Pokémon Go developer Niantic appears to have opened up a new front in its ongoing war against third-party tools and trackers that use bot accounts to reveal where in-game Pokémon are hiding in the real world. Players are reporting that detected and flagged accounts are being limited so they can only see common Pokémon-not the most coveted, rarer beasts.Pokémon Go hackers getting put in Pidgey-filled purgatory
Pokémon Go developer Niantic appears to have opened up a new front in its ongoing war against third-party tools and trackers that use bot accounts to reveal where in-game Pokémon are hiding in the real world. Players are reporting that detected and flagged accounts are being limited so they can only see common Pokémon-not the most coveted, rarer beasts.
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Friday, December 1, 2017
Pokémon Go hackers getting put in Pidgey-filled purgatory
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