Technologies
Pokopia Is the Glorious Return of Animal Crossing in Pokemon Form
This Switch 2 exclusive might be its biggest killer app yet. I’m lost and in love with the cozy apocalypse.
Somewhere, on a lost and lonely island long abandoned by humans, there’s you. A lone, shape-shifting Pokemon named Ditto who’s taken on the form of its lost human trainer. And you’re looking for friends.
A big squiggly-faced beast named Professor Tangrowth meets you. From there, you wonder: Why is everyone gone? How can you make things better?
And then the Pokemon start to arrive.
I’ve been playing Pokemon Pokopia at home for over a week, and I’m feeling feelings I haven’t had since the early days of the pandemic back in 2020: cozy-living in a world where friends seem to pop up daily, full of needs and missions, and where I’m spending hours watering plants, fixing roads, finding food for hungry Pokecritters and decorating homes. It’s Animal Crossing, but in a new and more interesting way than even the latest Animal Crossing update.
I had literally no expectations for Pokemon Pokopia, and now I’m absolutely in love with it. And my youngest kid, a die-hard Pokemon fan, is absolutely crushed that this is a Switch 2 exclusive because he doesn’t have his own Switch 2 yet — which makes me convinced that Pokopia is the most diabolical Switch 2 killer app yet, even more so than Donkey Kong Bananza or Mario Kart World. That being said, you could do multiplayer between a Switch 2 and an original Switch with Game Share, but that’s not quite the same thing, is it?
It’s more than just a Pokemon 30th anniversary way to hold the fort until next year’s fantastic-looking mainline Pokemon Winds and Waves game arrives. This whole game’s Animal Crossing x Pokemon feel is brilliant, and it really works. And I’m not even a Pokemon superfan.
This game is the flip side of the last Pokemon game, Legends Z-A, which was all about battles. You’d fight, fight, fight and learn real-time attack moves. None of that’s here. You fight no one. You just make friends.
Just like with Animal Crossing, you’re always chatting with little buddies and doing daily things to make your world better. You have items to buy, items to craft, resources to collect, and little odd things to dig up or find. (A fossil remnant? A mysterious feather?) And you have an endless amount of Pokemon to discover, partly by happenstance and partly by creating habitats that attract these Pokemon later. One or two friends suddenly becomes 20, 30, or more. And while I haven’t done it yet, you can connect with friends and play together in the same world, building homes or other things, farming, or decorating.
I made a little leaf hut home with a kit I bought and then made a larger home. It totally looked like Animal Crossing. Even the menus and some of the character reaction sounds are similar.
Unlike Animal Crossing, the scale of Pokopia is way larger. It’s not one village: It’s a whole connected set of islands.
I have no idea how big it is, actually, even after a week-plus playing. Everything’s made of blocks, like Minecraft. You can break them down and collect them to build elsewhere. There’s definitely a Minecraft or Dragon Quest Builders (a series I never played) style here, but approachable. I never felt lost or overwhelmed.
Still, there are some big challenges. Creating new structures can extend to massive things that could take a long time to make. You have to rehabilitate and reconnect all sorts of ruins, including Pokemon Centers and more. It’s a game to chip away at.
There’s a central story line to follow, sort of, in which the player can go back and talk to Professor Tangrowth to get ideas of where to go next. But it’s so easy to get distracted: What’s that shiny thing over there? Wait, this Pokemon wants to ask me something. And this one. And oh yeah that side quest. These Pokemon sure are needy. I have no idea what it’ll be like when I maybe have hundreds of them. It’s Animal Crossing Unleashed.
My Ditto also has skills it can absorb from other Pokemon, which keep advancing what’s possible. This fluid evolution of the game keeps it mysterious and exciting. What if the next day in Animal Crossing your arms extended and could do something totally different, like cut trees or break new blocks? That’s Pokopia. I want to go back and keep discovering. The horizon remains unexplored right beyond the next wall of blocks.
I needed a cozy game like this to tuck into in the middle of a chaotic year. In the middle of a blizzard, it was a warm blanket. I’m worried about where all the humans went, and I feel a mournful, Miyazaki-like sadness draped over this game. But also hope. I’m cleaning up a broken world, bit by bit.
I feel like I have so much to do in this game, so much to tinker with. I’m not sure if there’s ever really an end — even if Nintendo apparently claims there is an end, about 20 to 40 hours in. I’m sure that’s just a story milestone, while the daily Animal Crossing-like things will just keep going. This is a game that feels like it’s worth the $70 price — even though I still feel like $70 is too high for games (grumble).
And it’s also a game that, finally, is making my kid want his own Switch 2. Nintendo may have found its upgrade moment, for my family at least. Going forward, Nintendo’s games are likely to be almost all Switch 2 exclusives. And this one is staying in the mix for a long while to come.
Technologies
Today’s NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Wednesday, March 11
Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for March 11.
Looking for the most recent Mini Crossword answer? Click here for today’s Mini Crossword hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Wordle, Strands, Connections and Connections: Sports Edition puzzles.
Need some help with today’s Mini Crossword? I thought it was a bit tricky. 1-Down is one of those old-fashioned comic-book sounds that I had to remember how to spell correctly. Read on for all the answers. And if you could use some hints and guidance for daily solving, check out our Mini Crossword tips.
If you’re looking for today’s Wordle, Connections, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands answers, you can visit CNET’s NYT puzzle hints page.
Read more: Tips and Tricks for Solving The New York Times Mini Crossword
Let’s get to those Mini Crossword clues and answers.
Mini across clues and answers
1A clue: Study of the human mind, informally
Answer: PSYCH
6A clue: Common fixture in a gym bathroom
Answer: SCALE
7A clue: Kinda boring
Answer: HOHUM
8A clue: Like a commenter without a username, for short
Answer: ANON
9A clue: «All good between us?»
Answer: WEOK
Mini down clues and answers
1D clue: Old-fashioned «Yeah, right!»
Answer: PSHAW
2D clue: Coffeehouse pastry
Answer: SCONE
3D clue: Google alternative
Answer: YAHOO
4D clue: Sound of a dull thump
Answer: CLUNK
5D clue: Line on the bottom of a pant leg
Answer: HEM
Technologies
OnePlus and Oppo to Raise Smartphone Prices as Memory Costs Climb
Oppo says rising costs for key phone components will trigger price adjustments on some devices starting March 16.
Chinese smartphone-makers OnePlus and Oppo plan to raise prices on some existing models starting next week, according to a 9to5Google report citing GizmoChina and a notice posted on Oppo’s China online store.
In its notice, Oppo said it would adjust pricing after evaluating rising costs for several key components used in its mobile phones. The changes are expected to take effect around March 16 and will affect some of the company’s more affordable smartphones, as well as some OnePlus models.
Flagship devices — like those in the Find and Reno series — are not expected to be affected for now. The reported adjustments currently appear to be limited to China.
The move highlights growing pressure across the smartphone supply chain as component costs climb. Analysts say prices for memory and storage chips used in phones have been rising in recent months as demand surges across the tech industry.
Much of the chip demand is coming from the rapid buildout of AI data centers, which rely on large amounts of high-performance memory.
That pressure isn’t limited to Oppo and OnePlus. Analysts say smartphone brands across the industry are facing rising component costs amid increased demand for memory chips.
As manufacturers shift production toward higher-margin memory used in AI servers, supply for consumer electronics such as smartphones and laptops can tighten.
If component costs continue to rise, manufacturers may face difficult choices later this year, including raising retail prices or adjusting device specifications to offset higher manufacturing costs.
OnePlus and Oppo didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Technologies
Harvard Business Review Study Finds ‘AI Brain Fry’ Is Leaving Workers Mentally Fatigued
Study participants reported increased mental fatigue while using AI tools, but less burnout overall.
Workers who excessively use AI agents and tools at work are at increased risk of mental fatigue, according to a recent Harvard Business Review study. In certain industries, more than 25% of hired professionals report increased mental strain due to their role in AI oversight — though these professionals also generally experienced less burnout than peers who aren’t using AI.
This phenomenon — which the researchers refer to as «AI brain fry» — is described as a «‘buzzing’ feeling or a mental fog» that caused study participants to develop headaches and difficulty focusing and making decisions. Individuals pointed to being overwhelmed by large amounts of information and to frequent task switching as the reasons for these feelings.
Studied individuals experienced more brain fry when they utilized AI agents to manage a workload beyond their own cognitive capacity. When participants used AI to replace mundane, repetitive tasks, managing the growing number of tools led to increased mental fatigue.
Crucially, the study found that fewer individuals who used these AI agents reported workplace burnout.
The researchers predict that this is because burnout testing assesses emotional and physical distress. In contrast, they report, acute mental fatigue «is caused by marshalling attention, working memory and executive control beyond the limited capacity of these systems.»
These are the processes that are taxed when study participants use multiple AI tools in their workflow, according to the researchers.
The Harvard study identifies several business costs incurred by workers suffering from AI brain fry. The foremost consequence is that these individuals may end up making lower-quality decisions. «Workers in [the] study who endorsed AI brain fry experience 33% more decision fatigue than those who did not,» the study reports. Workers who report AI brain fry were also more likely to self-report making both minor and major errors at their jobs.
Another recent Harvard Business Review study similarly found that employees who use AI tools «worked at a faster pace, took on a broader scope of tasks and extended work into more hours of the day,» but warned that «workload creep can in turn lead to cognitive fatigue, burnout and weakened decision-making.»
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