I walk to my local park on weekends to circle a few times - I’m not only not the only person doing so (I’d say about half the people I pass are clearly playing) but at 30-ish I’m usually the youngest person there.
I walk to my local park on weekends to circle a few times - I’m not only not the only person doing so (I’d say about half the people I pass are clearly playing) but at 30-ish I’m usually the youngest person there.
Went to the Cincinnati Zoo yesterday, which is a hot spot for the game because there are Stops all over. I heard the game’s sound effects non stop everywhere I went, the few Gyms were constantly being fought over, and most stops had lures (maybe 15 out of 25). So yea, people of all ages still play, not like when it…
The cops here were mostly cool about it. They were confused about what was going on at first, but politely asked and then were fine with it so long as we didn’t cause any damage or get excessively loud. I mean, parks are for being in, after all.
One local park was overrun every night for weeks. I drove by recently and it looks like it has returned to just dog walkers and retirees feeding the squirrels.
Yep. Pokemon Generation 2 was just released on Wednesday and people are out walking around again. That will soon calm down before Generation 3 is released.
I’m still playing. Less so with it being colder, but I still see other players out (and gyms trade hands) albeit in lower numbers than the initial craze (and the intitial craze had plenty of drop off even weeks into the release.)
A large amount of Americans still play. It’s like drawing the assumption that no one owns a 3DS because you haven’t seen someone playing one for a while. When you saw people ALL over it was a mega-trend. Now it’s just a popular game mostly enjoyed by pre-teens.
I still play it barely. I got my sister, niece, and nephew into it last summer. None of them had played Pokémon at all before it and they are still hooked. They live in FL and they have planned routes where they go to the beach and walk around and play. I didn’t think many people played it at all anymore. No one I…
There’s an empty lot in town that I use to keep track of Pokemon Go popularity. It’s near a coffee shop and is within swiping distance of three stops. When it came out there were enormous crowds who would hang out on the weekend, by fall you would only see a group of 3-4 friends there. It seems to have died out…
Part of my job requirements is to constantly make sure there’s a lure on the spot outside. The street outside my work has seven spots going down a three block period so when you stroll the area you’re constantly in a spot. Those spots are constantly lured.
You don’t see as many places anymore but there are DEFINITELY…
I opened it up for the first time in months today. There were definitely more Pokemon around. I think they realized that the lack of Pokemon in the suburbs made the game suck. One or two of my friends still play, but most quit.
Yes - it’s still one of the most played apps in the U.S., and globally. Though it’s waned quite a bit since its release, no one in their right mind expected it to stay that way. It had an absolutely gargantuan explosion of popularity when it came out, and it was only natural that it would fall off. There’s no way any…
No, we can’t have nice things because Nintendo won’t make any nice things for us to buy, just three underpowered gimmick machines in a row. The latest of which they won’t even give us much info about before launch, because they know it is a turd that would disappoint people enough to not buy them, instead of buying…
I assume you’d have to return to the ocean to replenish the supply after what, an hour, hour-45?
“That’s because you haven’t used the atomic bomb.”
I would say as soon as you can play Blood and Wine, do it. I finished Witcher 3 and was happy that it was finally over, but then I played the DLC and regretted not doing it during the main story. It’s just so nice going where there’s sun and happy music. Though, Skellige is a lot of fun but just so expansive.
The Witches of the Bog is when it gits gud. If you’ve gotten there already and it’s still not doing it for you, maybe it’s not the game for you. THAT was the moment where I basically played straight through for the ensuing few months.
I finally picked the game back up a few weeks ago after initially being cool on it for a few months. I’m all in now. Not because it has grabbed me, but because I’ve gone to far to turn back now. Right now my only gripe is that some of these storylines involve way to much dialogue and not enough action. This because…
If you have just been running straight forward not checking out all the quest in every area then you should stop and try some of the quest markers.
If you finish the bloody baron quest and don’t like it, then the game will probably not be for you. I had my issues with it up until then but was intrigued enough, but after finishing it I knew I was hooked. It encapsulates the difficult decisions you have to make and the messed up family dynamics you have to insert…