Updated
Updated · GamesIndustry.biz · May 20
Scopely Rules Out Pokémon Go 2 After $3.5 Billion Niantic Deal, Targets 500 Million More Players
Updated
Updated · GamesIndustry.biz · May 20

Scopely Rules Out Pokémon Go 2 After $3.5 Billion Niantic Deal, Targets 500 Million More Players

1 articles · Updated · GamesIndustry.biz · May 20
  • Ed Wu said Scopely has no plans for a Pokémon Go sequel, arguing a second title would split the existing community instead of building on the original game.
  • 500 million downloads and $8.8 billion in estimated revenue have made Pokémon Go the centerpiece of Scopely’s $3.5 billion Niantic Games acquisition, which the company says was driven by years of talks and a shared focus on community and licensed IP.
  • Scopely said it bought only Niantic’s games arm in May 2025, leaving the tech business as Niantic Spatial with $250 million in funding, because running B2B technology and consumer games under one roof was seen as a drag on both.
  • 800 potential partners were reviewed by Scopely in 2025, but executives said Niantic stood out on cultural fit and long-term operations; the buyer also said it made no layoffs at Niantic Games after closing.
  • More than five years out, Wu said the strategy is to expand Pokémon Go, Pikmin Bloom and Monster Hunter Now into more markets and build new location-based experiences—just not a direct sequel.
With no Pokémon Go sequel planned, what new reality-bending experiences are being developed to keep players exploring the world?
How will Saudi Arabia’s Savvy Group leverage Pokémon Go’s real-world player data to build its global entertainment empire?