Peruvian Pokémon Go players are pumping money into the motorcycle taxi business

  • Pokémon Go, the trendy mobile game that sent Nintendo's stock values on a rollercoaster ride lately, is pumping money into another industry in the Peruvian Amazon: Motorcycle taxi drivers in Iquitos, the capital city of the Loreto region, have seen a spike in demand, as the game's players hire drivers to move around town more efficiently. For eight to twelve soles (between $2.50 and $3.60) an hour, a Pokémon hunter can hire a typical three-wheel ride to drive them around the streets of Iquitos, so they can catch the elusive virtual creatures.

    In a text republished by several different media outlets, a driver named Luis López explained how the Association of Motor Taxi Drivers of Iquitos has embraced the trend:

    "We provide the service and the user, with their mobile phone, asks us to drive around Iquitos downtown, where most Pokémons and pokéstops are located. The rarest Pokémons are found in avenues outside downtown, though, so we drive without distractions while the user catches them."

    López also said the association is working in coordination with the police to avoid traffic collisions, and pointed out that some younger players have risked their lives while playing, out of eagerness for the game. Police have also stepped up patrolling efforts to protect players from mobile-phone thieves.


    Unfortunately, despite these efforts, the city has seen an increase in traffic collisions. The
    Pro & Contra magazine reports:

    "In the past few hours, the number of Pokémon-Go-related traffic collisions in the city has increased, according to Iquitos police. General of Peruvian National Police of the East, Julio Mercado, said that pedestrians playing [the game] are constantly distracted in the roads full of vehicles.
    Also, many users become involved in accidents while driving motorcycles to catch the creatures and others have become targets for wrongdoers who take their mobile phones."

    Drivers aren't limiting themselves to motorcycle taxis, however, and some services are making boats available to players who want to find Pokémon on the Amazon river.


    Iquitos, incidentally, isn't the only city offering Pokémon-Go-related services. In Fortaleza, the Brazilian state capital of Ceará, there are similar reports of motorcycle taxi drivers earning extra money thanks to the search for Pokémons.


    Thirty-two-year-old driver Denis Paz, for instance, used
    Facebook to announce that he is making his vehicle available to “Pokemaniacs,” so they can visit various spots around the city. Ceará News reported:

    "According to an interview with [the Paulista news outlet] Estado, in only 24 hours [Denis] got over 50 requests to reserve 'tours' all around the city. 'At first, I'd like to charge R$25 (about $7.80 in US dollars) per hour,' he noted. 'I think this can be a promising business.' "

    It remains to been seen if these are isolated cases when it comes to Pokémon Go boosting local transport markets, or perhaps this is a sign of things to come elsewhere, as the Japanese game and augmented reality in general grow more mainstream.


    This article was first published by Global Voices. You can find the original article here (English & Spanish).


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