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Advanced Building Techniques
April 4, 2026 at 10:50 AM
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This guide covers advanced building techniques discovered by the Pokemon Pokopia community. These go beyond the basics covered in the Building article and can save hours of work on large construction projects.
Hold the A button while placing blocks to continuously place them in a row without needing to press A for each individual block. This is dramatically faster for laying floors, walls, and roads.

Hold ZL to strafe while placing blocks. This locks Ditto's facing direction and lets you move side-to-side while placing, which is essential for precise wall construction. Combine A-hold with ZL-strafe to lay entire rows in seconds.
Use Mouse Mode (enabled in Settings) for the most precise control. The Nintendo Switch 2's Joy-Con acts as a pointing device, letting you target exact block positions. This is particularly useful for breaking specific blocks with Rock Smash without accidentally destroying neighboring blocks.
You can connect up to four Large Storage Boxes to a single Workbench. Place the storage boxes adjacent to or behind the workbench. When you open the crafting menu, you will have access to all materials stored in every connected box. This eliminates the need to transfer materials into your inventory before crafting.
To quickly move items between storage containers, use Rock Smash to break the storage box. All items inside will scatter on the ground. Then hold Y to vacuum everything up into your bag. This is much faster than transferring items one by one through menus.
For portable storage while exploring, have Gulpin follow you. Gulpin's Storage specialty gives you additional inventory slots that travel with you, so you do not need to return to a stationary chest mid-gathering trip.
Use Rollout for large-scale terrain clearing. It destroys blocks faster than Rock Smash and covers a wider area. It is the single best tool for terraforming.
To place blocks directly below your character (useful for stacking upward or escaping holes), look straight down and press A. See How to Place Blocks Below You for the full technique.
The Magnet Rise post-game transformation is the ultimate building tool. It allows free vertical flight and lets you place and absorb blocks from any angle, making elevated builds trivial.
Build a temporary support pillar, place a decorative item or furniture piece on top, then destroy the pillar blocks. The item will remain floating in midair. This works for security cameras, lights, signs, and most furniture.
Use Leafage on the side of a wall to grow vines. These vines are climbable and can be used as both decoration and functional ladders. Powered-up Leafage (from eating a Salad) creates different vine appearances including duckweed on water and moss on rocks.
Place your main workbench near Ditto's assigned house. Since you can fast-travel home from the pause menu at any time, this gives you instant access to crafting from anywhere on the island.
Houses in Pokopia follow these size rules:
Property | Value |
|---|---|
Minimum footprint | 2 blocks x 2 blocks |
Maximum footprint | 9 blocks x 10 blocks |
Minimum furniture inside | 3 pieces to register as a home |
Door required | Yes, at least one door block |
Roof required | No (but some Pokemon prefer roofed habitats) |
Some buildings take real-world time to construct (Pokemon with the Build specialty work on them over time). You can speed this up by going to your Nintendo Switch 2 Settings, disabling internet time synchronization, and manually advancing the clock forward. The game will think the required construction time has passed. Remember to re-enable internet sync afterward to avoid disrupting limited-time events.
Mouse Mode is one of the most useful features for precise building in Pokopia. It turns the Nintendo Switch 2's detached Joy-Con into a pointing device, giving you cursor-based control over block placement and destruction. While it is briefly mentioned above under Block Placement Shortcuts, this section covers Mouse Mode in full detail.
Open the in-game Settings menu and scroll down on the Game tab to the Mouse Mode section. Toggle it on. Then detach Joy-Con 2 (the right controller) from the console and lay it on a flat surface with the colored side facing down, as though you were holding a computer mouse. The game will automatically detect the orientation and display a cursor on screen.
You do not need to press any button to switch into Mouse Mode. Simply placing the Joy-Con flat on the surface activates it. Lifting the Joy-Con off the surface returns you to standard controls instantly.
Action | Button (Right Joy-Con) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
Destroy block | ZR | Uses Rock Smash on the targeted block |
Place block / furniture | R | Places the currently equipped item at the cursor position |
Move cursor | Slide Joy-Con on surface | Requires a flat, textured surface for reliable tracking |
Exit Mouse Mode | Lift Joy-Con off surface | Instantly reverts to standard controls |
If you prefer using the left Joy-Con as the mouse, the buttons swap accordingly: ZL destroys blocks and L places them.
Strengths: Mouse Mode lets you target and place blocks at a much greater range than standard controls. You can aim at specific blocks without physically moving Ditto next to them, which is invaluable when working on tall walls, ceilings, or intricate interior designs. Furniture placement is also significantly more accurate, since the cursor snaps to valid positions across the entire visible area.
Limitations: The only move available in Mouse Mode is Rock Smash. You cannot use Rollout, Leafage, Surf, Cut, or any other transformation while in Mouse Mode. If you need a different move, simply lift the Joy-Con off the surface to exit and then use the move normally.
Keep a small mouse pad or textured mat at your gaming setup. The Joy-Con's IR sensor tracks best on surfaces with some friction. Smooth glass or glossy tables can cause erratic cursor movement.
Mouse Mode is especially useful for breaking a single block in a tight cluster without accidentally destroying its neighbors. In standard mode, Rock Smash can clip adjacent blocks.
When decorating house interiors, switch to Mouse Mode to place furniture against far walls without needing to squeeze Ditto behind tables and chairs.
For large-scale terrain work, stick with standard controls and Rollout. Mouse Mode excels at precision, not speed.
The Rollout transformation (learned from Graveler) is the fastest way to reshape terrain across large areas. While the Terrain Manipulation section above introduces Rollout briefly, this section explains the full terraforming workflow.
Press ZR to transform Ditto into Graveler and begin rolling. While rolling, hold ZR to break any blocks you collide with. Rollout moves significantly faster than Ditto's default running speed, so you can clear wide stretches of land in a fraction of the time it would take using Rock Smash alone.
Rollout destroys standard terrain blocks on contact. For harder blocks like Copper, power up your Rock Smash first by consuming a Hamburger Steak. The powered-up state carries over to Rollout, letting you barrel through reinforced materials.
Cut trees first. Trees cannot be destroyed by Rollout or Rock Smash. If you remove the blocks underneath a tree with Rollout, the tree will float in midair and become much harder to reach with Cut. Always chop down trees before clearing the ground beneath them.
Roll in straight lines. Start at one edge of the area you want to flatten, hold ZR, and roll in a straight line to the opposite edge. Turn around and make another pass next to the first one. This methodical approach prevents patchy terrain.
Work from the top down. If you are flattening a hill or plateau, start by rolling across the highest layer and work your way down one level at a time.
Bring PP recovery items. Rollout consumes PP while active. Stock up on Leppa Berries and Carrots before starting a large project. Hold A while holding food to continuously restore PP without interrupting your workflow.
Rocky Ridges is where Rollout is most impactful. The entire area is covered with scattered boulders and uneven stone blocks. Rolling through them quickly opens up flat building plots. Bleak Beach and the Withered Wasteland also benefit from Rollout clearing, though the terrain there is more sparse.
Magnet Rise is the final Ditto transformation and the single most powerful building tool in the game. Unlocked during the post-game, it transforms Ditto into Magnemite and essentially grants a creative-mode flight ability with enhanced block manipulation.
After completing the main story and watching the credits, load back into the world. A Magnemite will appear in the hole where the mysterious tower used to stand in the Withered Wasteland. Speak to Magnemite and it will ask you to build a Factory Storage habitat.
The Factory Storage habitat requires a Streetlight, a Metal Drum, a Jumbled Cord, and a Control Unit. Two of these items (the Metal Drum and Jumbled Cords) are already available on the same floor as Magnemite, making the quest relatively quick to complete. Build the habitat anywhere in the Withered Wasteland, then report back to Magnemite to learn Magnet Rise.
Material | Quantity | Where to Find |
|---|---|---|
Streetlight | 1 | Craft at a Workbench or find in Sparkling Skylands |
Metal Drum | 1 | Same floor as Magnemite in the tower ruins |
Jumbled Cord | 1 | Same floor as Magnemite in the tower ruins |
Control Unit | 1 | Craft at a Workbench (requires Copper Ingot, Glass, Iron Ingot) |
Action | Button | Description |
|---|---|---|
Activate Magnet Rise | ZR | Transform into Magnemite and begin hovering |
Fly upward | B (Jump) | Hold to ascend; release to hover in place |
Fly downward | L | Hold to descend |
Move horizontally | Left Stick | Full omnidirectional movement while hovering |
Place blocks (3x3x1) | A | Spits out a 3x3 layer of terrain blocks in front of you |
Replace blocks (3x3x1) | Y | Swaps existing terrain blocks for a different material |
Zap (break blocks) | ZR (while hovering) | Instantly destroys terrain blocks; materials are auto-collected |
Deactivate | ZR (on ground) | Return to normal Ditto form |
Free vertical flight. Unlike every other transformation, Magnet Rise lets you hover at any altitude and move in all directions. This makes building rooftops, bridges, towers, and elevated platforms trivial. There is no need to stack blocks under your feet to reach high places.
3x3x1 block placement. Instead of placing one block at a time, Magnet Rise places blocks in a 3x3 slab. This is nine times faster for laying floors, filling walls, and building large flat surfaces.
Instant Zap destruction. The Zap ability destroys blocks instantly without the repeated-hit animation of Rock Smash. Dropped materials are automatically collected, so you do not need to vacuum them up separately.
Block absorption. Magnet Rise allows Ditto to absorb certain blocks and materials that cannot be picked up in any other form. This opens up new crafting and decoration possibilities.
Block replacement. The Replace function lets you swap existing terrain for a different block type without destroying and rebuilding. This is perfect for changing a stone wall to brick or a dirt floor to concrete without altering the structure.
Task | Best Tool | Why |
|---|---|---|
Precise single-block placement | Cursor targeting is more accurate for individual blocks | |
Clearing large flat areas | Faster ground-level traversal for horizontal clearing | |
Building tall structures | Free flight removes the need for scaffolding | |
Placing furniture indoors | Cursor control is better in tight spaces | |
Reshaping terrain at elevation | Hover to the exact height and Zap or place 3x3 slabs | |
Decorating exterior walls | Fly alongside walls to place decorations at any height | |
Breaking one block in a cluster | Precision cursor avoids collateral damage |
The most efficient builders in Pokopia switch between tools constantly. Here is a typical workflow for constructing a large multi-story building from scratch:
Step 1: Clear the site with Rollout. Use Cut to remove any trees, then transform into Graveler and roll across the plot to flatten it.
Step 2: Lay the foundation with Magnet Rise. Fly up and place 3x3 slabs to quickly create the floor footprint. Use Replace to swap terrain blocks for your chosen material.
Step 3: Build walls with A-hold strafing. Drop back to Ditto form, hold A and ZL, and strafe along each wall line to lay blocks in continuous rows.
Step 4: Add the roof with Magnet Rise. Fly above the walls and place 3x3 roof slabs. Fine-tune edges by switching to single-block placement.
Step 5: Furnish with Mouse Mode. Detach the Joy-Con, lay it flat, and use the cursor to place furniture, lights, and decorations with pixel-perfect accuracy.
Step 6: Final touches with Leafage and paint. Grow vines on exterior walls for decoration, then apply Paint to customize block colors.