Christina Spicer  |  August 3, 2021

Category: Legal News

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Pokémon Go coins
(Photo Credit: pim pic/Shutterstock)

Pokémon Go Coins Class Action Overview:

  • Who: A Pokémon Go player has filed a class action lawsuit against Niantic, Inc.  
  • Why: The plaintiff claims that the company encourages gambling-like behavior with in-app coin and loot box purchases.  
  • Where: The Pokémon Go Coins class action lawsuit was filed in California federal court.  

The maker of the popular online video game, Pokémon Go, encourages addictive behaviors by inducing players, including many minors, with in-app coin and loot box purchases that are nonrefundable, according to a class action lawsuit filed in California federal court Friday.  

Lead plaintiff, Jarrett Reeves, who says he spent more than $250 on coins as a minor, wants to represent Pokémon Go players nationwide. Reeves accuses Niantic, the company that introduced the “online augmented reality video game” five years ago, of creating a lucrative profit stream from hundreds of millions of players spending real world money on in-app purchases in their pursuit to “catch ’em all.”  

“This system was created to capitalize on and encourage addictive behaviors, akin to gambling,” alleges the class action lawsuit. 

Thousands Spent on Pokémon Go Coins, Loot Boxes

While the game is purportedly free, Reeves says that Niantic has made Pokémon Go virtually impossible to play without purchasing coins, called “PokéCoins,” and loot boxes. Free coins are capped at 50 PokéCoins a day, making it difficult for players to progress.  

Pokémon Go coins are nonrefundable and the plaintiff says that Niantic fosters addictive behavior in players, many of whom are children and teens, with limited time sales and discounts on larger purchases. Currently, a player can pay nearly $100 for 14,500 within the app, alleges the class action lawsuit.  

“The PokeCoins system serves to psychologically distance players from the financial implications of their in-game purchases by disconnecting the expenditure of real money from the products the players purchase with their digital PokeCoins,” states the class action lawsuit, which points out that minors have an especially hard time keeping track of the money they spend on Pokémon Go coins.  

Pokémon Go players then use these PokéCoins to purchase loot boxes, which include various virtual tools, characters, and other items to help them in their quests, which are continually updated by Niantic. The real-world price of loot boxes is never clear, claims Reeves who says he would not have purchased many of the loot boxes he bought if he had known their value.  

Further, Niantic makes it “incredibly easy” for Pokémon Go players to purchase coins and loot boxes by saving credit card information in users’ accounts, says Reeves.  

“[A] player can purchase PokeCoins at any time almost instantly…this means minors whose parents enter and save their credit cards into a Pokemon account can use their parents’ credit cards to make an endless number of purchases,” alleges the class action lawsuit. 

Reeves wants to represent others who played Pokémon Go before turning 18 and purchased or otherwise obtained coins between July 2106 and the present. He accuses Niantic of violating consumer protection laws and unjust enrichment.  

The plaintiff also says that by encouraging addictive behaviors in minors by offering nonrefundable Pokémon Go coins, Niantic violated laws protecting children and teens from poor purchasing decisions.  

The Pokémon Go coins class action lawsuit wants to force Niantic to get parental permission before allowing minor players to make in-app purchases, as well as pay damages to players who purchased PokéCoins in the past.  

Have you or your children spent money on Pokémon Go coins, loot boxes, or other in-app purchases? Tell us about it in the comment section below! 

The plaintiff is represented by L. Timothy Fisher, Philip L. Fraietta, and Alec M. Leslie of Bursor & Fisher, PA.  

The Pokémon Go Coins Class Action Lawsuit is Reeves v. Niantic, Inc., Case No. Case 3:21-cv-05883 in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.


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177 thoughts onPokémon Go Coins ‘Encourage Addictive Behavior’ in Minors, Claims Class Action Lawsuit

  1. Matty says:

    Perhaps a bigger issue here is the lack off transparency for the odds of egg hatches, shiny rates etc that are often the motivating factor for coin purchases. Niantic is also guilty of notoriously manipulating pokemon spawns to put them behind special event pay walls, still without published odds. They remove pokemon from wild spawns and put them in raids during an event, encourage the purchase of raid passes, and then reinstate the pokemon into the wild again after the event is over. The only way to get these is to roll the dice on raids with unknown odds.

  2. Diana hammonds says:

    Add me

  3. Becky v morris says:

    My kids has spent way to much on this and would buy prepaid cards 50 to 100 at a time to to play this game even hot where the kids was taking money that didnt belong to them to purchase prepaid cards yo purchase bad things for kids

  4. Cheryl L says:

    Add me. Son is a junkie for pokeman.

  5. Boo says:

    This is the dumbest law suit so far.

  6. Sarah says:

    My daughter has bought some when she was under 5 and couldn’t read. I have honestly spent so much I deleted the game.

  7. Nancy says:

    I have spent hundreds of dollars. Everything cost’s so much.

  8. Joletha Denson says:

    Add me please

  9. Simone says:

    Please add me.

    Ive spend well over thousand dollars on this game and have yet caught them all!!

  10. Kristen Molloy says:

    Add me

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