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Pokemon Plans Detective Pikachu Sequel for Switch, Sleep Device

Detective Pikachu will now track your sleep

Pokemon Plans Detective Pikachu Sequel for Switch, Sleep Device
Tsunekazu Ishihara, chief executive officer of Pokemon Co., speaks at a company event in Tokyo, Japan, on Wednesday, May 29, 2019. Pokemon, partly owned by Nintendo Co., unveiled several new initiatives at an event in Tokyo, including a Detective Pikachu sequel for the Switch console and a new device for tracking sleep. Photographer: Akio Kon/Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- Pokemon Co., partly owned by Nintendo Co., unveiled several new initiatives at an event in Tokyo, including a Detective Pikachu sequel for the Switch console and a new device for tracking sleep.

The Detective Pikachu title aims to cash in on the popularity of the eponymous movie released this month. The game could further boost demand for the Switch, although Pokemon did not announce a release date.

Pokemon Plans Detective Pikachu Sequel for Switch, Sleep Device

The new Pokemon Go Plus + device will sync with Pokemon Go and is aimed at helping people develop healthy sleep habits and turning sleep into entertainment, Pokemon Chief Executive Officer Tsunekazu Ishihara said at the event. It will be released in 2020, he said. “Everyone spends a large part of their life sleeping, and turning that into entertainment is our next challenge at Pokemon,” he said at an event in Tokyo.

Pokemon is looking to follow up on its surprise hit Pokemon Go, which created a sensation in the gaming community by letting users hunt monsters and prizes in the real world with their smartphones. It also showed off a cloud services app called Pokemon Home that will let players pool pocket monsters collected across Switch and 3DS titles, and in Pokemon Go. The app will be released in 2020.

Ishihara also revealed the first details of Pokemon Masters, a new title developed with DeNA Co. The new game is scheduled for release by the end of 2019 and will focus on battling Pokemon, with footage showing impressive graphics quality. News that DeNA was developing a new title with Pokemon was cheered by investors and analysts this month, but shares slipped after Pokemon’s announcement.

Nintendo shares were little changed after the announcements. It owns a significant stake in Pokemon Co. and recorded 6.9 billion yen of operating profit from that investment in the latest fiscal year -- most of it likely from Pokemon Go.

To contact the reporter on this story: Yuji Nakamura in Tokyo at ynakamura56@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Peter Elstrom at pelstrom@bloomberg.net, Edwin Chan

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.