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Lore and Backstory
April 4, 2026 at 10:50 AM
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Pokemon Pokopia is set in a post-apocalyptic version of the Kanto region where no humans remain. The game's lore is told through Human Records and Emotes, data logs in abandoned buildings, and conversations with Pokemon NPCs. Piecing together these fragments reveals a tragic story of environmental catastrophe, desperate evacuation, and the Pokemon left behind.
A series of cataclysmic events dramatically altered the Kanto region's environment and atmosphere. The exact cause is never stated outright, but the effects are visible across every region of the game:

Region | Former Location | What Happened |
|---|---|---|
Fuchsia City | Dried out completely; all vegetation withered from lack of rain | |
Vermilion City | Plunged into perpetual darkness; the port city flooded and crumbled | |
Pewter City / Mt. Moon | Buried under volcanic ash and lava flows | |
Celadon / Saffron Cities | Ripped from the ground and now float among the clouds |
The disasters appear to involve droughts, hurricanes, volcanic eruptions, and seismic upheaval. Some lore fragments suggest the involvement of Legendary Pokemon like Kyogre and Mewtwo, though the exact triggers remain ambiguous.
Facing an uninhabitable world, humanity built rockets to escape into space. In a darkly ironic twist, it was Team Rocket, true to their name, who built the rockets that carried humanity off Earth. The evacuation was selective: apart from a select few, no Pokemon were taken on the trip.
Hidden lore pages scattered throughout Pokopia strongly suggest that humanity's escape was a one-way trip. There was not enough fuel for a return journey. Professor Tangrowth repeatedly expresses his hope that humans will return someday, but they never do.
Before leaving, humanity stored their Pokemon in a massive digital system, a giant PC Box as part of the Pokemon Conservation Project. Data logs found in the ruins of Silph Co. headquarters in Sparkling Skylands describe this system in detail. The project included a failsafe: if humans did not return after an extended period, the Pokemon would be automatically released into habitable areas. This is the current state of the game world when the player begins.
The player character is a Ditto that has been sleeping for an unknown period. Unlike ordinary Ditto, it possesses the unique ability to maintain a stable human form. The game implies that Ditto is imitating the appearance of its original trainer, the human who left it behind during the evacuation. This connection is reinforced during the ending credits, when the trainer appears to receive the rocket Ditto sends into space.
The game never specifies how long ago humanity left for space. The level of decay across the four regions suggests it has been a very long time. Buildings have crumbled, vegetation has either died or overgrown, and the Pokemon have built their own society in the absence of humans.
Several Pokemon in the game have unexpectedly sad backstories hidden in their Pokedex entries and dialogue:
Pokemon | Lore Detail |
|---|---|
Used all her electricity to heal sick Pokemon friends, permanently draining her own energy. Her normally yellow fur turned ghostly white from the sacrifice. | |
Tried to sleep off depression after losing a fight, but accidentally slept through the entire apocalypse. Woke up covered in moss and vines. | |
Waited faithfully for humans to return, maintaining the hope that they would come back despite all evidence suggesting the trip was one-way. |
The game contains numerous references to the original Kanto games. In the ruins of Vermilion City at Bleak Beach, a note reveals that a man named Kenzo completed construction of a building with the help of a Machamp. This solves a three-decade-old mystery from Pokemon Red and Blue, where an NPC in Vermilion City was perpetually building a house with a Machop. The note confirms he finished the building after his Machop evolved.
There is also a hidden reference to the next generation of Pokemon games, tentatively called Pokemon Winds and Pokemon Waves, which can be found early in the game.
Each of Pokopia's five biomes maps to a recognizable location from the original Kanto region. Environmental details, building ruins, and NPC references confirm the connections:
Pokopia Biome | Original Kanto Location | Key Evidence |
|---|---|---|
Fuchsia City | Starting area; drought-stricken terrain with earthquake damage; Team R building/lighthouse on the coast | |
Vermilion City | Coastal region with the wrecked S.S. Anne remains visible offshore; a note about Kenzo completing a building with Machamp | |
Pewter City | Mountain valley consumed by volcanic ash; Pewter Museum embedded in the volcano; intact mines | |
Celadon City / Saffron City | Floating islands with ruins of the Celadon Department Store; Mewtwo encounter on the rooftop | |
Pallet Town | Three vacant islands accessible via the remains of Cycling Road; free-form sandbox zone |
Many smaller details reinforce these connections. In Bleak Beach, a note reveals that "Kenzo" completed his building with the help of a Machamp, finally resolving a running joke from the original Pokemon Red and Blue: an NPC in Vermilion City was perpetually constructing a house with a Machop. The Celadon Department Store in Sparkling Skylands can be rebuilt through Tinkmaster's multi-phase questline, and Mewtwo's rooftop encounter mirrors the original games' developer room placement.
Scattered throughout the game world are collectible Human Records left behind by the departed humans. These text entries paint a picture of the final days before the evacuation: personal diaries, official memos from the Pokemon Conservation Project, and journal entries from a "Team R" operative stationed in the lighthouse at Withered Wasteland. The lighthouse journals suggest that Team Rocket had advance knowledge of the evacuation and attempted to exploit the chaos for their own purposes.
Other hidden lore pages imply that the evacuation to space was a one-way trip. References to "insufficient fuel for a return voyage" and "no word from the colony" lend the game's bright, hopeful tone a bittersweet undercurrent. Whether the rocket launched during the ending sequence actually reaches the colony or delivers a signal is left ambiguous.