Tech
Pokemon Go Update: Niantic Offers Is Planning To Rotate The Nests Of The Rare Pokemon
Alex Davis
First Posted: Sep 10, 2016 05:20 AM EDT
Rumors about "Pokémon Go" hype that is fading out is scattering. Despite the bad comments, Niantic is still at their peak in making the Pokémon capturing game more challenging for trainers. Niantic is planning to rotate the Pokémon nest's location.
The ultimate goal for the Pokémon Go players is to at least complete the Pokedex and to dominate other gyms. Rumors have shown that the game developer will rotate the Pokémon nests regularly until the end of September. Thus, it could challenge more patience for players in hunting rare.
The nests are the location in the map where an enormous amount of the same Pokémon will appear on a regular basis. Yet, the difference is that developers will have the nests randomly. So for example, If Pidgey appears in one location it is not necessarily that it has a nest nearby. Players just have to estimate when it is going back, since they randomly drop Pokémon all over the world, according to University Herald.com.
Reported by IDigital Times.com, last August, players were disappointed since developers change the nest again. Example major Dratini nests suddenly become Eevee spawns instead. In their defense, developers have to move the nests since it is commonly inhabited by rare Pokémon's. Niantic felt like it is too easy to catch such high-levelled species.
If Niantic establishes to change the rare Pokémon nests repeatedly, the trainers will have more difficulty in catching the rare pocket monsters. Thus, Pokémon Go players have already had a difficulty in catching rare, the rotation of nests will give them a harder time in catching. Perhaps the hardest to catch like Dragonite will possibly be more challenging than before since its average spawn rate is 0.0011% which probably be one to every 100,000 Pokémon spawned.
Furthermore, not too many updates available regarding the rotation of nests users help other players where the Pokémon nests location via Google Maps document. It is still a good sign for those who have just started playing or for those who wants to catch the rare Pokémon.
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First Posted: Sep 10, 2016 05:20 AM EDT
Rumors about "Pokémon Go" hype that is fading out is scattering. Despite the bad comments, Niantic is still at their peak in making the Pokémon capturing game more challenging for trainers. Niantic is planning to rotate the Pokémon nest's location.
The ultimate goal for the Pokémon Go players is to at least complete the Pokedex and to dominate other gyms. Rumors have shown that the game developer will rotate the Pokémon nests regularly until the end of September. Thus, it could challenge more patience for players in hunting rare.
The nests are the location in the map where an enormous amount of the same Pokémon will appear on a regular basis. Yet, the difference is that developers will have the nests randomly. So for example, If Pidgey appears in one location it is not necessarily that it has a nest nearby. Players just have to estimate when it is going back, since they randomly drop Pokémon all over the world, according to University Herald.com.
Reported by IDigital Times.com, last August, players were disappointed since developers change the nest again. Example major Dratini nests suddenly become Eevee spawns instead. In their defense, developers have to move the nests since it is commonly inhabited by rare Pokémon's. Niantic felt like it is too easy to catch such high-levelled species.
If Niantic establishes to change the rare Pokémon nests repeatedly, the trainers will have more difficulty in catching the rare pocket monsters. Thus, Pokémon Go players have already had a difficulty in catching rare, the rotation of nests will give them a harder time in catching. Perhaps the hardest to catch like Dragonite will possibly be more challenging than before since its average spawn rate is 0.0011% which probably be one to every 100,000 Pokémon spawned.
Furthermore, not too many updates available regarding the rotation of nests users help other players where the Pokémon nests location via Google Maps document. It is still a good sign for those who have just started playing or for those who wants to catch the rare Pokémon.
See Now: NASA's Juno Spacecraft's Rendezvous With Jupiter's Mammoth Cyclone