Too busy for Pokémon? These entrepreneurs will play for you

Although the practice is considered cheating, some gamers seek professionals to help them gain points to impress others

July 23, 2016 11:24 pm | Updated October 18, 2016 12:58 pm IST - NEW YORK:

A gamer hunts down a virtual monster on a pavement in Rome. — Photo: AFP

A gamer hunts down a virtual monster on a pavement in Rome. — Photo: AFP

Too busy with your real life to play the hit augmented reality game ‘Pokémon Go’? For a price, some entrepreneurs will play the game for you.

New ads are popping up on Craigslist nearly every day from people who say they will log on to your ‘Pokémon Go’ account and effectively run up your score while you are stuck at work or sitting in class.

On a recent July afternoon, two 24-year-old Pokémon “trainers,” Lewis Gutierrez and Jordan Clark, walked through Brooklyn’s Prospect Park with their eyes glued to their phones, tapping and swiping away to catch virtual Pokémon for clients paying about $20 per hour for the service. Mr. Gutierrez, who described himself as a welder and writer, said he began by helping relatives with the game after it was released in the U.S. in early July. Then he put a post on Craigslist advertising his services professionally.

“I couldn’t even do it by myself,” Mr. Gutierrez said. “I had two phones. I was doing, like, ten-hour days and I got my friend Jordan to come along with me. And now it looks like we are going to have to hire another person. So, it’s just been booming.”

And they aren’t the only ones getting in the game. One trainer in London offers to boost your Pokémon account up to Level 20, which is very high, for a price of $185. Others offer Uber-like driving services with the promise of taking a player to some of the hottest Pokémon hunting grounds around the city. Played on smartphones, ‘Pokémon Go’ has been a phenomenon since its release. The game involves going to real-world locations to chase virtual characters from the classic Nintendo game.

Paying people to play a game for you might seem to defy common sense, but Mr. Gutierrez and Mr. Clark say clients come to them mainly for two reasons.

Impressing a date

They want to compete in the game at a high level, but they don’t have time to roam the city and play the game all day. Or, they are getting ready for a ‘Pokédate’.

“It’s a good first date for Tinder,” said Clark, referring to the location-based dating app. “A lot of people are meeting up that way.” Some want to impress their potential partners by being in the game at a respectable level.

Levelling-up services aren’t unique to Pokémon Go. The clandestine practice already occurs with online multiplayer role-playing games such as ‘World of Warcraft’ and ‘Destiny’, where paid professionals help clients gain the necessary experience and resources in the game to compete at a high level.

Publishers of such titles deem the act cheating and warn they’ll cancel accounts of users who enlist outside assistance to mine for virtual currency or level up their characters. The terms of service in ‘Pokémon Go’ explicitly forbid the practice of transferring access to an account to a third party. — AP

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