Tony Nicklow started seeing people walk into his diner last week absorbed in their phones — and then walk out.
Not being technically savvy, Nicklow said it took him awhile to learn the Pokémon Go craze had reached his business. The mobile game made Tony's Diner in Dinkytown a place where players could stock up on "ammunition" to battle and capture its animated monsters.
Across the Twin Cities just as around much of the country, businesses have been unwittingly roped into the game, which has attracted millions of players by uniting a made-up world with the real one. Many businesses are trying to figure out how to capitalize on the phenomenon, only to be uncertain whether they can.
"It's bringing people into the restaurant," Nicklow said. But he added, "I don't know if a lot of people are actually coming in to eat or get anything."
After debuting two weeks ago, Pokémon Go has quickly become a business and cultural phenomenon. According to SurveyMonkey data, just under 26 million Americans were estimated to have played the game last Thursday on Android and Apple phones.
In the game, Pokéstops are set up outside local landmarks, typically historic buildings and parks, for players to pick up digital ammunition and other accessories for the game. And "gyms" are places where players can "battle" other players for points. One of them is outside the Black Dog Coffee and Wine Bar near 4th Street E. and N. Broadway Street in St. Paul.
"I've definitely noticed people outside playing Pokémon," Sara Remke, the shop's owner, said. But that action hasn't led to a direct increase in foot traffic or sales inside the shop.
Best Buy Co. — one of the nation's largest sellers of smartphones and video games — welcomed more than 60 players to its corporate headquarters in Richfield last week to hunt for Pokémon and visit its two Pokéstops and gym.