포코피아는 포켓몬의 첨단 기술 미래를 완전히 새로운 방식으로 보게 해주었습니다.

The Verge | | 🔬 연구
#3d프린터 #미래기술 #포켓몬 #포코피아 #리뷰 #첨단기술
원문 출처: The Verge · Genesis Park에서 요약 및 분석

요약

포켓몬스터의 신작 '포코피아'에 등장한 3D 프린터는 게임 내 고도로 발달한 미래 기술을 다시금 생각하게 만드는 계기가 되었습니다. 오랜 팬들조차 당연하게 여겼던 생물체 디지털 저장나 화석 부활 같은 SF적 요소들이, 무너진 포켓몬 센터를 복원하는 과정 속에서 낯설게 다가왔습니다. 이는 게임 속 세계관이 가진 과학적 상상력과 기술적 풍요로움을 새로운 관점에서 조명하게 만듭니다.

본문

Pokémon Pokopia features, of all things, a 3D printer. I wasn’t sure why this surprised me so much, given all the other high-tech gear in pretty much every Pokémon game. But I was not expecting to find, inside the once-crumbling Pokémon Center I’d just worked hard to restore, a kind of machine I’d never seen before. Pokopia made me look at Pokémon’s high-tech future in a whole new way Pokémon has always featured advanced technology, but I didn’t truly think about it until Pokopia. Pokémon has always featured advanced technology, but I didn’t truly think about it until Pokopia. Until Pokopia, I hadn’t spent much time thinking about tech in the Pokémon world. I’ve been Pokémon-pilled for so long that I took all its sci-fi technology for granted. Sure, there are magic PCs that can digitally store living creatures — that’s how it’s always been. Obviously fossils can be resurrected and obviously sometimes pokémon can travel through time. These are just facts. The power of science is amazing. Pokopia is different. In this world, humans are long gone, and pokémon are slowly repopulating the ruins left in their wake. Here, technology is not guaranteed to work. Climate change has led to widespread environmental disasters, and as a result, pokémon have been safely stored in PCs for some time. But a collectible journal entry reveals that the PC storage system can’t keep working without regular maintenance, and it seems that explains what’s been happening: The pokémon are showing up now because the storage system has finally failed. That fallibility made me pay closer attention to the technology in Pokopia — and see the high-tech world of Pokémon in a new light. There is still a lot of sci-fi and fantasy in Pokopia, in more than a few ways. (Least among them: The PC outside the dilapidated Pokémon Center, which is not for storing pokémon but for tracking your restoration efforts in the surrounding area, still works somehow.) But ordinary, real-life objects you can find throughout the world — lamps, TVs, vending machines, arcade cabinets — often need electricity to work, and more of it than electric-type pokémon can reasonably provide on their own. That means building some significant power infrastructure; magical Pokémon technology can only get you so far. You can’t take these kinds of devices for granted in Pokopia because using them takes real effort. As you work to rebuild the world, you have to create homes for pokémon to live in. Sometimes this just means growing a flowerbed, but in a lot of cases, you have to acquire “old” human technology and supply it with electricity in order to make a proper pokémon habitat. You might need to get power to a vending machine to fulfill a pokémon’s request, or power the lights in their house so they aren’t sitting sadly in the dark. To do this, you have to set up utility poles and enough power generators to supply all the electronics on your grid — and this takes time, resources, and planning. What happened to the humans is best left unspoiled, but suffice it to say that it’s very much science fiction. In that way, some things about Pokopia feel like a distant, apocalyptic future, and then you turn around and build a regular ol’ windmill to generate electricity. The Pokémon-specific fantasy elements are there, too, but exist alongside run-of-the-mill and even largely outdated tech. There’s a new version of Rotom — the pokémon that can occupy appliances to change its form — who has possessed a stereo and is a DJ, but you have to find physical compact discs so DJ Rotom can play music for you. The dichotomy between ordinary and futuristic tech makes Pokopia feel stuck out of time. How long has it been since the humans disappeared? How much time has passed since the events of the main series games? Why, in this world where you can put living beings into the computer, are we using CDs to play music? Caught between the sci-fi tech and the game’s normal everyday devices is the 3D printer. It’s in its own category: not purely contemporary, not a far-off evolution of real-life technology, but something almost within reach. Take out your Pokédex’s camera, toggle the setting for reference photos, and take a picture of basically any object; now you can use that photo and some rare materials to 3D print a copy of it. It’s more advanced than in real life, but it doesn’t take much imagination to get there. Pokémon gadgets have reflected real-life ones going back as far as the series does, but they’ve mainly been handhelds (and sometimes wearables) that fulfill menu functions and provide information. The original Pokédex is essentially a ’90s PDA with a pokémon database in it; Gold and Silver’s Pokégear is a sort of flip phone that can take calls and access the radio; Diamond and Pearl’s Pokétch is an early smartwatch with a ton of simple apps, including a calculator for some reason. The recent games’ Rotom phones, too, are pretty much just real-life smartphones, albeit possessed by a pokémon t

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