Pokémon Pokopia, a collaboration between Game Freak and Koei Tecmo, has released exclusively on Nintendo Switch 2, offering players a role as a transforming Ditto to restore a post-apocalyptic world. The game blends habitat building and exploration in a slower-paced experience distinct from mainline titles. It arrives amid the franchise's 30th anniversary celebrations, filling the gap until the next core entry in 2027.
Pokémon Pokopia casts players as an anthropomorphic Ditto in a barren wasteland of the Pokémon universe, where humans have long vanished. The objective is to revive the environment by constructing habitats tailored to specific Pokémon species, such as watering grass and engineering precise conditions for arrivals like Bulbasaur. Developer Koei Tecmo, known for the Dragon Quest Builders series through its Omega Force team, infuses the title with block-based construction, survival gathering, and crafting elements reminiscent of Minecraft and Animal Crossing.
Gameplay emphasizes deliberate progression, with players focusing on one habitat at a time to avoid resource strain. Unique mechanics include vomiting streams of water instead of using a traditional watering can, and transforming into forms that add puzzle-solving to building. Exploration reveals derelict landmarks like a Poké Mart and involves clearing areas such as Bleak Beach from sand. The game embraces Pokémon's darker undertones, featuring elements like Drifloon dreamworlds accessed via dolls holding memories of deceased owners, and notes on the collapse of streaming services in this post-apocalyptic setting.
Keza MacDonald of The Guardian called it "a sweet surprise," highlighting its novel expression of the series' environmentalism. An Eurogamer preview noted the character's creation as cosplaying a "dead child" in lore, leading to existential humor when named after the player. With an estimated playtime of over 30 hours, Pokopia stands out among spin-offs by leveraging Koei Tecmo's builder expertise.
The release coincides with the 30th anniversary of the original 1996 Pokémon games, including re-releases like FireRed and LeafGreen on Nintendo Switch and a Tokyo theme park opening. It precedes the mainline Pokémon Winds and Waves, set for 2027 in an Indonesia-inspired region, following the troubled launch of Scarlet and Violet.