March 2018 Bulbasaur (1) Frenzy Plant
15 April 2018 Mareep (1) Dragon Pulse
19 May 2018 Charmander (1) Blast Burn
16 June 2018 Larvitar (1) Smack Down
8 July 2018 Squirtle (1) Hydro Cannon
11–12 August 2018 Eevee (1) Last Resort
22 September 2018 Chikorita Frenzy Plant
21 October 2018 Beldum Meteor Mash
10 November 2018 Cyndaquil Blast Burn
30 November – 2 December 2018 Previous Pokémon [94]
12 January 2019 Totodile Hydro Cannon
16 February 2019 Swinub (1) Ancient Power
23 March 2019 Treecko Frenzy Plant
13 April 2019 Bagon (1) Outrage
19 May 2019 Torchic Blast Burn
8 June 2019 Slakoth Body Slam
21 July 2019 Mudkip (1) Hydro Cannon
3 August 2019 Ralts Synchronoise
15 September 2019 Turtwig Frenzy Plant
12 October 2019 Trapinch Earth Power
16 November 2019 Chimchar Blast Burn
14–15 December 2019 11 Previous Pokémon [95]
19 January 2020 Piplup Hydro Cannon
22 February 2020 Rhyhorn Rock Wrecker
15 March 2020 Postponed by COVID-19 pandemic [96]
25 April 2020 Abra Counter
24 May 2020 Seedot Bullet seed
20 June 2020 Weedle Drill Run
19 July 2020 Gastly Shadow Punch
8 August 2020 Magikarp Aqua Tail
20 September 2020 Porygon (1) Tri Attack
17 October 2020 Charmander (2) Dragon Breath
15 November 2020 Electabuzz Flamethrower
21 November 2020 Magmar Thunderbolt
12–13 December 2020 Previous Pokémon from 2019 and 2020 Previous
16 January 2021 Machop Payback [97]
7 February 2021 Roselia Bullet Seed (fast)
Fire type Weather Ball (charged)
[98]
6 March 2021 Fletchling Incinerate [99]
11 April 2021 Snivy Frenzy Plant [100]
15 May 2021 Swablu Moonblast [101]
6 June 2021 Gible Earth Power [102]
3 July 2021 Tepig Blast Burn [103]
14–15 August 2021 Eevee (2) Last Resort [104]
19 September 2021 Oshawott Razor Shell [105]
9 October 2021 Duskull Shadow Ball [106]
23 November 2021 Shinx Psychic Fangs [107]
18–19 December 2021 Previous Pokémon from 2020
(in raids and eggs)
and 2021 (in wild)
Previous [108]
16 January 2022 Spheal Powder Snow (fast)
Icicle Spear (charged)
[109]
22 January 2022 (Classic) Bulbasaur (2) Frenzy Plant [91]
12 February 2022 Hoppip Acrobatics [110]
13 March 2022 Sandshrew and Alolan Sandshrew Night Slash (charged, Sandslash)
Shadow Claw (fast, Alolan Sandslash)
[111]
10 April 2022 (Classic) Mudkip (2) Hydro Cannon [112]
23 April 2022 Stufful Drain Punch [113][92]
21 May 2022 Alolan Geodude Rollout [114]
25 June 2022 Deino Brutal Swing [115]
17 July 2022 Starly Gust [116]
13 August 2022 Galarian Zigzagoon Obstruct [117]
18 September 2022 Roggenrola Meteor Beam [118]
15 October 2022 Litwick Poltergeist [119]
5 November 2022 (Classic) Dratini (2) Draco Meteor [120]
12 November 2022 Teddiursa High Horsepower [121]
17–18 December 2022 Previous Pokémon from 2021 and 2022 Previous [122]
7 January 2023 Chespin Frenzy Plant [123]
21 January 2023 (Classic) Larvitar (2) Smack Down [124]
5 February 2023 Noibat Boomburst [125]
18 March 2023 Slowpoke and Galarian Slowpoke Surf [126]
15 April 2023 Togetic Aura Sphere [127]
29 April 2023 (Classic) Swinub (2) Ancient Power [128]
21 May 2023 Fennekin Blast Burn [129]
10 June 2023 Axew Breaking Swipe [130]
9 July 2023 (Classic) Squirtle (2) Hydro Cannon [131]
23 July 2023 (makeup event) [132]
30 July 2023 Poliwag Counter (fast, Poliwrath)
Ice Beam (charged, Politoed)
[133]
13 August 2023 Froakie Hydro Cannon [134]
2 September 2023 (Classic) Charmander (3) Dragon Breath (fast)
Blast Burn (charged)
[135]
23 September 2023 Grubbin Volt Switch [136]
15 October 2023 Timburr Brutal Swing [137]
5 November 2023 Wooper and Paldean Wooper Aqua Tail (Quagsire)
Megahorn (Clodsire)
[138]
25 November 2023 (Classic) Mareep (2) Dragon Pulse [139]
16–17 December 2023 Previous Pokémon from 2022 and 2023 Previous [140]
6 January 2024 Rowlet Frenzy Plant [141]
20 January 2024 (Classic) Porygon (2) Tri Attack [142]
4 February 2024 Chansey Wild Charge [143]
16 March 2024 Litten Blast Burn [144]
7 April 2024 (Classic) Bagon (2) Outrage [145]
20 April 2024 Bellsprout Magical Leaf [146]
19 May 2024 TBA [147]

Other events edit

Outside of the events mentioned above, Niantic has held multiple one-off events, official or in cooperation with other organizations. On 7 May 2017, the first real-life event was held in Charlotte, North Carolina.[148] The first such official Go event in Europe was held in Chester in the United Kingdom, on 22–23 July 2017 during the annual Chester Heritage Festival in partnership with local non-profit Big Heritage. It was estimated that during the two days, between 16 and 18 thousand players visited the city.[149][150]

Between 9 and 15 August 2017, during the Pikachu Outbreak event held by TPC, Niantic held Pokémon Go Park events in two parks within the city of Yokohama, Japan.[151] On 14 August, during the aforementioned event, a Pokémon Go Stadium event was held at Yokohama Stadium in which thousands of players attempted to catch Mewtwo.[1] The event was livestreamed.[152] In total, during the seven days of the event; 2 million players participated in Yokohama,[1] with the Pikachu Outbreak event overall recording 3 million participants including the Go players.[153] Due to the disruption to the city's traffic caused by the large numbers of attendees, Yokohama declined to host a Go event the following year.[65]

In partnership with the Knight Foundation, an event was held in Akron, Ohio on 26–27 August 2017.[154] Niantic also partnered with the Viva Calle San Jose event on 17 September 2017,[155] and a second iteration of the partnership was held on 23 September 2018.[156] Go also held scavenger hunts in the Philadelphia's 2017 Philly Free Streets[157] and in Los Angeles in partnership with CicLAvia on 10 December 2017.[158]

Held alongside the annual Pokémon Festa, between 4 and 12 November 2017 Go had an event held across South Korea.[159] The event was repeated the following year, centered around the Lotte World Mall in Seoul, between 21 and 23 September 2018.[160]

On Earth Day of April 2018, an "Earth Day Cleanup" event was launched, which rewarded players globally if sufficient players signed up to join cleanup events across 12 countries.[161] Niantic reported over 4,200 players signing up with 6,600 kg of trash collected across 19 countries.[162]

Notes edit

  1. ^ The locations were: San Francisco, Denver, Atlanta, Chicago, Indianapolis, New York City, Seattle, Washington, D.C., Nashville, Tennessee, Austin, Texas, Linz, Dresden, Essen, Hamburg, Sevilla, Paris, Warsaw, Bristol, Edinburgh, Liverpool, and London.[50] Auckland, New Zealand was also slated to hold an event, but it was cancelled due to extreme weather.[51]

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External links edit

  • Pokémon GO Events

pokémon, live, events, since, release, 2016, multiple, real, life, events, gatherings, based, augmented, reality, mobile, game, pokémon, have, been, held, developer, niantic, labs, outside, unofficial, player, gatherings, typically, events, involve, increased,. Since its release in 2016 multiple real life events and gatherings based on the augmented reality AR mobile game Pokemon Go have been held by its developer Niantic Labs outside of unofficial player gatherings Typically the events involve increased in game rewards for participating players and are often held in cooperation with local organizations or governments The common repeating events are the Pokemon Go Fest held annually the Pokemon Go Safari Zone which has been held in multiple countries and the monthly Community Day events Player counts for the larger events range from thousands up to two million players in one event 1 Due to large concentrations of players all using their mobile phones in such events the large gatherings have resulted in incidents and network disruptions which have resulted in a lawsuit against Niantic Niantic estimated that Pokemon Go live events in 2019 generated about 249 million in tourism revenue 120 million in Chicago 71 million in Montreal and 56 million in Dortmund 2 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Pokemon Go 1 2 Ingress events 2 Pokemon Go Fest 2 1 2017 2 2 2018 2 3 2019 2 4 2020 2023 3 Pokemon Go Safari Zone 4 Community Days 5 Other events 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBackground editPokemon Go edit nbsp A gathering of Pokemon Go players in Dusseldorf Germany in August 2016Pokemon Go or Pokemon GO is an augmented reality mobile game developed by Niantic Labs based on the Pokemon franchise of Game Freak which began to release in July 2016 The game centers around catching various Pokemon creatures by navigating the in game map based on the player s actual location and nearby landmarks 3 Shortly after its release the game went viral breaking multiple records and being installed on millions of devices within weeks of its initial release 4 With the game s massive initial player base landmarks would gather crowds of players taking advantage of the Pokestops which provide player with items to the point where certain landmarks such as the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and the Arlington National Cemetery explicitly requested players to not play the game within the grounds 5 On the other hand the traffic generated by the game was capitalized on by some local businesses 6 During the first weeks after the game s release multiple events and gatherings organized by the players happened across the world Examples include a single gathering in Sydney days after the game s launch which attracted over 2 000 players 7 and a Facebook based bar crawl in San Francisco for the game collected thousands of responses and a significant number of attendees 8 Another player gathering at Chicago s Millennium Park gathered around 5 000 players 9 A zoo in Bristol which held a Go event received more attendance than its capacity and had to turn away players 10 Several months after release the player count for the game declined losing some one third of its peak of 45 million active users by mid August 2016 11 Niantic held the first in game event where different Pokemon are encountered in the game and players receive increased rewards on Halloween of 2016 and the revenue generated by the game spiked during the period 12 Go had several more in game events that year including on Thanksgiving Day and Christmas 13 14 In one November 2016 event Niantic increased the spawn rate of the otherwise rare Pokemon Lapras in areas affected by the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami intended to help recover tourism in the area 15 Shortly after Go s release during an interview with Recode Niantic CEO John Hanke stated that Niantic intended to hold official events due to their experience with their previous game Ingress He stated that the intent of the events for Go would be to have people coming together having an event that moves you through an interesting part of the city so it s part walking tour part competition and then having a big get together at the end where we re announcing winners and leaderboards He also added that the lack of events in the early stages of the game was to ensure that Niantic could handle the expected large crowds in such events 16 Ingress events edit Main article Ingress video game Special events Prior to the release of Go Niantic had developed and released a similar AR game called Ingress A component of Ingress is a series of real life events held directly by Niantic across multiple cities Its first post beta event series held in 2013 spanned over 9 weeks and involved 39 cities worldwide 17 The Pokemon Company TPC CEO Tsunekazu Ishihara was also an Ingress player which according to Hanke eased cooperation between Niantic and TPC for Go 18 One type of Ingress events is known as Anomalies where gathered players in a specific location attempt to control the landmarks to score points for their factions with clear victory objectives 19 Anomalies can have attendances of upwards of 1 000 players 20 and Hanke noted in the 2016 Recode interview that an event in Japan gathered over 10 000 16 Additionally Ingress also holds monthly First Saturday events and NL1331 meetups involving a mobile van 21 Pokemon Go Fest edit2017 edit nbsp Players in Grant Park during Pokemon Go Fest 2017In June 2017 Niantic announced a new Pokemon Go Fest event which was held in Chicago s Grant Park on 22 July 2017 as the game s first official real life event 22 Tickets to the event priced at US 20 were sold out within fifteen minutes of its release for sale despite the details of the event not having been revealed then Scalpers were reported to have attempted to resell the tickets through resellers for inflated prices 23 Later it was revealed that players worldwide and players at Grant Park would contribute towards a catching target which would unlock rewards 24 On the date of the event itself The Chicago Tribune estimated that 20 000 players attended some having traveled across the United States or even from abroad 25 26 During the event itself however mobile networks in the park overloaded resulting in the attendees being nearly unable to play the game Niantic acknowledged the issue by around 2 p m and its CEO Hanke was booed when speaking on stage in front of the players 27 In an attempt to alleviate the network pressure Niantic extended the in game event area to two miles outside of Grant Park and continued the event throughout the weekend The event in Grant Park was ended on 5 p m local time two hours before it was scheduled 26 Multiple media outlets called the event a disaster 26 27 28 A spokesperson from Niantic remarked that the company s staff were horrified with the outcome of the event 29 Immediately after the event Niantic refunded the tickets of the attendees in addition to giving their accounts US 100 worth of in game currency and the legendary Pokemon Lugia meant to have been released during the event 26 Niantic released a blog post by Hanke the following day blaming both technical issues with the game which was resolved according to the post and network oversaturation due to insufficient availability of mobile cell sites Also according to the blog post 7 7 million Pokemon were captured by players in Downtown Chicago during the ensuing weekend 30 In a 2018 interview with The Guardian Hanke remarked that the first six hours of Pokemon Go Fest were among the most challenging of my professional life 31 Later on a Go Fest attendee Jonathan Norton filed a class action lawsuit to the Circuit Court of Cook County against Niantic 32 The lawsuit was settled after Niantic agreed to pay US 1 575 million to compensate for non ticket fees such as accommodation and transportation 33 2018 edit Despite the outcome of the 2017 Go Fest Niantic announced a second Go Fest to be held again in Chicago at Lincoln Park on 7 May 2018 Unlike the previous Fest the event was held across two days 14 and 15 July 34 The area allocated for the event was larger with attendees being limited to one of the two days and additional temporary cellular network facilities were provided by major providers 35 Like in 2017 tickets for the event sold out rapidly with tickets running out on the official website within half an hour and scalpers reselling the tickets for increased prices 36 During the event Lincoln Park was decorated with props resembling various biomes which could be found in the game As part of the event Pokemon which are normally rare or only found in other parts of the world spawned in the area 37 Attendees were also given a chance to complete Research Quests in game in order to encounter the Mythical Pokemon Celebi 38 According to Niantic 21 000 people attended the event in Lincoln Park with an additional 180 000 players in Chicago 39 The event was seen as largely successful with relatively few technical difficulties in contrast to the 2017 event 37 40 2019 edit A third Go Fest event was announced on 4 April 2019 The 2019 event unlike the preceding ones were to be held in three separate cities Chicago Grant Park held between 13 16 June Dortmund Westfalenpark held between 4 7 July and Yokohama Yamashita Park Rinko Park and Akarenga Park held between 6 12 August 41 42 In the lead up to the events Niantic held a Pokemon Go Snapshot Challenge centered around the game s augmented reality camera feature with the contest s main prizes being trips to the Go Fest events 43 Tickets for the Chicago event were distributed through a random drawing which followed in game registration 44 Niantic reported around 60 000 attendees to the Chicago event 45 The reported player count in Dortmund was 85 000 in the Westfalenpark across the four days 46 and 150 000 players participated in Yokohama 47 2020 2023 edit In 2020 due to the COVID 19 pandemic which limited the capacity for in person gatherings Niantic opted for a fully online Go Fest holding the event worldwide and enabling players to participate in the event at home It was held on 25 26 July 2020 48 The 2021 Go Fest was held on 17 18 July with a lower ticket price of 5 49 With the pandemic s impact having lessened in parts of the world the 2021 Go Fest involved at home events still but also a number of real life gatherings in 21 cities across the United States and Europe Unlike events in 2017 2019 which saw Niantic set up many Pokemon themed builds across the parks the 2021 events were described as having a lighter touch with the locations intended to be more spread out Each of the 21 locations were still staffed by Niantic personnel 50 a A special raid egg display was set up at Maggie Daley Park in Chicago in reference to the first Go Fest held in the city 52 The global part of the 2022 Go fest was held 4 5 June with a finale event 27 August 53 A pink flower around the logo hinted that the mythical Pokemon Shaymin would make its Pokemon Go debut 54 It was officially confirmed later 55 There were also in person events in three cities in different weekends 1 3 July in Berlin 22 24 July in Seattle and 5 7 August in Sapporo citation needed The 2023 Go fest had three cities with in person events 4 6 August in London and Osaka and 18 20 August in New York City as well as a global event 26 27 August 56 Pokemon Go Safari Zone edit nbsp A gel bracelet handed out to attendees of the 2017 Safari Zone at CentrO in Oberhausen Germany signalling both attendance of the event and affiliation to one of the three ingame teams here Team Instinct On 12 July 2017 Niantic announced Safari Zone events across several cities in Europe at shopping centers operated by Unibail Rodamco held in August and September 2017 57 The events where otherwise region limited Pokemon could be found among others required registration and had a player limit for example the event in Amsterdam was limited to 2 000 players 58 though unregistered players would still be able to play with increased rewards within the city 59 However due to the failure of the 2017 Go Fest event Niantic delayed some of the Safari Zone events to fall that year 60 Later in 2017 another Safari Zone event was held in Tottori Prefecture Japan at the Tottori Sand Dunes between 24 and 26 November According to the local government 89 000 people attended the event which generated around US 16 million in travel and tourism revenue In the leadup to the event Niantic brought several influencers in a tour around Japan as a campaign which was named Pokemon Go Travel 61 The Summer 2018 iteration of the Safari Zone announced in conjunction with the 2018 Go Fest as part of a Summer Tour involved a Safari Zone event in Dortmund s Westfalenpark on 30 June and 1 July and another event in Yokosuka Japan on 29 August 2 September 62 63 The Dortmund event attracted some 170 000 players across the city thrice the expected amount with some players reporting network issues during the 2 day event 64 Yokosuka s 2018 Safari Zone event held in three parks took up large portions of the city with speakers playing Go s in game music and businesses handing out Pokemon merchandise 65 Niantic reported that 65 000 players went to one of the three parks and that 200 000 users played in Yokosuka during the event 66 A Safari Zone event was held in Chiayi County of Taiwan between 26 February and 3 March 2018 during the Chiayi Lantern Festival In total around 200 000 players went to Chiayi which had a population of around 500 000 for the event 67 68 Between 1 and 5 November 2018 another Safari Zone event was held in Tainan Taiwan While initially expected to have 200 000 attendees the event ended up gathering 560 000 participants with 80 000 during the last day a Monday alone Around one tenth of the figure were players from overseas mainly from Japan and Hong Kong The event which generated an estimated NT 1 5 billion for the local economy was the result of a cooperation between Niantic and the local government though the former did not receive royalties 69 The first Safari Zone event of 2019 was held in Porto Alegre Brazil on 25 January 130 000 players registered to join the event though only 25 000 were granted tickets The event was largely conducted alongside the banks of the Guaiba River 70 71 Niantic later also announced another Safari Zone held between 18 and 22 April at Sentosa Singapore 72 125 000 tickets were issued 20 percent of those to non Singaporeans 73 After the event concluded Niantic reported an attendance of 95 000 players 74 Between 20 and 22 September 2019 another Safari Zone event was held in Montreal Canada with an attendance of approximately 45 000 players Tickets for the event were sold out in four hours 75 Another Taiwanese Safari Zone held in New Taipei City between 3 and 6 October 2019 saw 100 000 players in the first day and 150 000 in the second with the city s tourism and travel department estimating a NT 100 million profit generated by the event for local businesses with around 40 percent of the attendees coming from outside Taiwan 76 For 2020 Safari Zone events were scheduled to be held in St Louis 27 29 March Liverpool 17 19 April and Philadelphia 8 10 May 77 However all three Safari Zone events were postponed due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic with ticketholders receiving the Safari Zone experience in their own locales during the originally scheduled dates 78 The new dates were 15 17 October 2021 for Liverpool 29 31 October for Philadelphia and 12 14 November for St Louis 79 20 000 players attended the in person event at Sefton Park in Liverpool 80 with thousands also attending the events at Tower Grove Park St Louis 81 and Fairmount Park Philadelphia 82 In 2022 there were scheduled Safari Zone events in Seville Spain 13 15 May at Alamillo Park 83 in Goyang South Korea 23 25 September at Ilsan Lake Park 84 in Taipei Taiwan 21 23 October at Daan Forest Park 85 and in Singapore 18 20 November in Gardens by the Bay 86 Community Days editCommunity Days are monthly worldwide in game events where certain Pokemon species spawn in large amounts 87 An evolution of the featured Pokemon can learn an exclusive event move which is generally stronger than its normal moves There are also bonuses like more rewards or time for certain activities Community Days are intended to draw players together especially in major cities 88 and the events drew crowds in hotspots such as Seattle s Green Lake and Brighton and Hove s Hove Park 89 90 The first Community Day was Pikachu day on 20 January 2018 In January 2022 Niantic introduced Community Day Classic a second Community Day bringing back a previously featured Pokemon and the three hour event duration seen pre pandemic but with the bonus benefits introduced because of it 91 The April Day Community Day also reverted to a 3 hour total duration 92 As of Bellsprout on 20 April 2024 68 Pokemon have been featured ten of them twice and one thrice Abra Axew Bagon 2 Beldum Bellsprout Bulbasaur 2 Chansey Charmander 3 Chespin Chikorita Chimchar Cyndaquil Deino Dratini 2 Duskull Eevee 2 Electabuzz Fennekin Fletchling Froakie Gastly Alolan Geodude Gible Grubbin Hoppip Larvitar 2 Litten Litwick Machop Magikarp Magmar Mareep 2 Mudkip 2 Noibat Oshawott Pikachu Piplup Poliwag Porygon 2 Ralts Rhyhorn Roggenrola Roselia Rowlet Sandshrew both Alolan and Kantonian Seedot Shinx Slakoth Slowpoke Snivy Spheal Squirtle 2 Starly Stufful Swablu Swinub 2 Teddiursa Tepig Timburr Togetic Torchic Totodile Trapinch Treecko Turtwig Weedle Wooper Galarian Zigzagoon 93 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 Date Pokemon featured Event Move Ref20 January 2018 Pikachu Surf24 February 2018 Dratini 1 Draco Meteor25 March 2018 Bulbasaur 1 Frenzy Plant15 April 2018 Mareep 1 Dragon Pulse19 May 2018 Charmander 1 Blast Burn16 June 2018 Larvitar 1 Smack Down8 July 2018 Squirtle 1 Hydro Cannon11 12 August 2018 Eevee 1 Last Resort22 September 2018 Chikorita Frenzy Plant21 October 2018 Beldum Meteor Mash10 November 2018 Cyndaquil Blast Burn30 November 2 December 2018 Previous Pokemon 94 12 January 2019 Totodile Hydro Cannon16 February 2019 Swinub 1 Ancient Power23 March 2019 Treecko Frenzy Plant13 April 2019 Bagon 1 Outrage19 May 2019 Torchic Blast Burn8 June 2019 Slakoth Body Slam21 July 2019 Mudkip 1 Hydro Cannon3 August 2019 Ralts Synchronoise15 September 2019 Turtwig Frenzy Plant12 October 2019 Trapinch Earth Power16 November 2019 Chimchar Blast Burn14 15 December 2019 11 Previous Pokemon 95 19 January 2020 Piplup Hydro Cannon22 February 2020 Rhyhorn Rock Wrecker15 March 2020 Postponed by COVID 19 pandemic 96 25 April 2020 Abra Counter24 May 2020 Seedot Bullet seed20 June 2020 Weedle Drill Run19 July 2020 Gastly Shadow Punch8 August 2020 Magikarp Aqua Tail20 September 2020 Porygon 1 Tri Attack17 October 2020 Charmander 2 Dragon Breath15 November 2020 Electabuzz Flamethrower21 November 2020 Magmar Thunderbolt12 13 December 2020 Previous Pokemon from 2019 and 2020 Previous16 January 2021 Machop Payback 97 7 February 2021 Roselia Bullet Seed fast Fire type Weather Ball charged 98 6 March 2021 Fletchling Incinerate 99 11 April 2021 Snivy Frenzy Plant 100 15 May 2021 Swablu Moonblast 101 6 June 2021 Gible Earth Power 102 3 July 2021 Tepig Blast Burn 103 14 15 August 2021 Eevee 2 Last Resort 104 19 September 2021 Oshawott Razor Shell 105 9 October 2021 Duskull Shadow Ball 106 23 November 2021 Shinx Psychic Fangs 107 18 19 December 2021 Previous Pokemon from 2020 in raids and eggs and 2021 in wild Previous 108 16 January 2022 Spheal Powder Snow fast Icicle Spear charged 109 22 January 2022 Classic Bulbasaur 2 Frenzy Plant 91 12 February 2022 Hoppip Acrobatics 110 13 March 2022 Sandshrew and Alolan Sandshrew Night Slash charged Sandslash Shadow Claw fast Alolan Sandslash 111 10 April 2022 Classic Mudkip 2 Hydro Cannon 112 23 April 2022 Stufful Drain Punch 113 92 21 May 2022 Alolan Geodude Rollout 114 25 June 2022 Deino Brutal Swing 115 17 July 2022 Starly Gust 116 13 August 2022 Galarian Zigzagoon Obstruct 117 18 September 2022 Roggenrola Meteor Beam 118 15 October 2022 Litwick Poltergeist 119 5 November 2022 Classic Dratini 2 Draco Meteor 120 12 November 2022 Teddiursa High Horsepower 121 17 18 December 2022 Previous Pokemon from 2021 and 2022 Previous 122 7 January 2023 Chespin Frenzy Plant 123 21 January 2023 Classic Larvitar 2 Smack Down 124 5 February 2023 Noibat Boomburst 125 18 March 2023 Slowpoke and Galarian Slowpoke Surf 126 15 April 2023 Togetic Aura Sphere 127 29 April 2023 Classic Swinub 2 Ancient Power 128 21 May 2023 Fennekin Blast Burn 129 10 June 2023 Axew Breaking Swipe 130 9 July 2023 Classic Squirtle 2 Hydro Cannon 131 23 July 2023 makeup event 132 30 July 2023 Poliwag Counter fast Poliwrath Ice Beam charged Politoed 133 13 August 2023 Froakie Hydro Cannon 134 2 September 2023 Classic Charmander 3 Dragon Breath fast Blast Burn charged 135 23 September 2023 Grubbin Volt Switch 136 15 October 2023 Timburr Brutal Swing 137 5 November 2023 Wooper and Paldean Wooper Aqua Tail Quagsire Megahorn Clodsire 138 25 November 2023 Classic Mareep 2 Dragon Pulse 139 16 17 December 2023 Previous Pokemon from 2022 and 2023 Previous 140 6 January 2024 Rowlet Frenzy Plant 141 20 January 2024 Classic Porygon 2 Tri Attack 142 4 February 2024 Chansey Wild Charge 143 16 March 2024 Litten Blast Burn 144 7 April 2024 Classic Bagon 2 Outrage 145 20 April 2024 Bellsprout Magical Leaf 146 19 May 2024 TBA 147 Other events editOutside of the events mentioned above Niantic has held multiple one off events official or in cooperation with other organizations On 7 May 2017 the first real life event was held in Charlotte North Carolina 148 The first such official Go event in Europe was held in Chester in the United Kingdom on 22 23 July 2017 during the annual Chester Heritage Festival in partnership with local non profit Big Heritage It was estimated that during the two days between 16 and 18 thousand players visited the city 149 150 Between 9 and 15 August 2017 during the Pikachu Outbreak event held by TPC Niantic held Pokemon Go Park events in two parks within the city of Yokohama Japan 151 On 14 August during the aforementioned event a Pokemon Go Stadium event was held at Yokohama Stadium in which thousands of players attempted to catch Mewtwo 1 The event was livestreamed 152 In total during the seven days of the event 2 million players participated in Yokohama 1 with the Pikachu Outbreak event overall recording 3 million participants including the Go players 153 Due to the disruption to the city s traffic caused by the large numbers of attendees Yokohama declined to host a Go event the following year 65 In partnership with the Knight Foundation an event was held in Akron Ohio on 26 27 August 2017 154 Niantic also partnered with the Viva Calle San Jose event on 17 September 2017 155 and a second iteration of the partnership was held on 23 September 2018 156 Go also held scavenger hunts in the Philadelphia s 2017 Philly Free Streets 157 and in Los Angeles in partnership with CicLAvia on 10 December 2017 158 Held alongside the annual Pokemon Festa between 4 and 12 November 2017 Go had an event held across South Korea 159 The event was repeated the following year centered around the Lotte World Mall in Seoul between 21 and 23 September 2018 160 On Earth Day of April 2018 an Earth Day Cleanup event was launched which rewarded players globally if sufficient players signed up to join cleanup events across 12 countries 161 Niantic reported over 4 200 players signing up with 6 600 kg of trash collected across 19 countries 162 Notes edit The locations were San Francisco Denver Atlanta Chicago Indianapolis New York City Seattle Washington D C Nashville Tennessee Austin Texas Linz Dresden Essen Hamburg Sevilla Paris Warsaw Bristol Edinburgh Liverpool and London 50 Auckland New Zealand was also slated to hold an event but it was cancelled due to extreme weather 51 References edit a b c Skrebels Joe 16 August 2017 Pokemon Go 2 Million Players Participated in Pikachu Outbreak Event in Japan IGN Retrieved 10 April 2019 Partleton Kayleigh 24 January 2020 Pokemon Go live events generated 249 million in tourism 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original on 20 September 2022 Retrieved 20 September 2022 Roselia is the featured February Community Day Pokemon Pokemon GO 13 January 2021 Archived from the original on 20 September 2022 Retrieved 20 September 2022 March Community Day s featured Pokemon will be Fletchling Pokemon GO 16 February 2021 Archived from the original on 20 September 2022 Retrieved 20 September 2022 Snivy stars during April Community Day Pokemon GO 23 March 2021 Archived from the original on 20 September 2022 Retrieved 20 September 2022 Swablu features during May Community Day and Mega Altaria will be appearing afterward Pokemon GO 29 April 2021 Archived from the original on 20 September 2022 Retrieved 20 September 2022 Gible Community Day is coming Pokemon GO 20 May 2021 Archived from the original on 20 September 2022 Retrieved 20 September 2022 Get fired up for Tepig Community Day Pokemon GO 21 June 2021 Archived from the original on 20 September 2022 Retrieved 20 September 2022 Eevee Community Day is back with special attacks for each of Eevee s Evolutions Pokemon GO 22 July 2021 Archived from the original on 20 September 2022 Retrieved 20 September 2022 September Community Day Osha watch out the Sea Otter Pokemon Oshawott will be featured Pokemon GO 20 August 2021 Archived from the original on 20 September 2022 Retrieved 20 September 2022 October Community Day Duskull the Requiem Pokemon will be featured Pokemon GO 9 September 2021 Archived from the original on 20 September 2022 Retrieved 20 September 2022 November Community Day Shinx the Flash Pokemon will be featured Pokemon GO 22 October 2021 Archived from the original on 20 September 2022 Retrieved 20 September 2022 December Community Day features some familiar faces from 2020 and 2021 Pokemon GO 18 November 2021 Archived from the original on 23 November 2021 Retrieved 22 November 2021 January 2022 Community Day Spheal s spear tastic sojourn Pokemon GO 20 December 2021 Archived from the original on 2 January 2022 Retrieved 4 January 2022 February 2022 Community Day Hoppip s Hop Along Hangout Pokemon GO 24 January 2022 Archived from the original on 14 February 2022 Retrieved 14 February 2022 March 2022 Community Day Sandshrew and Alolan Sandshrew Pokemon GO 28 February 2022 Archived from the original on 6 March 2022 Retrieved 7 March 2022 Community Day Classic Memories of Mudkip Pokemon GO 28 March 2022 Archived from the original on 28 March 2022 Retrieved 28 March 2022 Save the dates Next Season s Community Day events Pokemon GO 14 February 2022 Archived from the original on 14 February 2022 Retrieved 14 February 2022 May 2022 Community Day Alolan Geodude Pokemon GO 25 April 2022 Archived from the original on 28 April 2022 Retrieved 28 April 2022 June 2022 Community Day Deino Pokemon GO 9 June 2022 Archived from the original on 9 June 2022 Retrieved 10 June 2022 July 2022 Community Day Starly Pokemon GO 27 June 2022 Archived from the original on 27 June 2022 Retrieved 27 June 2022 August 2022 Community Day Galarian Zigzagoon Pokemon GO 19 July 2022 Archived from the original on 19 July 2022 Retrieved 19 July 2022 September 2022 Community Day Roggenrola Pokemon GO 7 September 2022 Archived from the original on 7 September 2022 Retrieved 8 September 2022 October 2022 Community Day Litwick Pokemon GO 19 September 2022 Archived from the original on 19 September 2022 Retrieved 20 September 2022 Community Day Classic Dreaming of Dratini Pokemon GO 6 October 2022 Archived from the original on 6 October 2022 Retrieved 6 October 2022 November 2022 Community Day Teddiursa Pokemon GO 17 October 2022 Archived from the original on 17 October 2022 Retrieved 17 October 2022 Save the dates for next Season s Community Days Pokemon GO 18 November 2022 Archived from the original on 18 November 2022 Retrieved 19 November 2022 January 2023 Community Day Chespin Pokemon GO 19 December 2022 Archived from the original on 19 December 2022 Retrieved 19 December 2022 January 2023 Community Day Classic Larvitar Pokemon GO 4 January 2023 Archived from the original on 4 January 2023 Retrieved 4 January 2023 February 2023 Community Day Noibat Pokemon GO 11 January 2023 Archived from the original on 12 January 2023 Retrieved 12 January 2023 March 2023 Community Day Slowpoke and Galarian Slowpoke Pokemon GO 2 March 2023 Archived from the original on 2 March 2023 Retrieved 2 March 2023 April 2023 Community Day Togetic Pokemon GO 19 March 2023 Archived from the original on 20 March 2023 Retrieved 20 March 2023 April 2023 Community Day Classic Swinub Pokemon GO 17 April 2023 Archived from the original on 17 April 2023 Retrieved 17 April 2023 May 2023 Community Day Fennekin Pokemon GO 1 May 2023 Archived from the original on 1 May 2023 Retrieved 1 May 2023 June 2023 Community Day Axew Pokemon GO 31 May 2023 Archived from the original on 31 May 2023 Retrieved 31 May 2023 July 2023 Community Day Classic Squirtle Pokemon GO 12 June 2023 Archived from the original on 12 June 2023 Retrieved 12 June 2023 July 2023 Community Day Classic Squirtle makeup event Pokemon GO 18 July 2023 Archived from the original on 18 July 2023 Retrieved 18 July 2023 July 2023 Community Day Poliwag Pokemon GO 10 July 2023 Archived from the original on 10 July 2023 Retrieved 10 July 2023 August 2023 Community Day Froakie Pokemon GO 31 July 2023 Archived from the original on 31 July 2023 Retrieved 31 July 2023 September 2023 Community Day Classic Charmander Pokemon GO 30 August 2023 Archived from the original on 30 August 2023 Retrieved 30 August 2023 September 2023 Community Day Grubbin Pokemon GO 4 September 2023 Archived from the original on 4 September 2023 Retrieved 4 September 2023 October 2023 Community Day Timburr Pokemon GO 25 September 2023 Archived from the original on 25 September 2023 Retrieved 25 September 2023 November 2023 Community Day Wooper and Paldean Wooper Pokemon GO 16 October 2023 Archived from the original on 16 October 2023 Retrieved 16 October 2023 November 2023 Community Day Classic Mareep Pokemon GO 6 November 2023 Archived from the original on 6 November 2023 Retrieved 6 November 2023 Catch up with Community Day Pokemon from 2022 and 2023 Community Days are returning for a year end catch celebration Pokemon GO 28 November 2023 Archived from the original on 28 November 2023 Retrieved 28 November 2023 January 2024 Community Day Rowlet Pokemon GO 18 December 2023 Archived from the original on 18 December 2023 Retrieved 18 December 2023 January 2024 Community Day Classic Porygon Pokemon GO 2 January 2024 Archived from the original on 3 January 2024 Retrieved 3 January 2024 February 2024 Community Day Chansey Pokemon GO 9 January 2024 Archived from the original on 10 January 2024 Retrieved 10 January 2024 March 2024 Community Day Litten Pokemon GO 29 February 2024 Retrieved 29 February 2024 April 2024 Community Day Classic Bagon Pokemon GO 19 March 2024 Retrieved 19 March 2024 April 2024 Community Day Bellsprout Pokemon GO 9 April 2024 Retrieved 9 April 2024 Save the dates for next Season s Community Days Pokemon GO 5 February 2024 Archived from the original on 5 February 2024 Retrieved 6 February 2024 Frank Allegra 4 May 2017 Pokemon Go s first community event is a hint of the game s future Polygon Archived from the original on 18 September 2017 Retrieved 22 April 2019 Big Heritage and Pokemon GO team up in the ancient city of Chester Niantic Labs 6 July 2017 Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 Chester transformed by Pokemon GO heritage festival Place North West 24 July 2017 Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 Pokemon GO Park Events at Pikachu Outbreak Pokemon GO Niantic Labs 8 August 2017 Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 Borkowski Alex 10 August 2017 Pokemon Go will live stream a big Stadium event from Japan and fans are freaking out Mic Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 Hoffer Christian 19 April 2018 Pikachu Festival Passes on Pokemon Go Event Due to Safety Concerns Comic Book Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 Pokemon Go in Downtown Akron Events Downtown Akron OH Downtown Akron Partnership Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 San Jose Viva Calle goes Downtown and Eastbound The Mercury News 17 September 2017 Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 Pokemon GO is Back Viva Calle San Jose 24 July 2018 Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 Slabbers Bastiaan 28 October 2017 In second year Philly Free Streets route was car free from Old City to North Philly WHYY Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 Kacurov Dejan 30 November 2017 Pokemon Go CicLAvia event in Los Angeles on December 10 It s Free to Participate Future Game Releases Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 Jeffery Maxwell 26 October 2017 Pokemon GO Announces a New Event Game Rant Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 Pokemon GO Week in Korea Pokemon GO Niantic Labs 14 September 2018 Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 Webster Andrew 4 April 2018 Pokemon Go will reward players for picking up trash on Earth Day The Verge Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 Earth Day Cleanup Pokemon GO Niantic Labs Archived from the original on 10 April 2019 Retrieved 10 April 2019 External links editPokemon GO Events Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pokemon Go live events amp oldid 1218097696, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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