IGN India on MSN
Pokemon Pokopia Might Finally Be the Life Sim Pokémon Fans Have Waited For | IGN Preview
We’ve had some relaxing Pokémon games over the years, but we’ve never quite had a game that embraced this secondary cozy aesthetic fully into its gameplay–until now, with Pokémon Pokopia. I played the ...
Logan Paul set a new world record by selling a rare Pokémon trading card for a staggering $16.5 million. On Monday, the Pikachu Illustrator card sold at Goldin Auctions after ...
Five years ago, Logan Paul set a world record when he purchased a Pokémon card for $5.275 million. It proved a sound ...
A rare Pokemon card was auctioned off through a New Jersey auction house on Monday for a record $16.49 million, setting a ...
The shop posted on its Instagram account that Nintendo reached out with “concerns” about its name and logo, which included the iconic red-and-white Poké Ball. “The short story is Nintendo reached out ...
YouTuber Logan Paul has become a Guinness World Record holder by selling a rare Pokémon card for nearly $16.5 million, but has sparked some backlash.
Pokemon Pokopia's director has revealed that the game will have persistent servers for multiplayer, just like in Minecraft.
YouTuber Logan Paul's rare Pikachu Illustrator Pokémon card sold for $16.5 million, setting a new record for the auction price of a trading card.
1don MSN
Logan Paul Sells Pokémon Card at Auction for Record $16M and Throws in Diamond Necklace as Bonus
The online personality bought the card four years prior for $5.3 million, which also set a world record ...
Leaked API keys are nothing new, but the scale of the problem in front-end code has been largely a mystery - until now. Intruder's research team built a new secrets detection method and scanned 5 ...
Stocktwits on MSN
Logan Paul's $16.5 million record Pokémon card auction ignites ‘slop tokenization’ NFT debate
The Pokémon card had previously been tied to a fractionalized NFT offering on the now-defunct Liquid Marketplace. ・Paul said ...
The Pokémon Europe International Championships has drawn more than 7,000 competitors from 70 countries to London, making it Europe's largest esports tournament.
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