Nintendo's Pokémon Presents broadcast introduced a series of exciting releases for fans of the franchise,forced sex at home videos including an expansion for Pokémon Sword and Shieldand an upcoming new Pokémon Snapfor the Nintendo Switch. Among these larger announcements was the reveal for Pokémon Smile, an AR game for mobile in which "children can brush their teeth to rescue Pokémon that have been captured by cavity-causing bacteria."
Since I have not played Sword, Shield, or Pokémon Snapbefore, I figured I'd help the games team at Mashable by reviewing Pokémon Smile, which launched on iOS and the Google Play shortly after the Nintendo broadcast.
Also, it was past 10AM and I had a late start in the morning, so I think I was the only team member who hadn't brushed my teeth yet. The circumstances were perfect, even if my morning routine was not.
I have to admit I approached Pokémon Smilewith some condescension. I grew up in the '90s and currently own a Quip, so I think I know how to catch a Pokémon and brush my teeth, thank you very much. Even though I’d never attempted to do those two things at the same time, I was sure I wouldn’t experience any issues with Nintendo’s little tooth game.
When opening Pokémon Smile, the app asked for the kind of location and demographic information that I’m used to surrendering whenever I download something on my phone — my country of origin, date of birth, and gender identity (Pokémon Smileoffers “not listed” and “no response” in addition to boy/girl for gender categories). It also asked me to select a starter Pokémon. Once I admitted I was a 28-year-old female in the United States who would like one (1) Pikachu, please, I was ready to get brushing.
The main game of Pokémon Smileinvolves following a series of onscreen visual prompts that correspond with sections of a human mouth, presumed to be the user’s. The game tracks brush movements with the front-facing camera to see if players are moving the brush in the right areas and rewards them with the dissipation of purple clouds identified as “cavity-causing bacteria.”
Somewhere in that bacteria is a Pokémon, trapped. The imperative is to free it. (How the Pokémon got inside my mouth is a mystery the game does not explain and still haunts me hours later).
The mouth model in the game provided text-free instruction for where to move the toothbrush by highlighting sections of teeth. My Pikachu was also there, standing in my illustrated mouth to zap away bacteria as I followed the prompts. I could see my own face in the app through my front-facing camera, and was delighted to see that through no initiative of my own I was wearing an augmented reality Pikachu hat. Pokémon Smilecounted down from five...and the game began.
SEE ALSO: 'Pokémon Snap' makes its triumphant return on Nintendo Switch“Brush the front of the middlemost section,” Pokémon Smilecommanded. "Now brush the back teeth on the left side. Get on top of those right molars. Scrub, baby, scrub!” In addition to the highlighted tooth section prompts, the game constantly encouraged me to “brush faster,” leading to intense toothpaste buildup and the suspicion that I had been cleaning my teeth too slowly for my entire life.
How the Pokémon got inside my mouth is a mystery the game does not explain and haunts me hours later.
Between the purple bacteria clouds manifesting at a rapid rate and the “brush faster” prompts, I quickly fell behind the game’s rhythm. My phone camera, propped on a windowsill, lost track of my face when I stood up straight and my Pikachu hat blipped out of existence when I tried to find the right spot for optimal face-to-phone interaction. Foam dribbled down my chin as I hunched towards the window, but I dared not lean away to spit into my sink — there was a Pokémon somewhere in my mouth and I was going to catch it even if it meant a mess.
Finally, after the longest 120 seconds of my life, Pokémon Smilereleased me. I lunged sideways to spit and almost missed the final Pokémon Go–style swipe to toss a Poké Ball at the mouth monster. I tossed the ball, certain that I’d get some reward for my struggle, and...did not catch the Pokémon. I don’t even know what it was supposed to be. I’ll never know what it was supposed to be, and yet the logic of the game demands that I accept it had been living between my teeth for quite some time. Who were you, little one? Should I use a Master Ball next time? These are questions doomed to go unanswered.
Then, Pokémon Smilepulled its final trick. It awarded me a sticker for my first tooth-brushing adventure and revealed that it had surreptitiously taken four pictures of me while I brushed. The pictures, which will never see the light of day, were horrible. I understand that this app is meant for children to learn proper oral hygiene, but the image of my stressed out, hunched over face dead-eyeing my phone camera with toothpaste all over my face gave me knowledge no adult needs to know about themselves. I looked repulsivein those pictures, like a dead-eyed, Pikachu-hat-wearing rabies patient foaming at the mouth.
The image below is not one of those four pictures, but I'd be remiss as a reviewer to neglect a gameplay image just because I'm hideous. Click if you must, but I will take it personally.
Luckily, the game gave me the option to decline the pictures and directed me to a setting that turned off the auto-capture feature. Of course, I would only have to use that feature if I intended to use Pokémon Smileto brush my teeth again, so mark my words: I absolutely will.
What? My teeth feel cleaner then the day they grew and I want to see if next time I can catch the Pokémon. It’s not like I can see a dentist these days. Pikachu and I have work to do.
Pokémon Smile is available now for iOS and Android.
Topics Gaming Pokemon Small Humans
Ryan Lochte would really like to put his poor life decisions behind himNBC just announced 'Will & Grace' is coming back, and we're screamingEveryone's favourite 'Simpsons' boss Hank Scorpio gets a punk theme songMan posts incredibly dumb maths 'problem' and Twitter descends into chaosHere's what Obama plans to do after he leaves the White HouseBride fulfils her dream by cruising to her wedding in a tractorNASA orbiter saw something astonishing peek through Martian cloudsYup, bartenders are putting ants in your cocktailsNearly 70% of Americans would like @realDonaldTrump to please stop tweetingTurns out that Donald Trump doesn't really like TwitterNearly 70% of Americans would like @realDonaldTrump to please stop tweetingMum's blog about autism is challenging perceptions one post at a timeBritain has a courgette shortage and people are losing their damn mindsTrump's EPA nominee spars with Bernie Sanders over climate changeAshley Judd refuses to be bullied by online abuse in this defiant speechVengeful girl used the plot of 'Finding Nemo' to prank a Tinder matchHaunting images and footage show devastation of Italian avalanchePresident Obama is peak dad in White House snow day photosVirtual march helps people with disabilities join the Women's March on WashingtonCops carry a pregnant woman to the hospital after walking 6 miles in snow, win hearts 'The Happytime Murders' review roundup: Critics think it's a mess Russia's biggest gun maker thinks its electric car can take on Tesla It's time we all accept it: Netflix is a meme account now How the Internet ruined this viral story about an Uber's driver's good deed 6 problems with the foster care system Donald Trump criticizes, praises Saddam Hussein in the same breath You know you love Windows 95, and now it's an app Store immediately regrets asking customer to back up faulty carrot claim Photos of Hurricane Lane from space show the storm's extreme size 'To All The Boys I've Loved Before' inspires Twitter to share love letters The Chinese billionaire who wants to out Daniel Radcliffe's friendly dead corpse gets the Photoshop treatment People queued up at a food truck while stuck in traffic in Los Angeles 'Ice Cream Books' is your delicious Instagram for summer reading Pink stopped her concert to comfort a grieving fan and it was heartwarming 'Leaked' LG V40 press renders are probably fake Catch a discounted ride to the polls Someone just attempted to hack the DNC's voter database FBI director says no charges for Clinton, but blasts her email security 8 Snapchat pranks you can pull off from the comfort of your phone
0.8594s , 10547.59375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【forced sex at home videos】,Wisdom Convergence Information Network