Some days ago, I received a comment on one of my older posts that pertained to what can be said as the "extreme" multitude of events in Pokémon Go. Admittedly, the post had a lot to do with what I would call as "day events", the likes of Community Day, Max Battle, and Raid Day as well as full-paid events like City Safari. The commenter (who for some reason chose to remain incognito) also noted that what I would call "theme events" are also as numerous, both in quantity as well as duration; this also has its side effects, one of them being the lack of variation that the situation creates. I responded that I could make a fuller discussion of this - obviously in a post - and that becomes the very point of this one.
The gist of the problem, as I stated in my response, is that the theme events have gotten longer; where they used to be only a few days tops, many of them have extended themselves to span a week or a duration close to or effectively that. Then, the "break" - the days with no elements of particular events, even regional ones - are also shorter as a result, being only approximately two days long. The shorter break consequently results in having less time to deal with the Pokémon that are featured during the season, which is a crucial part of the season system since its inception, and is seemingly cast aside as a result.
For a particular example of how dense things can really get, July's events for this year shows how they can really pan out. The events in that month, including the one that would carry over into the next, all lasted six days; the only full "break" days were all on Monday, and there were four of them (three if the one with the Summer Concert is not counted). Since the events started at 10 AM and ended at 8 PM local time on the respective days, that afforded another 12 hours of a "break", not even amounting to a full day even if it did technically span the period of three days. This becomes the situational concern.
Going back to what the commenter said, many of the theme events often feature a selection of species that are hard to escape from, being particularly present in all places. Such a situation certainly can and does become boring, and it may be evident of "desperation" and a "cash grab", exactly the same points I raised as for the day events in the previous post. These sentiments of the commenter are understandable, even with the good intentions of the theme events as they are executed.
Responding to that, I proposed that the theme events may need some rework. As an example, while some featured species may be needed for "grinding" (for example, Gastly and its family may be needed for PvP in all leagues, Mega Evolution, and Max Battles), others have less utility and may be better off not as being the primary promotion, yet still featured in some way as with Research. Then, even shaving off a day from the theme events can cut the boredom and allow seasonal variety to appear again; it may also be possible to have other midweek events.
Whoever the commenter is, an interesting point was raised regarding theme events and their current state in Pokémon Go, with them becoming numerous in quantity yet somehow lacking in variety. Even now, such is the state of the matter, and its future may demand resolution that appeases every Trainer, including the two of us. It's just another thing that this Pokémon blog is a prompt for bringing up and dealing with.
One year ago: Visiting Pokémon Go Trainer Friends
Two years ago: The First-Generation Wild Pokémon Battle Theme
Three years ago: Possible Participation in Pokémon Unite Tournaments?
Four years ago: All for Pokémon Communication
Five years ago: "To the Sea" with Pokémon
Six years ago: Some Pokémon Commercials
Seven years ago: Pokémon Go Community Day, 10/21/2018
Eight years ago: Pokémon Brand Parodies
I agree. I just got back into this game in September (I stopped after they randomly deleted my account back in 2017 and I never cheated).
ReplyDeleteIt’s fun, it’s addicting, it gets me walking around town, but God these events are ridiculous.
Niantic just heaps on the events, which like you said, can last a whole week long EACH and they just keep coming back to back to back. There was that crappy Psychic type event, Steel Skyline, the Halloween Ghost one they just have to do every year, etc.
Yeah, I got enough Candy from some of these events to get some of my favorites (Aggron comes to mind in particular),but this is getting so annoying. The problem is, they stan a very specific pool of 5-10 Pokemon during each event. That means that you’ll mostly just see THOSE 5 POKEMON for a whole week, at the expense of all others!
There’s a noticeable difference between an event timeframe and one of the few days without having an event shoved down our throats: in the case of the latter, I can go for a mile walk and get a huge variety of Pokemon and Candys I needed. It’s like day and night.
This evening I opened up the app after work, and the overworld was lousy with Fighting types. Scraggys everywhere (they JUST DID AN EVENT FEATURING SCRAGGY a couple weeks ago, and they couldn’t be bothered to throw me one with 3-star stats then). I’m sick of them! Lo and behold, I go to Serebii on my browser, and it’s another freaking event that’s causing the problem. I thought I’d get to enjoy some variety (I.e. standard spawns) leading up to Thanksgiving, but I should have known better.
TLDR: Calm TF down Niantic, just leave us alone, we’ll entertain ourselves in this game without your unwanted interference. You’re like that Camp counselor who never shuts up and packs the schedule from sunup to sundown to hide your own insecurities.
Hi there! Are you the same "Anonymous" as the one who left the previous comment? If so, then yes, this is the discussion in response to that.
ReplyDeleteYou must have opened the game during the Spotlight Hour (Tuesdays 6-7 PM local time) on November 25. It can be a useful way of getting resources for certain species, although admittedly some are more needed than others.
In a way, you still have a valid point, like in the previous comment, that a bit of a longer break between events is useful. It may also be useful to plan out when to play and which events are appealing to you in your specific case; I can benefit from this as well. This too makes for a good discussion later.
Thanks for the comment and your added perspectives.
(By the way, if you're open to talk with me personally further about Pokémon Go matters, you can find my contact info on the Donate post.)