Spencer Kern/Sway
See, when the game first launched, Mojang - the Sweden-based game studio that created Minecraft, acquired by Microsoft for $2.5 billion in 2014 - tried to get all employees to unify and join up with Team Mystic, Pokémon Go's blue team.
But here in America, the Bellevue, Washington-based Minecraft team was more split. Some of them were willing to go along with the Swedes, while others wanted to go with the red Team Valor or the yellow Team Instinct.
Amid the chaos, though, came inspiration: Spencer Kern, an artist with the Minecraft team in Washington, found himself getting very into Pokémon Go.
"After spending hours running around my local park with a few hundred people I knew this was a special moment in gaming history," Kern writes on a Microsoft Sway presentation explaining his project.
In the original Pokémon games that Pokémon Go is based on, players can run to a handy Pokémon Center in each city to heal up their pocket monsters and get ready for the next battle. In Pokémon Go, the thing that gets hurt more than anything in your smartphone's battery, as the game chews up power like nothing else.
"I thought it would be fun to re-create a Pokémon Center from the main games and use it as a charging station for trainers to hang out and heal their power drained phones," Kern writes.
And so he did, building an awesome project that doubles as something of a social hub for Pokémon trainers in real life. Here's how.