While some players have shrugged off microtransactions as intractable for the mobile MOBA genre, others have pointed out that Pokémon Unite diverges from the norm in giving players an in-game advantage by spending real-world money, per Polygon (opens in new tab), and a Reddit post (opens in new tab) by u/SpeedRacing1 laid out exactly how item upgrade costs start getting so prohibitive that players may feel the need to spend real money to remain competitive.Ī YouTube video (opens in new tab) with 1.7M views of Twitch streamer moistcr1tikal showed exactly how packing three pay-boosted items can let a player snowball into dominating other teams. There’s still the question of how they’ll feel about the microtransactions in the game, which has divided the fanbase and critics. Thus, we’d expect players to flock to Pokémon Unite when it lands on smartphones on September 22 given it’s free and from such a huge franchise. Nintendo Switch players have already experienced the polish of Pokémon Unite, which shouldn’t be surprising: the game was created in partnership with Tencent’s TiMi Studio Group, which made the first-person shooter Call of Duty: Mobile and the MOBA Honor of Kings (along with its international version Arena of Valor), which has topped the mobile gaming revenue charts since they were released years ago (Honor of Kings made $231.2 million in July, per a Sensor Tower (opens in new tab) report).
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