Austin American-Statesman

Businesses jump on Pokemon train

Theme parks, zoos — even doughnut shops — capitalize on Go craze.

- By Bree Fowler

Weeks into the “Pokemon Go” craze, demand remains strong for “Poke Ball”-shaped treats made by a high-end doughnut company, one of many businesses and organizati­ons coming up with creative ways to lure players in their search for the elusive “pocket monsters.”

Even on sweltering summer days, the popular smartphone game has gotten throngs of players out of their homes to realworld locations designated as “PokeStops” and “Gyms.” Theme parks, bars and even a county animal shelter are among those trying to capitalize on that surge in foot traffic.

In New York, Doughnut Plant created an edible version of the Poke Ball — dubbing it the Pokeseed — after a Pokemon-obsessed employee realized that all four of the company’s shops are either PokeStops or very close to one, owner Mark Israel said. And one location is an in-game Gym, making it a gathering place to both consume and virtually burn off calories.

The team at Doughnut Plant designed the fruity treat in less than a day, using cranberry-raspberry and white chocolate icings to recreate the red-and-white Poke Balls, the objects used in the game to capture monsters. The Pokeseed is stuffed with a peach-strawberry cream filling, an imagining of Pokemon’s mythical pecha berry.

Pictures went out on social media the next morning, “and before they were delivered, people were already coming to the stores,” Israel said.

Doughnut Plant has already sold thousands of Pokeseeds, and customers frequently post pictures of them on Instagram. They’re still selling strong, so Doughnut Plant has no plan to take them off the menu any time soon.

Meanwhile, a trendy food court near New York’s Penn Station put up a sign urging passersby to catch a Pokemon instead of a train, while the city’s parks department created “PokeFit” classes for kids to play while exercising.

Earlier, the Busch Gardens theme park in Florida hosted a Pokemon “lure-a-thon,” with some PokeStops accessible only by season-pass members for one hour. The Pawtucket Red Sox baseball team in Rhode Island invited fans onto the field to chase the virtual monsters.

Police in Manchester, N.H., even tried to lure fugitives by claiming to have detected a rare Charizard in the booking area. A Facebook post invited those on a list of “lucky ones” to capture the monster — the list happens to be filled with the city’s most wanted.

The Phoenix Zoo was a hotbed of Pokemon activity right after the game’s release last month, even when temperatur­es climbed as high as 112 degrees.

It helped that a Pokemon Gym was housed in the zoo’s convenient­ly air conditione­d orangutan house.

After noticing that some visitors were on the hunt for more than just traditiona­l zoo creatures, the zoo opened an hour early at 6 a.m. for a week during what’s usually a slow time of year. The zoo also converted its train into a “PokeShuttl­e” that pointed out PokeStops along with its animal exhibits.

On the first day of the promotion, attendance more than doubled from a week earlier, and sign-ups for new membership­s spiked, said zoo spokeswoma­n Kerri Baumann.

“It has snowballed in the most exciting and fun way,” she said.

 ?? PAULA BRONSTEIN / GETTY IMAGES ?? A man plays Pokemon Go while commuting on a train in Bangkok, Thailand, on Wednesday. The country’s junta has warned youths against playing the game too much.
PAULA BRONSTEIN / GETTY IMAGES A man plays Pokemon Go while commuting on a train in Bangkok, Thailand, on Wednesday. The country’s junta has warned youths against playing the game too much.
 ?? MARK LENNIHAN / AP ?? Pecha Berry Pokeseed doughnuts that resemble the Pokeballs of Pokemon Go (top left and center) were created by New York’s Doughnut Plant.
MARK LENNIHAN / AP Pecha Berry Pokeseed doughnuts that resemble the Pokeballs of Pokemon Go (top left and center) were created by New York’s Doughnut Plant.
 ?? ANICK JESDANUN / AP ?? A sign at The Pennsy food court near New York’s Penn Station urges passersby to play Pokemon Go.
ANICK JESDANUN / AP A sign at The Pennsy food court near New York’s Penn Station urges passersby to play Pokemon Go.

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