Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

The Lure Of Pokemon Go: Respite From A Summer Of Violence

Darpan News Desk IANS, 19 Jul, 2016 12:20 PM
    NEW YORK — It's easy to see the appeal of "Pokemon Go."
     
    Coming out of nowhere in what's been an otherwise soul-crushing summer filled with endless shootings and other horrors, the smartphone game offers an escape, without removing us completely from the real world.
     
    I started playing it for the same reason I devoured the Harry Potter books, tended virtual cows on "FarmVille" and suffered through all three "50 Shades of Grey" books, plus a movie.
     
    It was pure, objective intellectual curiosity about a popular cultural phenomenon that involves traipsing to real-life places to pick up virtual red-and-white balls to throw at on-screen monsters.
     
    Put another way, everyone else was doing it.
     
    It hasn't gone smoothly, yet I can't stop.
     
    I'm not one for tutorials or how-to guides . Give me a gadget or app, and have it work. Someone had to explain that you get transported to a virtual Poke-world only when there are digital monsters called Pokemon nearby.
     
    Until then, you see the world through a digital map, similar to Google's or Apple's. You walk around collecting "Poke Balls" from "PokeStops," which are based on real-life landmarks — or often like pseudo-landmarks, such as an old church doorway no one else cares about.
     
     
    The game turns into a virtual tour guide, as it forces me to notice little sights along my daily route, ones I've been too preoccupied to see until now — probably because my eyes were glued to my phone.
     
    For instance, our midtown Manhattan office has a lot of weird little plaques and markers nearby, such as "Gold Leaf on Printing Cards Building," whatever that is. There's also a community garden called Alice's Garden just blocks away. Without "Pokemon," I probably wouldn't have noticed a mural near home dedicated to Wu-Tang Clan founding member Ol' Dirty Bastard, who died 12 years ago.
     
    The game gets intense when Pokemon — these cute, sometimes-angry monsters with magical powers — appear in the vicinity. Time freezes, and I'm transported inside the Poke-world, ignoring everything around me as I try to capture Pokemon by flicking Poke Balls. I've bumped into people. Others have twisted ankles or gotten into car accidents.
     
    On the flip side, "Pokemon Go" has sparked spontaneous conversations with fellow players and others curious about the phenomenon. These are folks I might have otherwise ignored while texting or playing the far-more-solitary "Candy Crush." Because it's based on real-world surroundings, "Pokemon" boosts interactions rather than shuts people out.
     
     
    Having reached Level 5, I am now part of a team. I chose Instinct over Mystic and Valor. Instinct seems not to overthink stuff, though my best friend joined Mystic and declared our friendship over.
     
    I can now visit "gyms" to train creatures and fight Pokemon captured by other players. I haven't gathered up the courage yet to enter a Poke-world gym, much like in real life as of late. My boyfriend assures me that I need to go to the gym to train. Um ... OK.
     
    From what I hear, Poke-world gyms can also be social as strangers converge around real-life locations. Sometimes, too real. The Auschwitz memorial has banned the game on its grounds, for good reason.
     
    The game seems to get more complex as you move along, and I'm not sure how long I will keep playing if it does.
     
    As a busy working mother, I like that I don't have to take time out from my day to play it. I can look for Poke Balls during my commute. I can chase Pokemon while strolling around my neighbourhood with the baby, grocery shopping with the baby or going to the park with the baby.
     
    I don't particularly want to battle with others. I don't want my cute pocket-monsters to evolve into scary giant monsters, much in the same way I'm apprehensive about my baby evolving into a teenager.
     
     
    For now, though, I am having a great time collecting a growing array of strange creatures, along with 185 Poke Balls, three sets of incense to lure Pokemon, and some potions and medicines I don't quite understand yet — I'm sure they'll be useful at some point.
     
    I welcome the ability to take my mind off police shootings, the gay nightclub massacre in Florida, horrific attacks on civilians in France, a coup attempt Turkey, a mosquito-borne Zika virus causing brain damage in the womb and a fraught, divisive U.S. election season. Plus, the death of my cousin at 42, three weeks after he found out he had cancer.
     
    I'll stop before I'll make us all depressed.
     
    "Pokemon Go" is a surprise hit for many of us not versed in this massive Japanese gaming, cartoon, toy and comic book franchise. The characters are meant for children, yet adults are using them to lighten our world for a little bit.
     
    There is a sense of joyous accomplishment in catching a Pokemon at times when everything else seems too overwhelming.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Watchdog: Afghanistan's Lapis Lazuli Is A 'Conflict Mineral'

    Watchdog: Afghanistan's Lapis Lazuli Is A 'Conflict Mineral'
    The group, Global Witness, appealed in its new report to have lapis lazuli, a blue stone almost unique to Afghanistan, classified as a "conflict mineral."

    Watchdog: Afghanistan's Lapis Lazuli Is A 'Conflict Mineral'

    Social Media Has Changed Culinary Scene Globally: Chef Gary Mehigan

    Social Media Has Changed Culinary Scene Globally: Chef Gary Mehigan
    Mehigan was in India to be part of a Knorr masterclass session where IANS spoke to him about his observation of the Indian food sector and global culinary trends.

    Social Media Has Changed Culinary Scene Globally: Chef Gary Mehigan

    Rescuers Scour Rugged Area North Of Vancouver For Missing Aircraft

    Rescuers Scour Rugged Area North Of Vancouver For Missing Aircraft
    Officials with the Victoria Rescue Centre say the single-engine plane was reported overdue at about 7:30 Sunday evening.

    Rescuers Scour Rugged Area North Of Vancouver For Missing Aircraft

    Royal BC Museum spearheads new legacy initiative with BC’s Punjabi community

    Royal BC Museum spearheads new legacy initiative with BC’s Punjabi community
    Royal BC Museum, in partnership with the Centre for Indo Canadian Studies at the University of the Fraser Valley (UFV) and through collaboration with regional institutions, is establishing seven community consultations throughout the province to gather feedback from the Punjabi community.

    Royal BC Museum spearheads new legacy initiative with BC’s Punjabi community

    Bhangra Has Become Integral Part Of British Music Industry: DJ Surinder Rattan

    Bhangra Has Become Integral Part Of British Music Industry: DJ Surinder Rattan
    The foot-tapping Bhangra genre of Punjabi music has become a significant part of the music industry in Britain, says Indian DJ Surinder Rattan, based in Manchester.

    Bhangra Has Become Integral Part Of British Music Industry: DJ Surinder Rattan

    Operation Bluestar Anniversary: No Ban On Media, Says Top Sikh Body

    Operation Bluestar Anniversary: No Ban On Media, Says Top Sikh Body
    Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC) today dismissed reports of ban on media coverage at the premises of Golden Temple on June 6, the 32nd anniversary of Operation Bluestar.

    Operation Bluestar Anniversary: No Ban On Media, Says Top Sikh Body