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Pokemon Champions Release Date: When Does the New Competitive Standard Come Out?

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Why This Matters

Pokemon Champions introduces a unified competitive format for the Pokemon series, emphasizing the importance of team-building and online play for both casual and professional players. Its integration with Pokemon Home and the new free-to-play model highlight ongoing shifts toward accessible, cloud-based gaming experiences in the industry.

Key Takeaways

Pokemon Champions, the competitive pocket monster-battling spin-off game announced during the Pokemon Day 2025 livestream, will be released on the Nintendo Switch and Switch 2 on April 8.

Champions is completely free to play, but it will be launched alongside an optional paid starter pack bundle. This pack includes extra in-game Pokemon storage, a special battle song and additional in-game currency to recruit Pokemon for battle.

The latest Pokemon game unifies professional-level play under a single battling format, which will be used for the 2026 Pokemon World Championships in August. While a whole host of battling mechanics from past games like Z-Moves and Terastallization haven't been shown off in any of the promotional materials, Mega Pokemon will be available in Pokemon Champions as soon as the game is released.

We've known for a while that Pokemon Champions will largely use Pokemon Home for teambuilding. Pokemon Home is a subscription service that stores Pokemon in the cloud and allows them to be transferred in and out of multiple games, including Pokemon Go, Pokemon Sword and Shield, Pokemon Scarlet and Violet and Pokemon Legends: Z-A.

The Pokemon Company's helpful graphic explains the confusing process of moving Pokemon from one game to another -- some Pokemon can leave a game, but can't return to it afterwards. Nintendo/The Pokemon Company

What we didn't know is how players without a Pokemon Home subscription would build their teams -- and frankly, it looks like a bit of a mess. Free-to-play users will be limited to unlocking one new Pokemon a day from a random pool of available pocket monsters.

These Pokemon can be used for a week before they disappear from the player's account. It'll take six days to build a whole team, and by the time a player does so, their first party member will nearly be rotated out. What a hassle.

On the upside, scoring wins against online opponents will reward players with a currency that allows them to unlock multiple Pokemon in a single day -- and even keep them permanently. Hopefully, this currency is plentiful enough that Pokemon Home doesn't feel like a requirement to engage with competitive Pokemon battling in the future.

The same currency that is used to permanently recruit a Pokemon is what players need in order to change move sets and alter base stat distributions. That will almost certainly become a pain in the neck to manage. Nintendo/The Pokemon Company

One of the most exciting parts of the impending release of Pokemon Champions will be seeing how the new Pokemon Legends: Z-A Mega Evolutions fare in classic turn-based Pokemon combat. Legends: Z-A launched with a real-time battle system that pared down complex parts of Pokemon battling in order to create more fluid fights. When these Mega Pokemon come to Pokemon Champions, they'll receive new abilities that could completely change high-level play.

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