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Things have changed quite a bit since then. More than nine years after the game’s debut, Pokemon Go doesn’t have quite the same cultural impact it once had. You don’t see as many news stories about people trespassing on military bases because they were searching for a rare Pokemon, and it’s basically impossible to stumble on large groups of players organically without having to coordinate something through Campfire or Reddit. However, Pokemon Go maintains a large and passionate following around the world, and it remains one of the best games in the overall franchise. There are many potential reasons for that, but the game’s connective tissue with the “mainline games” has made it an important part of the overall Pokemon experience.
How Pokemon Go Has Become an Extension of the Main Series

Admittedly, Pokemon Go lost me as a player for nearly two years. While I was in on the game from day one, I had long dropped it by the time Pokemon Sun and Moon arrived in the fall of 2016. As a Pokemon fan from the days of Red and Blue, it just felt like there wasn’t anything that was keeping me attached to what was, essentially, a fun little spin-off. Over the two years I missed, the game grew and expanded, but nothing caught my interest until the announcement of Pokemon: Let’s Go, Pikachu! and Pokemon: Let’s Go, Eevee! in 2018. The first Pokemon games on Nintendo Switch promised compatibility with Pokemon Go, and I immediately felt compelled to return. Suddenly, it all “counted,” and that made all the difference.
In the last seven years, The Pokemon Company and Niantic have continued to strengthen the connection between Pokemon Go and games like Sword and Shield and Scarlet and Violet. These days, almost anything you catch in Go can be transferred over to the mainline games (with some notable exceptions). When Pokemon Home added compatibility with Pokemon Go, it even convinced me to finally do something I hadn’t done in several years: catch ’em all. In one single place, I could have Pokemon that I had caught decades ago in Pokemon Ruby‘s Hoenn region mingling with those I caught playing Pokemon Go on trips to places like Hawaii or Disneyland. My quest to catch ’em all was helped by the fact that Pokemon Go has offered chances to obtain extremely rare Mythical Pokemon, which are offered so infrequently in the mainline games.









