It's fair to say that Pokémon GO has become a worldwide smash hit (despite not even being officially launched in some territories yet); when you're outperforming Candy Crush and Clash of Clans you know you're on to a winner. Still, it's amazing to think that this triumphant smartphone app would not even exist if not for 2014's Google Maps: Pokémon Challenge April Fool's prank.
In an interview with Famitsu, Pokémon GO developer Niantic - also responsible for the popular Augmented Reality title Ingress - explained how the collaboration happened. Speaking to Setsuto Murai, representative president of Niantic Japan and Kento Suga, marketing manager of Niantic Japan, we learn the genesis of the idea:
Famitsu: I think with the practical use of location information, Ingress became a game that gives birth to a whole new genre. Like with Ingress, Pokemon GO, which will also practically use position information, has been announced to be developed by Niantic. How did this project come to be realized?
Murai: We've touched about it briefly before (when talking about Ingress), but before we went independent, we were a group in charge of [handling] Google Maps in Google. Do you remember that we had a "Pokemon Challenge" for April Fools in 2014?Famitsu: Yes. It's when the ability to search for Pokemon appearing in Google Maps, and you could get Pokemon on the map. I see, so that's where you became acquainted.
Murai: Yes. That Pokemon Challenge was a chance for us to be able to build relations with people at Pokemon, and then (Pokemon) president (Tsunekazu) Ishihara and John (Hanke, CEO of Niantic) were able to meet and talk. At that time both of their thoughts and visions were also very close, and as a union of their spirit, the talk became "Let's do something together in the future".Famitsu: When president Ishihara and CEO John Hanke met, was Ingress already released?
Murai: Yes. It was just released, and barely anybody in Japan knew about Ingress yet at that time. However, president Ishihara already played it, and he talked a lot with John.Famitsu: So what about the chance meeting for Pokemon Challenge itself? I remember it was a very surprising collaboration between Google and Pokemon.
Murai: In Google, there's a culture where the staff release ideas for April Fools, then they make their own teams to realize those. But for Pokemon Challenge, it was a staff member named Tatsuo Nojima who pulled out that idea, and he became the center of the development.Suga: I have some acquaintances by chance, so I became the mediator between Google and The Pokemon Company.
Murai: Right now, Nomura is a product manager at Niantic who is involved in Pokemon GO's development.
Famitsu: One could say it's a large-scale sense of fun just for April Fools…
Suga: I think that kind of culture is one of Google's assets.Murai: As a result of that Niantic was born, and saying 'that sense of fun got connected to products like Ingress and Pokemon GO' wouldn't be too exaggerated.
Murai and Suga are also quite excited by the idea of "location-based" gaming, and feel that the mechanics shown in Ingress and Pokémon Go can be used in other ways:
Famitsu: What do you think about the game app market from hereafter?
Murai: I think the big reason why we provide a location-based platform is precisely because in-game apps from hereafter, by inserting the essence of location-based, shall generate further fun factor, thus they could go even higher. We at Ingress would like to show that possibility. In about 2-3 years from now, we think game apps that can only be done in smartphones will become the mainstream. By including location features on existing IPs, more people will be able to enjoy it, and thus we should be able to make a mechanism that can expand the market even further.Suga: Actually, there is also a concept of location in [current conventional] games, isn't it? In RPGs you walk around maps, but what if that were real-life places… For example when you turn in the corner, you may feel a change in your heartbeat, wondering if a Pokemon may come out. Which means, even in conventional games, adding location features would add new charms to them.
Murai: By inserting the location feature in Pokemon, we wonder what kind of chemical reaction will occur. That's one of the points we're excited about with Pokemon GO.
So here's to the dreamers at Google who might have inadvertently boosted Nintendo's fortunes (and The Pokemon Company's) in this one simple act. What are your thoughts on the Pokémon GO craze sweeping the planet at the moment? As always, let us know with a comment below.
[source nintendoeverything.com]
Comments 31
Meanwhile in the UK, still no Pokémon GO! ARGH!
Hopefully, we'll get it today.
Also, inb4 you know who complains about the abundance of Pokémon articles again.
@Lewieboy124 Please stop, you're just making things worse...
@Megumi_Sagano What? This is my first comment about the game.
Will Google sue now for stealing their fake idea? I'm joking before someone answers.
@SLIGEACH_EIRE Niantic is/was part of Google, only a clarification.
@SakuraHaruka I said I was joking.
@SLIGEACH_EIRE well, when I answered, it wasn't your other part of the statement.
@SLIGEACH_EIRE You didn't shotgun edit fast enough.
An interesting bit of foreshadowing. Granted, Google Maps doesn't necessarily ask for the many permissions that Pokemon Go does...
"In about 2-3 years from now, we think game apps that can only be done in smartphones will become the mainstream. By including location features on existing IPs, more people will be able to enjoy it, and thus we should be able to make a mechanism that can expand the market even further."
This statement scares me... As I thought, they're not going to stop with Pokemon Go. It really is unprecedented, how much data about themselves people are willing to give away to play a game for free now. It reminds me of Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World"...
"People will come to love their oppression, to adore the technologies that undo their capacities to think."
@PlywoodStick shut up and take your Soma
@ottospooky
WOAAAAH. IT FEELS SOOO GOOOOD.........
I've walked over 10 miles now with Pokemon GO just in the last 3 days. Not sure how I'm gonna eventually catch 'em all but I'm at least getting my heart rate up on a daily basis again!
"In about 2-3 years from now, we think game apps that can only be done in smartphones will become the mainstream"
I will never trade my console and/or handheld for a smartphone IF I have the choice.
@MGray the handheld patent filed by Nintendo has in built GPS and sim integration. dedicated handhelds will benefit from this AR.
@PlywoodStick I don't see how this is any different than any other app that asks your permission to access your location data, like Google Maps, Ingress, Facebook, Untappd, Twitter, Foursquare, Uber, and so on and so forth. Those companies all gather this data for meta use. And people are ok with granting those apps the access, so why would it suddenly be an issue now it concerns Pokémon?
I find it funny (and positive) that the entire world is talking about this new Nintendo game/app, and how Nintendo's fortunes have changed, and how Nintendo still have it in them to create crazily popular games and all that, yet Nintendo had hardly anything to do with this game's development. XD
Sure they own large parts of The Pokémon Company (which Nintendo actually founded together with Game Freak and Creatures) and Niantic, and Pokémon games can't just be made without Nintendo's consent as they own the rights and all that, but Nintendo itself was hardly involved at all in Go's development.
But like I said, very positive for Nintendo, obviously.
@Snader If Pokemon Go only requested the same permissions as a Google Maps on a browser, I would be playing Pokemon Go right now. If only.
http://www.unionleader.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20160711/newhampshire02/160719858
"For Android users, the game can access both the precise and general locations of the device as well as its camera – permissions inherently necessary to play the game. The game can also access users’ USB storage, contacts, network connections and more."
USB storage files? My contacts and address book info? Attaching geolocation to my camera shots? A detailed record of where and how I've personally used networks, that goes beyond cell tower communications? I don't want records of that information to be sold, not even potentially. Pokemon Go asks for way more than what Google Maps asks for.
@CB85 Positive in the short term, but in the long term, this is going to further persuade investors to pressure Nintendo to give up making their own portable consoles and just go mobile. And Kimishima may be more willing to listen to that rhetoric than Iwata.
@PlywoodStick True, however I don't think investors are in a hurry to pressure Nintendo to give up their own dedicated gaming systems anytime soon, as long as they also continue to seriously support mobile (which they will as it's a goldmine).
The dedicated gaming market is still very much an extremely big and robust industry (just look at the incredible success story that is the PS4), and that isn't likely to change anytime soon. As long as Nintendo is profiting off it, they will continue to do so, and investors will want them to.
There's zero reason for Nintendo nor its investors to not want to chase both mobile and dedicated gaming, as long as the profits are there.
@PlywoodStick I'm on Android, and in fact, Google Maps has permission to view my contacts and Pokemon GO does not. What it has is the ability to view device accounts, which is probably your Google Account if you choose to log in with it (Google Maps has the same permission but can also delete or add accounts!). In fact, the Google Maps app has way more permissions required, but I see you use the browser version instead.
Funny thing is, many of the default Android apps require a mountain of permissions; just look at the default Clock app which I thought would require no permissions.
Also I think USB storage is the same as SD card storage.
Thanks for the article though; I usually skim the privacy policies since 90% is the same thing in every privacy policy. I wish there was a place I could go to get privacy policy summaries.
What odds can I get on Google buying out Nintendo one day?
@gcunit Don't know but that gif is amazing
@HSuzumiyaVI Weird that people don't speculate it could be some cellphone/handheld hybrid
@BensonUii Yes, meaning Handheld consoles will be made obsolete. ( For them, at least )
Lol God it's amazing for just an April fool's joke, it turned out to be a great idea. It's cool to see how a joke became a "game"
@MGray I hope you're joking - I've been banging the cellphone-in-a-clamshell drum for 18 months!
I'm in Australia and still haven't downloaded it! They even had a story about it on Today Tonight which is a South Australian news program lol so it's basically everywhere right now.
@King_Johobo yep, where I live, its a set of a zombie apocalypse.
@gcunit Not sure what you meant
@HSuzumiyaVI I was at uni working in the library minding my own business when a group of three people came up trying to catch god knows what. Zombie apocalypse, I think you're on point!
its fun, yes people are not watching where lures are (some questionable areas have lures on their Poke stops. )
on the app, you can now log in with your Pokémon Official Play ID (this means the Pokémon league might be next... n.n)
who wants to be the very best, like no one ever was? (although that describes Pokémon GO's success to a T.)
Show Comments
Leave A Comment
Hold on there, you need to login to post a comment...