![]() ![]() "You see it all the time," Dave Waddell said. "I probably went 16 kilometers yesterday just looking for Pokemon," Jonathon said.Īnother thing Pokemon Go means, is more people walking around with their phones in their hands than ever. "I was in downtown yesterday, in Rochester. "Gotten pretty far, pretty addicted to it," Nicholas said. "There's different Pokemon for each location, so it's always different," Eric said. "I'm not exactly too sure," Jonathon said. ![]() "You walk around in real life and you capture Pokemon," Eric said. The game uses your phone's GPS to take players to local landmarks where Pokemon appear on the screen, allowing players to capture them. ![]() "We're out here playing Pokemon Go currently," Jonathon said. "This bridge is usually where a Pokemon is most of the time," Jonathon said.Ī game which in a matter of days has become the hottest phone app in the nation. Phone in hand, because the hunt is all part of a game. "It's surprising to see how many people are out playing it," Jonathon said. Look around Fairport on a July summer afternoon, and you'll see scores of young people trying to find those landmarks. "I think it's a pretty cool way to get out and explore nature and exercise," Nicholas Reed said. There's history, there's beauty and just like clockwork, the trains run through the middle of the village all day long. "There's a lot of historical sites and monuments," Jonathon Dell said. In the village of Fairport there is a lot to see. Time Warner Cable News reporter Seth Voorhees looked into the phenomenon that is Pokemon Go. It's only been available for a few days, but a game has an army of young explorers out and about, with phones in hand, trying to find things they never might have thought of before. ![]()
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