New
mobile game Pokemon Go has become an overnight sensation with U.S. fans
but also played a role in armed robberies in Missouri, the discovery of
a body in Wyoming and minor injuries to fans distracted by the app,
officials and news media reported on Monday. The “augmented
reality” game based on the 1990s Japanese franchise surged to the top of
Apple Inc’s app charts over the weekend. Gamers use their mobile
devices to find and capture virtual Pokemon characters such as cuddly
yellow Pikachu at various real-life locations.
Five days after its release, the game now is on more Android phones
than dating app Tinder, and its rate of daily active users was neck and
neck with social network Twitter, according to analytics firm
SimilarWeb. Highlighting a dark side to its popularity, the game was
used by four teens in Missouri to lure nearly a dozen victims into armed
robberies, police and media reports said. Police warned players to be
vigilant when using smartphones and other mobile devices to search for
characters in the game.
“When you’re involved in a game and not paying attention to what’s
going on around you, your situational awareness can go down,”
Greensboro, North Carolina police officer Ben Wingfield told local
television. Developed by Pokemon Company International, Niantic Inc and
Nintendo Co Ltd, the game uses the GPS mapping and camera systems on
players’ devices. “We encourage all people playing Pokemon Go to be
aware of their surroundings and to play with friends when going to new
or unfamiliar places,” Pokemon Company International and Niantic said in
an emailed statement.
Police in O’Fallon, a suburb of St. Louis, said they arrested the
four teens on Sunday after a robbery victim called police from a
convenience store. “Using the geolocation feature of the Pokemon Go app,
the robbers were able to anticipate the location and level of seclusion
of unwitting victims,” O’Fallon police Sergeant Bill Stringer said in a
release. Social media buzzed with reports of players who suffered minor
injuries from tripping and falling while glued to their cell phones and
minor incidents while driving and looking for Pokemon.
“I catch myself almost walking into things, so I’ve kind of started
playing a little bit less in the street,” said Henry Mendez, 32, a
parking valet from Los Angeles. The game was the most downloaded free
app on Apple’s app store while Nintendo’s shares surged nearly 25
percent for their biggest daily gains in history after Pokemon Go’s
takeoff. [nL4N19X16B] Shayla Wiggins, 19, was searching for a
water-based Pokemon character near Riverton, Wyoming when she discovered
a body near a bridge, where a man is thought to have drowned in shallow
water, according to media reports. “I probably would have never went
down there if it weren’t for this game,” Wiggins told CNN.
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