Pokemon Go

2016Subculture / multi-format meme (image macros, screenshots, reaction images, videos, copypasta)semi-active

Also known as: Pokemon GO · Pokémon GO · PoGo

Pokemon Go is a 2016 multi-format meme from Niantic's AR game, where players hunting digital creatures outdoors sparked viral content about inappropriate trespassing, safety incidents, and the surreal sight of masses obsessed with phones.

Pokemon Go is an augmented reality mobile game developed by Niantic that launched in July 2016 and immediately spawned a massive wave of internet memes about its real-world gameplay, team rivalries, safety incidents, and the absurdity of millions of people wandering around staring at their phones to catch digital creatures5. The game's requirement that players physically explore their surroundings led to countless viral moments, from people finding dead bodies while hunting Pokemon to the U.S. Holocaust Museum begging visitors to stop catching Pikachu on its grounds13. Pokemon Go memes peaked during the summer of 2016 but the game's ongoing updates and events kept generating new meme content for years afterward.

TL;DR

Pokémon Go uses GPS, camera, and gyroscope technology to overlay Pokémon onto the real world through a player's phone screen.

Overview

Pokemon Go memes cover the entire spectrum of internet humor formats. Image macros joke about rural players seeing empty maps, screenshots show Pokemon spawning in inappropriate locations like bathrooms and funerals, and reaction images mock the team rivalry between Valor, Mystic, and Instinct2. The game's unique blend of augmented reality and real-world exploration created situations no other mobile game could produce, giving meme creators endless material. A Diglett appearing on someone's crotch, a Magikarp flopping on a kitchen counter, players walking into traffic because a rare spawn appeared across the street. All of it became meme fuel1.

The meme ecosystem around Pokemon Go is unusually broad. It includes in-game screenshots, real-world photos of players in ridiculous situations, news headlines about Pokemon Go-related crimes and accidents, team loyalty propaganda, and jokes about Niantic's update priorities2. Few games have produced memes that crossed so thoroughly into mainstream awareness.

Pokemon Go's meme life actually started before the game launched. After the game was announced, people began creating hypothetical dialogues about players breaking into restricted areas to catch Pokemon2. These predictions turned out to be remarkably accurate, and the fact that the jokes came true became its own meme.

The game's roots trace back to a 2014 April Fools' Day collaboration between Google and The Pokemon Company, where Google Maps added a "Pokemon Challenge" that let users find and catch Pokemon on the map25. John Hanke, who had led Google's Geo division and founded Niantic Labs as an internal startup, spun Niantic out of Google in 20156. The company raised $30 million from Google, Nintendo, and The Pokemon Company to develop Pokemon Go6.

When the game launched on July 6, 2016, it became one of the most downloaded mobile apps ever released4. Within its first week, Pokemon Go was the top-grossing app on both Android and iPhone13. The game pulled in $75 million in revenue in its first few weeks alone22.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter, Reddit, Tumblr (viral meme spread), Niantic (game)
Creator
John Hanke
Date
2016
Year
2016

Pokemon Go's meme life actually started before the game launched. After the game was announced, people began creating hypothetical dialogues about players breaking into restricted areas to catch Pokemon. These predictions turned out to be remarkably accurate, and the fact that the jokes came true became its own meme.

The game's roots trace back to a 2014 April Fools' Day collaboration between Google and The Pokemon Company, where Google Maps added a "Pokemon Challenge" that let users find and catch Pokemon on the map. John Hanke, who had led Google's Geo division and founded Niantic Labs as an internal startup, spun Niantic out of Google in 2015. The company raised $30 million from Google, Nintendo, and The Pokemon Company to develop Pokemon Go.

When the game launched on July 6, 2016, it became one of the most downloaded mobile apps ever released. Within its first week, Pokemon Go was the top-grossing app on both Android and iPhone. The game pulled in $75 million in revenue in its first few weeks alone.

How It Spread

The meme explosion was immediate and overwhelming. Within days of launch, Twitter's #PokemonGO hashtag was producing content faster than anyone could scroll through it. Memes spread across every major platform. Reddit, Tumblr, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and Vine all hosted massive volumes of Pokemon Go content during July 2016.

Several distinct meme categories emerged in the first two weeks:

Location memes were among the first to go viral. Players in rural areas posted screenshots of empty maps with captions like "The Authentic Pokemon GO Experience in [location]". Meanwhile, city dwellers bragged about living on top of PokeStops. The game's location database, adapted from Niantic's earlier game Ingress, placed gyms and PokeStops at real-world landmarks, including some deeply inappropriate ones.

Team rivalry memes exploded after players had to choose between Team Valor (red), Team Mystic (blue), and Team Instinct (yellow). Instinct quickly became the butt of every joke. When team leaders were revealed on July 24, 2016, the internet latched onto Spark (Instinct's leader) as an adorable idiot while depicting Candela (Valor) as the hot one and Blanche (Mystic) as the cool, commanding one. The Verge reported the consensus was that "Mystic and Valor are run by badasses, while Instinct is run by a total dweeb". Fan-created personality quirks spread rapidly on Twitter and Tumblr, with Spark depicted as a dabbing meme lord who eats chips for dinner.

Professor Willow thirst posts started on day one. The Verge ran an article titled "Who is Pokémon Go's Professor Willow and why is he such a daddy?" describing him as "a prematurely graying man with an exquisitely chiseled jaw attached to a toned body that just wouldn't quit". Tumblr fan art followed immediately.

News headline memes came from the avalanche of real incidents. Players fell off cliffs, got robbed, walked into restricted areas, and discovered dead bodies, all while hunting Pokemon. These headlines became memes themselves, shared with incredulous commentary.

The game also crossed language and cultural barriers rapidly. Canadian fans made memes about being excluded from "North America" launches. Russian memes followed the arrest of blogger Ruslan Sokolovsky, who filmed himself playing Pokemon Go inside an Orthodox cathedral in Yekaterinburg and received a suspended sentence of three and a half years.

By May 2018, Pokemon Go had over 147 million monthly active users, with player numbers reaching their highest point since the 2016 launch. The game generated over $104 million that month alone, up 174% year-on-year.

Platforms

TwitterRedditTwitter

Timeline

2017-01-01

Meme keeps see steady use

2018-01-01

Pokemon Go reached mainstream popularity and media coverage

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

Pokemon Go memes do not follow a single template. They draw from the game's augmented reality features, team rivalries, and the absurd real-world situations the game creates.

1

For AR screenshots: capture a Pokemon appearing in an awkward or funny real-world location using the game's AR camera mode, then post with a caption pointing out the absurdity

2

For team loyalty posts: pick your team (Valor, Mystic, or Instinct) and either praise it or trash the others — Instinct is the usual punching bag

3

For news reactions: find a real headline about a Pokemon Go incident (trespassing, accidents) and share with commentary

4

For rural vs. urban comparisons: show the difference between playing in a city (PokeStops everywhere) versus a small town (empty map)

5

For patch note jokes: reference Niantic's infamous 'minor text fixes' whenever something major goes wrong

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

Pokemon Go's impact on mainstream culture in 2016 was staggering. The game was covered by every major news outlet from NPR to Rolling Stone to the BBC. Law enforcement agencies across the country issued official warnings and safety tips for players. The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department published a list of dos and don'ts for app users.

The game raised real questions about augmented reality in public spaces. Sacred sites like Arlington National Cemetery and the Holocaust Museum had to develop policies specifically about Pokemon Go. In Russia, Ruslan Sokolovsky's arrest for playing the game in a cathedral sparked international debate about blasphemy laws and digital behavior in religious spaces. He was found guilty of "offending the feelings of religious believers" and received a three-and-a-half year suspended sentence in May 2017.

Pokemon Go's commercial success reshaped the mobile gaming industry. SuperData Research noted that "high-profile launches like this generally come at the expense of major competitors," suggesting the game was pulling revenue from rival apps. The game's influence extended to Nintendo's own strategy. The success prompted The Pokemon Company and Game Freak to develop Pokemon Let's Go, Pikachu! and Pokemon Let's Go, Eevee! for the Nintendo Switch, attempting to capture Pokemon Go's audience on a traditional gaming platform.

Marie Claire credited the game with getting people to exercise, helping children with autism bond with peers, and assisting people with depression in leaving the house. These positive social effects were widely reported alongside the crime and accident stories.

Full History

The summer of 2016 was Pokemon Go summer. Nothing else came close. The game launched on July 6 and within a week had created a genuine cultural moment. People who hadn't thought about Pokemon since the late 1990s were suddenly walking around parks at midnight trying to catch a Snorlax. The memes reflected this collective experience in real time.

The first wave of memes centered on the sheer novelty of augmented reality gaming going mainstream. Players shared screenshots of Pokemon appearing in bathrooms, on dinner plates, at funerals, and in hospital rooms. Magikarp and Exeggcute became favorite subjects because finding them in kitchens or on frying pans created natural visual comedy. The early days also brought constant server crashes, and the error screen became a meme in itself, with people joking about finally being excited to play only to hit a wall of demand overload.

Safety incidents generated a parallel meme stream. On July 8, a woman in Wyoming discovered a dead body in the Big Wind River while searching for Pokemon near the bridge. The story went viral instantly. Two men fell off a sandstone bluff in Encinitas, California, dropping 75 to 100 feet after climbing past a fence while chasing characters. In Palm Coast, Florida, a homeowner shot at two teens playing Pokemon Go at 1:30 a.m. after overhearing one say "did you get anything?" and assuming they were burglars. The teens had actually been asking about catching a Marowak and Tauros.

Crime reports piled up fast. In O'Fallon, Missouri, four individuals used the game's lure feature to attract players to a parking lot and rob them, leading to eight or nine victims before police caught them. In Richmond, Virginia, three teens on bicycles grabbed a woman's phone while she played. Two men were robbed and carjacked at Lone Oak Park in Northern California after going there to catch Pokemon after work. Rolling Stone asked whether Pokemon Go was "really driving a crime wave," noting that several viral crime stories had been debunked as fake news from satirical sites, even as real incidents kept occurring.

Institutions scrambled to respond. The U.S. Holocaust Museum and Arlington National Cemetery both issued public statements asking visitors not to play Pokemon Go on their grounds. Arlington's statement read: "Playing games such as 'Pokémon Go' on these hallowed grounds would not be deemed appropriate". The Holocaust Museum's communications director called the game "extremely inappropriate" at a memorial dedicated to victims of Nazism and tried to get Niantic to remove the museum as a game location.

The team wars produced some of the most enduring meme content. The fact that team colors matched major gang affiliations (Blue/Crips, Red/Bloods, Yellow/Latin Kings) became a running joke. Drowzee spawned so frequently in Toronto that players nicknamed it "Drowzee City". The phrase "minor text fixes" became a sarcastic meme after Niantic's patch notes repeatedly listed it as the primary update while players complained about broken tracking systems and nerfed catch rates. Niantic eventually acknowledged this joke by including "No text fixes" in an update.

A young Czech boy nicknamed "Misha" created an unintentionally viral song called "I Play Pokemon Go Every Day" that became a meme through SiIvaGunner's music parody channel. The song's earnest enthusiasm and broken English made it both endearing and mockable, and the chorus spread as a copypasta with increasingly verbose rewrites like "My preference in the mobile video gaming market is of the mobile video game titled 'Pokémon GO,' of which I perform with routinely".

The financial side produced its own bizarre meme moment. Nintendo's stock price more than doubled after the game launched, only to plummet 17% in a single day on July 25 when the company issued a statement pointing out that it doesn't actually make Pokemon Go. The game was developed by Niantic, and Nintendo only held a 32% stake in The Pokemon Company, which received licensing fees. Investors had apparently not realized this.

On the positive side, Pokemon Go players made some genuinely helpful discoveries. In Michigan, Gabriel Loyola was hunting Pokemon when he found an unconscious, intoxicated woman behind the wheel of a car and called 911. "I'm over here supposed to be catching Pokemon, not saving people, right?" he told reporters. The game was also credited with helping children on the autism spectrum socialize and getting people with depression to leave the house.

Niantic itself became a meme source when the company's official Twitter account posted a meme comparing a "Gamer Stuck Inside" (depicted in a dark grey room) to a "GAMAR exploring the world" (in a bright outdoor setting), with the caption "Fresh air and exercise > Stale bedroom air and button mashing". The backlash was swift. Players pointed out the irony of insulting the gaming community that provides most of their revenue, with one user noting "most people that play are lovers of Pokémon. And that love of the brand came from playing the game inside their house on a Game Boy".

By 2020, the game had generated over $6 billion in total revenue. In 2025, Scopely acquired Pokemon Go as part of a $3.5 billion purchase of Niantic's gaming division, while John Hanke took the remaining team to form Niantic Spatial, a geospatial AI startup.

Fun Facts

A man in Florida shot at two teens playing Pokemon Go at 1:30 a.m. because he heard one say "did you get anything?" and thought they were burglars. They were actually asking about catching a Marowak.

Nintendo's stock dropped 17% in one day after the company had to publicly clarify that it doesn't make Pokemon Go.

The game's location database was originally built from Niantic's earlier game Ingress, which crowdsourced points of interest from players. This is why some PokeStops ended up at locations like the Korean Demilitarized Zone and an abandoned Afghan air base.

Toronto players nicknamed their city "Drowzee City" because the Pokemon spawned there more frequently than anywhere else.

Niantic once responded to a player's complaint email with just the letter "r," which quickly became a community in-joke.

Derivatives & Variations

Pokemon Go Variations

Different takes on the Pokemon Go format with modified content

(2016)

Pokemon Go Mashups

Combinations of Pokemon Go with other popular memes

(2017)

Pokemon Go Remixes

Updated versions with current events and references

(2017)

Frequently Asked Questions

References (28)

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
  5. 5
  6. 6
  7. 7
  8. 8
  9. 9
  10. 10
  11. 11
  12. 12
  13. 13
  14. 14
  15. 15
  16. 16
  17. 17
  18. 18
  19. 19
  20. 20
  21. 21
  22. 22
  23. 23
  24. 24
  25. 25
  26. 26
  27. 27
  28. 28

Pokemon Go

2016Subculture / multi-format meme (image macros, screenshots, reaction images, videos, copypasta)semi-active

Also known as: Pokemon GO · Pokémon GO · PoGo

Pokemon Go is a 2016 multi-format meme from Niantic's AR game, where players hunting digital creatures outdoors sparked viral content about inappropriate trespassing, safety incidents, and the surreal sight of masses obsessed with phones.

Pokemon Go is an augmented reality mobile game developed by Niantic that launched in July 2016 and immediately spawned a massive wave of internet memes about its real-world gameplay, team rivalries, safety incidents, and the absurdity of millions of people wandering around staring at their phones to catch digital creatures. The game's requirement that players physically explore their surroundings led to countless viral moments, from people finding dead bodies while hunting Pokemon to the U.S. Holocaust Museum begging visitors to stop catching Pikachu on its grounds. Pokemon Go memes peaked during the summer of 2016 but the game's ongoing updates and events kept generating new meme content for years afterward.

TL;DR

Pokémon Go uses GPS, camera, and gyroscope technology to overlay Pokémon onto the real world through a player's phone screen.

Overview

Pokemon Go memes cover the entire spectrum of internet humor formats. Image macros joke about rural players seeing empty maps, screenshots show Pokemon spawning in inappropriate locations like bathrooms and funerals, and reaction images mock the team rivalry between Valor, Mystic, and Instinct. The game's unique blend of augmented reality and real-world exploration created situations no other mobile game could produce, giving meme creators endless material. A Diglett appearing on someone's crotch, a Magikarp flopping on a kitchen counter, players walking into traffic because a rare spawn appeared across the street. All of it became meme fuel.

The meme ecosystem around Pokemon Go is unusually broad. It includes in-game screenshots, real-world photos of players in ridiculous situations, news headlines about Pokemon Go-related crimes and accidents, team loyalty propaganda, and jokes about Niantic's update priorities. Few games have produced memes that crossed so thoroughly into mainstream awareness.

Pokemon Go's meme life actually started before the game launched. After the game was announced, people began creating hypothetical dialogues about players breaking into restricted areas to catch Pokemon. These predictions turned out to be remarkably accurate, and the fact that the jokes came true became its own meme.

The game's roots trace back to a 2014 April Fools' Day collaboration between Google and The Pokemon Company, where Google Maps added a "Pokemon Challenge" that let users find and catch Pokemon on the map. John Hanke, who had led Google's Geo division and founded Niantic Labs as an internal startup, spun Niantic out of Google in 2015. The company raised $30 million from Google, Nintendo, and The Pokemon Company to develop Pokemon Go.

When the game launched on July 6, 2016, it became one of the most downloaded mobile apps ever released. Within its first week, Pokemon Go was the top-grossing app on both Android and iPhone. The game pulled in $75 million in revenue in its first few weeks alone.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter, Reddit, Tumblr (viral meme spread), Niantic (game)
Creator
John Hanke
Date
2016
Year
2016

Pokemon Go's meme life actually started before the game launched. After the game was announced, people began creating hypothetical dialogues about players breaking into restricted areas to catch Pokemon. These predictions turned out to be remarkably accurate, and the fact that the jokes came true became its own meme.

The game's roots trace back to a 2014 April Fools' Day collaboration between Google and The Pokemon Company, where Google Maps added a "Pokemon Challenge" that let users find and catch Pokemon on the map. John Hanke, who had led Google's Geo division and founded Niantic Labs as an internal startup, spun Niantic out of Google in 2015. The company raised $30 million from Google, Nintendo, and The Pokemon Company to develop Pokemon Go.

When the game launched on July 6, 2016, it became one of the most downloaded mobile apps ever released. Within its first week, Pokemon Go was the top-grossing app on both Android and iPhone. The game pulled in $75 million in revenue in its first few weeks alone.

How It Spread

The meme explosion was immediate and overwhelming. Within days of launch, Twitter's #PokemonGO hashtag was producing content faster than anyone could scroll through it. Memes spread across every major platform. Reddit, Tumblr, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and Vine all hosted massive volumes of Pokemon Go content during July 2016.

Several distinct meme categories emerged in the first two weeks:

Location memes were among the first to go viral. Players in rural areas posted screenshots of empty maps with captions like "The Authentic Pokemon GO Experience in [location]". Meanwhile, city dwellers bragged about living on top of PokeStops. The game's location database, adapted from Niantic's earlier game Ingress, placed gyms and PokeStops at real-world landmarks, including some deeply inappropriate ones.

Team rivalry memes exploded after players had to choose between Team Valor (red), Team Mystic (blue), and Team Instinct (yellow). Instinct quickly became the butt of every joke. When team leaders were revealed on July 24, 2016, the internet latched onto Spark (Instinct's leader) as an adorable idiot while depicting Candela (Valor) as the hot one and Blanche (Mystic) as the cool, commanding one. The Verge reported the consensus was that "Mystic and Valor are run by badasses, while Instinct is run by a total dweeb". Fan-created personality quirks spread rapidly on Twitter and Tumblr, with Spark depicted as a dabbing meme lord who eats chips for dinner.

Professor Willow thirst posts started on day one. The Verge ran an article titled "Who is Pokémon Go's Professor Willow and why is he such a daddy?" describing him as "a prematurely graying man with an exquisitely chiseled jaw attached to a toned body that just wouldn't quit". Tumblr fan art followed immediately.

News headline memes came from the avalanche of real incidents. Players fell off cliffs, got robbed, walked into restricted areas, and discovered dead bodies, all while hunting Pokemon. These headlines became memes themselves, shared with incredulous commentary.

The game also crossed language and cultural barriers rapidly. Canadian fans made memes about being excluded from "North America" launches. Russian memes followed the arrest of blogger Ruslan Sokolovsky, who filmed himself playing Pokemon Go inside an Orthodox cathedral in Yekaterinburg and received a suspended sentence of three and a half years.

By May 2018, Pokemon Go had over 147 million monthly active users, with player numbers reaching their highest point since the 2016 launch. The game generated over $104 million that month alone, up 174% year-on-year.

Platforms

TwitterRedditTwitter

Timeline

2017-01-01

Meme keeps see steady use

2018-01-01

Pokemon Go reached mainstream popularity and media coverage

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

Pokemon Go memes do not follow a single template. They draw from the game's augmented reality features, team rivalries, and the absurd real-world situations the game creates.

1

For AR screenshots: capture a Pokemon appearing in an awkward or funny real-world location using the game's AR camera mode, then post with a caption pointing out the absurdity

2

For team loyalty posts: pick your team (Valor, Mystic, or Instinct) and either praise it or trash the others — Instinct is the usual punching bag

3

For news reactions: find a real headline about a Pokemon Go incident (trespassing, accidents) and share with commentary

4

For rural vs. urban comparisons: show the difference between playing in a city (PokeStops everywhere) versus a small town (empty map)

5

For patch note jokes: reference Niantic's infamous 'minor text fixes' whenever something major goes wrong

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

Pokemon Go's impact on mainstream culture in 2016 was staggering. The game was covered by every major news outlet from NPR to Rolling Stone to the BBC. Law enforcement agencies across the country issued official warnings and safety tips for players. The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department published a list of dos and don'ts for app users.

The game raised real questions about augmented reality in public spaces. Sacred sites like Arlington National Cemetery and the Holocaust Museum had to develop policies specifically about Pokemon Go. In Russia, Ruslan Sokolovsky's arrest for playing the game in a cathedral sparked international debate about blasphemy laws and digital behavior in religious spaces. He was found guilty of "offending the feelings of religious believers" and received a three-and-a-half year suspended sentence in May 2017.

Pokemon Go's commercial success reshaped the mobile gaming industry. SuperData Research noted that "high-profile launches like this generally come at the expense of major competitors," suggesting the game was pulling revenue from rival apps. The game's influence extended to Nintendo's own strategy. The success prompted The Pokemon Company and Game Freak to develop Pokemon Let's Go, Pikachu! and Pokemon Let's Go, Eevee! for the Nintendo Switch, attempting to capture Pokemon Go's audience on a traditional gaming platform.

Marie Claire credited the game with getting people to exercise, helping children with autism bond with peers, and assisting people with depression in leaving the house. These positive social effects were widely reported alongside the crime and accident stories.

Full History

The summer of 2016 was Pokemon Go summer. Nothing else came close. The game launched on July 6 and within a week had created a genuine cultural moment. People who hadn't thought about Pokemon since the late 1990s were suddenly walking around parks at midnight trying to catch a Snorlax. The memes reflected this collective experience in real time.

The first wave of memes centered on the sheer novelty of augmented reality gaming going mainstream. Players shared screenshots of Pokemon appearing in bathrooms, on dinner plates, at funerals, and in hospital rooms. Magikarp and Exeggcute became favorite subjects because finding them in kitchens or on frying pans created natural visual comedy. The early days also brought constant server crashes, and the error screen became a meme in itself, with people joking about finally being excited to play only to hit a wall of demand overload.

Safety incidents generated a parallel meme stream. On July 8, a woman in Wyoming discovered a dead body in the Big Wind River while searching for Pokemon near the bridge. The story went viral instantly. Two men fell off a sandstone bluff in Encinitas, California, dropping 75 to 100 feet after climbing past a fence while chasing characters. In Palm Coast, Florida, a homeowner shot at two teens playing Pokemon Go at 1:30 a.m. after overhearing one say "did you get anything?" and assuming they were burglars. The teens had actually been asking about catching a Marowak and Tauros.

Crime reports piled up fast. In O'Fallon, Missouri, four individuals used the game's lure feature to attract players to a parking lot and rob them, leading to eight or nine victims before police caught them. In Richmond, Virginia, three teens on bicycles grabbed a woman's phone while she played. Two men were robbed and carjacked at Lone Oak Park in Northern California after going there to catch Pokemon after work. Rolling Stone asked whether Pokemon Go was "really driving a crime wave," noting that several viral crime stories had been debunked as fake news from satirical sites, even as real incidents kept occurring.

Institutions scrambled to respond. The U.S. Holocaust Museum and Arlington National Cemetery both issued public statements asking visitors not to play Pokemon Go on their grounds. Arlington's statement read: "Playing games such as 'Pokémon Go' on these hallowed grounds would not be deemed appropriate". The Holocaust Museum's communications director called the game "extremely inappropriate" at a memorial dedicated to victims of Nazism and tried to get Niantic to remove the museum as a game location.

The team wars produced some of the most enduring meme content. The fact that team colors matched major gang affiliations (Blue/Crips, Red/Bloods, Yellow/Latin Kings) became a running joke. Drowzee spawned so frequently in Toronto that players nicknamed it "Drowzee City". The phrase "minor text fixes" became a sarcastic meme after Niantic's patch notes repeatedly listed it as the primary update while players complained about broken tracking systems and nerfed catch rates. Niantic eventually acknowledged this joke by including "No text fixes" in an update.

A young Czech boy nicknamed "Misha" created an unintentionally viral song called "I Play Pokemon Go Every Day" that became a meme through SiIvaGunner's music parody channel. The song's earnest enthusiasm and broken English made it both endearing and mockable, and the chorus spread as a copypasta with increasingly verbose rewrites like "My preference in the mobile video gaming market is of the mobile video game titled 'Pokémon GO,' of which I perform with routinely".

The financial side produced its own bizarre meme moment. Nintendo's stock price more than doubled after the game launched, only to plummet 17% in a single day on July 25 when the company issued a statement pointing out that it doesn't actually make Pokemon Go. The game was developed by Niantic, and Nintendo only held a 32% stake in The Pokemon Company, which received licensing fees. Investors had apparently not realized this.

On the positive side, Pokemon Go players made some genuinely helpful discoveries. In Michigan, Gabriel Loyola was hunting Pokemon when he found an unconscious, intoxicated woman behind the wheel of a car and called 911. "I'm over here supposed to be catching Pokemon, not saving people, right?" he told reporters. The game was also credited with helping children on the autism spectrum socialize and getting people with depression to leave the house.

Niantic itself became a meme source when the company's official Twitter account posted a meme comparing a "Gamer Stuck Inside" (depicted in a dark grey room) to a "GAMAR exploring the world" (in a bright outdoor setting), with the caption "Fresh air and exercise > Stale bedroom air and button mashing". The backlash was swift. Players pointed out the irony of insulting the gaming community that provides most of their revenue, with one user noting "most people that play are lovers of Pokémon. And that love of the brand came from playing the game inside their house on a Game Boy".

By 2020, the game had generated over $6 billion in total revenue. In 2025, Scopely acquired Pokemon Go as part of a $3.5 billion purchase of Niantic's gaming division, while John Hanke took the remaining team to form Niantic Spatial, a geospatial AI startup.

Fun Facts

A man in Florida shot at two teens playing Pokemon Go at 1:30 a.m. because he heard one say "did you get anything?" and thought they were burglars. They were actually asking about catching a Marowak.

Nintendo's stock dropped 17% in one day after the company had to publicly clarify that it doesn't make Pokemon Go.

The game's location database was originally built from Niantic's earlier game Ingress, which crowdsourced points of interest from players. This is why some PokeStops ended up at locations like the Korean Demilitarized Zone and an abandoned Afghan air base.

Toronto players nicknamed their city "Drowzee City" because the Pokemon spawned there more frequently than anywhere else.

Niantic once responded to a player's complaint email with just the letter "r," which quickly became a community in-joke.

Derivatives & Variations

Pokemon Go Variations

Different takes on the Pokemon Go format with modified content

(2016)

Pokemon Go Mashups

Combinations of Pokemon Go with other popular memes

(2017)

Pokemon Go Remixes

Updated versions with current events and references

(2017)

Frequently Asked Questions

References (28)

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
  5. 5
  6. 6
  7. 7
  8. 8
  9. 9
  10. 10
  11. 11
  12. 12
  13. 13
  14. 14
  15. 15
  16. 16
  17. 17
  18. 18
  19. 19
  20. 20
  21. 21
  22. 22
  23. 23
  24. 24
  25. 25
  26. 26
  27. 27
  28. 28