Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

Has science gone too far? ‘Pokémon: Let’s Go’ lets you give Eevee bangs

Add as a preferred source on Google
Explore the World of Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee!

Technological advances have, in general, led to better video games over the years, and the horsepower of the Nintendo Switch allows it to run Pokémon: Let’s Go, Pikachu!, and Pokémon: Let’s Go, Eevee! with plenty of detail, but Game Freak may have gone too far this time. If you’ve ever wanted to give Eevee some bangs, now is your chance.

Recommended Videos

The Pokémon Company released a new trailer for Let’s Go on Thursday, July 12, showing off the vibrant and colorful Kanto region you’ll be able to explore either alone or with a friend. As you travel, you’ll be able to bond with your partner Pokémon — Eevee or Pikachu, depending on the version you’re playing. Activities you can do include petting their heads, customizing their clothes, and yes, changing their hair.

The trailer shows a few different available hairdos for the little monsters, and they’re all terrifying. Want a little bit of fluff, like your Pikachu is a sheep? You’re covered. Want Eevee to look like her mom cut her hair with a bowl? You are, unfortunately, also covered.

You won’t have to travel on foot at all times during your adventures. The video also shows off a few faster riding options, including flying on the back of a Charizard and sailing the sea on a Lapras. You’ll spot several familiar human faces, as well, including Professor Oak, your rival, and gym leaders like Brock and Misty. In battles against other trainers, the effects for special attacks are much more impressive than they were on older Game Boy, DS, and 3DS games. Pikachu, for instance, calls a bolt of lightning down from a cloud high above the battlefield, blasting Eevee in a blitz of electricity.

Pokémon: Let’s Go offers a mix of the classic adventure gameplay from more traditional Pokémon games with the simple catching mechanics of Pokémon Go on mobile devices. It will support connectivity with the mobile game, as well as both local and online Pokémon trading.

Pokémon: Let’s Go, Pikachu! and Pokémon: Let’s Go, Eevee! will both be available exclusively for Nintendo Switch on November 16, alongside the optional Poké Ball Plus accessory controller.

Gabe Gurwin
Gabe Gurwin has been playing games since 1997, beginning with the N64 and the Super Nintendo. He began his journalism career…
MSI’s Triple Mode OLED monitor is a Computex showstopper and my eyes genuinely can’t wait for it
MSI's Triple Mode OLED raises the bar for gaming monitors at Computex 2026.
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

Dual-mode gaming monitors have been around long enough that the novelty has worn off. MSI has decided that two modes simply aren't enough and has unveiled the MPG OLED 322URDX36 ahead of Computex 2026.

It is the world's first Triple Mode gaming monitor, and if the execution is as good as it sounds, it could be one of the few gaming monitors that I’d be genuinely interested in. 

Read more
PS4 and Xbox One players are getting booted from Call of Duty: Warzone soon
Existing PS4 and Xbox One players can access Warzone until Black Ops 7 Season 06 ends
Call of Duty video game

Call of Duty players on previous-generation consoles can’t seem to catch a break. First, Activision announced that the next Call of Duty, which we now know is Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 4, will not be released on PS4 and Xbox One. Now, the company is also taking Call of Duty: Warzone away from both older consoles.

The publisher has confirmed that Warzone support on PS4 and Xbox One will be reduced in stages before ending later this year. The first step begins on June 4, when Warzone will be removed from the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One digital storefronts. After that, new downloads will no longer be available on either platform.

Read more
Intel reveals Arc G-series processors, hoping it will power your next Windows 11 gaming handheld
Acer, MSI, and OneXPlayer are already lining up for Arc G-series chips
Intel Arc G series logo

After years of going head-to-head with AMD for PC gaming supremacy, Intel now appears determined to challenge Team Red’s dominance in the Windows 11 gaming handheld market.

The company has just unveiled the Intel Arc G3 and Arc G3 Extreme processors, both based on the Panther Lake architecture used in Intel Core Ultra Series 3. Intel says the chips are tuned for handhelds, with 2 performance cores, 8 efficiency cores, 4 low-power efficiency cores, and graphics based on its latest Xe3 architecture. The top configuration uses Intel Arc B390 graphics, with support for real-time ray tracing, XeSS 3, Multi-Frame Generation, Xe Low Latency, and AI-based upscaling.

Read more