Skip to main content

Pokémon Legends: Arceus is the future of the series

Is Pokémon Legends: Arceus a mainline Pokémon game? Since the ambitious Nintendo Switch game’s reveal in February 2021, this has been a highly contested question.

Discover the Hisui region in Pokémon Legends: Arceus!

On the one hand, it’s radically different from how older Pokémon games are structured and played. On the other, it’s the most innovative and refreshing Pokémon game in years. Game Freak and the Pokémon community need to decide whether it’s a glorified spin-off that tests new ideas or the next step for the series’ future.

Recommended Videos

After spending several days heads-down in playing Pokémon Legends: Arceus, it’s clear that it’s both. Game Freak has lots of room to grow and expand Pokémon Legends: Arceus’ mechanics. With several regions and a series worth of dense lore to explore, it’d be a shame if the experiment stopped here. Game Freak is only getting started.

Evolving, slowly

I play and enjoy Pokémon games every year, but even I can admit that the series had standardized by the late 2000s. Since then, the series has toyed with game-exclusive gimmicks, with Pokémon Sun and Moon’s trials being the most different from the norm.

Still, Game Freak never fully committed to abandoning the series’ traditional turn-based setup until now. Pokémon Legends: Arceus features no gyms, towns interconnected by routes, Pokémon abilities, multiplayer, or Pokémon League. Players are instead thrust into an ancient Sinnoh where a lot of that doesn’t exist yet. It plays with the concepts and power of godlike legendary Pokémon in one of the series’ best narratives, alongside Pokémon Black and White, and lets players roam free across five different open biomes, capturing and battling new and old Pokémon.

Some traditional Pokémon elements are here, but it pulls from open-world and RPG games like Monster Hunter World, The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, Dragon Age: Inquisition, and even Death Stranding to create a lively, dense world that players have a lot of freedom to explore.

It feels fresh, even if it’s far from perfect. The visuals are terrible, noble Pokémon encounters and the satchel retrieval system don’t have a lot of depth to them, and the lack of multiplayer means fans of competitive Pokémon won’t pay much attention to the game. There’s a lot of work yet to come if Game Freak sticks with this formula.

A crew of Pokemon hangs out in Pokemon Legends: Arceus.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

This isn’t even its final form

While those issues are part of what has some fans conflicted about whether or not this should set a precedent for upcoming games to follow, it’s also one of the main reasons why Pokémon Legends: Arceus should be the genesis of Pokémon’s future. Game Freak moves slowly, implementing minor but ambitious changes with each new Pokémon game. Its work over the past decade allowed it to make this giant leap with Pokémon Legends: Arceus, but that now means were back to square one.

Game Freak needs time and support to flesh out all of the ideas established in Pokémon Legends: Arceus to make future games in this style much better, just as it improved on the formula established in Pokémon Red and Blue for over 25 years. With proper time and effort, experimental features can become more fleshed out.

But if this game is considered just a spin-off, then Game Freak might think it’s better to regress into the standard formula fans know and love. If that happens, we’re back to having fun but unambitious turn-based RPGs that only have one or two defining gimmicks to make them unique from the rest of the series.

The player character stands next to a Drifloon at the Valley Windworks.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

For Game Freak to capitalize, it’ll need to find a way to bring requested features like multiplayer battles into the Legends format, bridging old and new. The release precedent set by Pokémon Legends: Arceus and Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl could give the developer the time it needs to sharpen the idea. As Game Freak works on a Pokémon Legends: Arceus follow-up possibly set in another region with dense lore like Johto, Unova, or Kalos, The Pokémon Company can fill the gap with more traditional remakes between Pokémon Legends entries. That release cadence could jumpstart a renaissance for the series.

Pokémon Legends: Arceus might be different from everything that came before it, but it should be lauded, not discredited for that. If it’s a blueprint for what’s to come, I’m the most excited I’ve been about Pokémon since it made the jump to 3D.

Pokémon Legends: Arceus is available now on Nintendo Switch.

Tomas Franzese
Former Digital Trends Contributor
A former Gaming Staff Writer at Digital Trends, Tomas Franzese now reports on and reviews the latest releases and exciting…
Sony is working on a proper portable console, report claims
PlayStation Portal bundle home screen while turned on.

Sony could be following up the release of the PlayStation Portal with a new handheld PlayStation 5 console, according to a new report.

Bloomberg claims that Sony is working on a portable PlayStation 5 and would be in direct competition with the Nintendo Switch successor or an Xbox handheld, which Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer said is in early testing. However, the PlayStation handheld is likely years away from an announcement even if it makes it to production. So nothing is guaranteed.

Read more
Your video game consoles could become much more expensive soon
A PS5 Pro sits on a table with a DualSense.

People have a lot of questions about what a second Donald Trump presidential administration will look like, and one of the big concerns surrounds proposed tariffs on foreign imports, with larger ones targeted for China. If these are passed, it could signal a big change in how video game hardware and software is manufactured and could lead to increased costs for players.

Digital Trends spoke to analysts about the potential impact that tariffs could have on tech like game consoles. As of this writing, the proposal is to implement a 10% or 20% tariff on all imports, but a specific 60% tariff on Chinese imports. Some analysts we reached out to declined to comment on the impact of the tariffs because while Trump has discussed a plan, it hasn't gone into effect and might not. Others, like Serkan Toto of Japanese games industry consulting firm Kantan, warned that consumers could be the ones paying the cost if plans go into effect.

Read more
Stardew Valley 1.6 has finally arrived on consoles and mobile
Special Orders board in Stardew Valley.

Stardew Valley console and mobile players will want to start a new farm soon. The long-awaited 1.6 update is finally available for all platforms on Monday, bringing with it a new farm type, more dialogue with NPCs, new events, and too many other things to count.

The 1.6 update launched for PC players on March 19, so console and mobile players have been waiting almost eight months for the release. In July, developer Eric "ConcernedApe" Barone said in a post on X (formerly Twitter) that it was taking longer than expected. The following month, he wrote in another post that the ports have been the "primary focus" for the team. He had even stopped working on the Stardew follow-up Haunted Chocolatier to get the console and mobile updates finished.

Read more