![pokemon go live map of atlanta pokemon go live map of atlanta](https://venturebeat.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/activecampaign-dashboard-screenshot.png)
Now Niantic announced another “new” feature: players can “extend” the day after 2 p.m. Players are rightly angry at the inexplicable ( and never rationalized) Decision to halve the length of the Community Days from six to three hours, only 11 a.m. Then Niantic did a new June Community Day announcement, who managed to put salt in two wounds at once. (That said, the weekly 1-coin boxes remain available and offer some really good bundles of various in-game items.) (Individual passes remain at 100 coins, or $0.99 each.) That felt like a spectacular move, timing-wise. Then, at the same time, the price of three remote raid passes in the in-game store was increased from 250 PokéCoins to 300. The first worrying sign was the simultaneous removal of a weekly 1-coin remote raid pass previously given to all players on a Monday. And, quite importantly, Niantic took no steps at all to create its own version of similar technology. (Though I heartily recommend Poke Genie over the more popular PokeRaid - it never charges a dime.) However, Niantic also charges fees for the required Remote Raid Passes, meaning that the more people encouraged to participate in such raids, the more they do. Well, if it were, maybe you could see how Niantic could be upset that third-party app makers are making money instead. Everyone makes friends with codes shared across the apps, and then the host invites everyone to the raid. All it takes is one person on site to host, then apps like PokeRaid and Poke Genie will automatically assign players into teams. Smart people quickly saw an opportunity here and created various apps that allow complete strangers around the world to team up to tackle specific heists. Or you could even just click on a relatively nearby raid and fight it yourself from a distance. This allowed you to participate in a raid from any distance and team up with friends from anywhere in the world to attack the Pokemon. When the game was new and gyms were few and far between, this was actually possible.įaced with the pandemic and the utter impossibility of such actions for much of the world, Niantic introduced the Remote Raid Pass. For a five-star raid, meaning the most powerful - often legendary - Pokemon, you need at least five or six people working together to successfully battle it. Time was when you wanted to take part in a raid Pokemon GO, you would have to gather with other real players and all stand a few meters away from the imaginary gym.
![pokemon go live map of atlanta pokemon go live map of atlanta](https://venturebeat.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/star-treke284a2_-bridge-crew_20180520212449.jpg)
Of course, every new move made by the developer seems to threaten its future. Of all the many excellent changes Niantic has made Pokemon GO In the face of the global Covid-19 pandemic, remote raiding appeared to be the one most likely to survive in the long term.