TIME Video Games

Hey, 90’s Kids: You Can Now Catch Pokémon In Real Life

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Yoshikazu Tsuno—AFP/Getty Images Dozens of Pikachu characters, the famous character of Nintendo's videogame software Pokemon, march at the Landmark Plaza shopping mall in Yokohama, suburban Tokyo on August 13, 2015.

Well, sort of, thanks to augmented reality technology

Video game designers have unveiled a new mobile game called Pokémon Go, a program that will bring the virtual world of Pokémon — once restricted to the sticky screen of your GameBoy color — to real life, more or less.

New technology takes your view of the world around you, or at least the world as it’s seen through your smartphone camera, and adds computer-generated images of the colorful biomorphic critters and the anime teens who walked around the forest catching them in little spheres, according to a press conference in Tokyo on Friday.

And once you’ve successfully real-world hunted the CGI Pokémon, you can push them into real-world battle with other CGI Pokémon, assuming those around you are also playing the game. The Pokémon Company remains one of the strongest youth entertainment properties in the world, pulling in around $1.5 billion per year.

The game’s designers will release it for iOS and Android next year.

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