Close Menu
  • Gaming
    • Game Guides
    • Codes
    • Game News
    • Game Previews
    • Game Reviews
    • Game Features
    • Game Lists
    • Platforms
      • Nintendo
      • PC
      • PlayStation
      • Xbox
      • Mobile
  • Entertainment
    • Movies
    • Movie Features
    • Movie Reviews
    • TV
    • Reality TV
    • Royals
  • Celebrity
  • Human Interest
  • Astrology
  • Videos
  • More
    • Anime
    • Lists
    • Podcasts
    • Reviews
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn YouTube
  • About Us
  • Join Our Team
  • Meet the Team
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Use
  • Sitemap
  • Editorial Guidelines
  • Advertising Policy
The Nerd Stash
  • Gaming
  • Celebrity
  • Human Interest
  • Videos
The Nerd Stash
Home»Game Features»Turns Out Playing Pokemon As A Kid Really Did Rot Your Brain

Turns Out Playing Pokemon As A Kid Really Did Rot Your Brain

Scientists say your parents might have been right about this one.

Taylor CoffmanBy Taylor CoffmanJanuary 26, 20244 Mins Read
Scientists from Stanford show that playing Pokemon as a kid might've altered your brain.
Image source: Pokemon via The Nerd Stash
This article is over 1 years old and may contain outdated information.

Anyone who played video games as a kid is intimately familiar with the lecture they got from any adult within earshot on how much time they spent sitting in front of a screen. Everyone’s got at least one adult in their life convinced thatĀ video gamesĀ would rot kids’ brains, turning them into lazy, ultra-violent couch potatoes who spend their days eating greasy potato chips and guzzling teeth-rotting sodas. It’s an easy argument to brush off as you grow into an adult, but a new scientific study into theĀ PokemonĀ games has posed a truly terrifying question: What if those adults wereĀ right?

Here’s How Playing Pokemon As A Kid Might’ve Altered Your Brain

How playing Pokemon as a kid affected your brain.
Image source: Pokemon via The Nerd Stash

Scientists at Stanford University are usually busy with big, world-changing experiments that don’t tend to make headlines. However, they recently published a new study where a collection of people who spent their childhoods playingĀ PokemonĀ were put through a variety of brain scans. It turns out that spending your formative years with theĀ early-genĀ games might have led to some pretty interesting changes in how your brain works.

Related:

PokƩmon Concierge Is Perfect for a Specific Type of Fan

Published in Nature magazine, the new study – conducted by Jesse Gomez, Michael Barnett, and Kalanit Grill-Spector from Stanford’s psychology and neurosciences departments – set out to see if there was a neurological difference between experienced Pokemon players and complete newbies. Researchers took 22 participants, aged 18 to 44, and split them into two groups. Half were self-reported as experienced Pokemon Trainers, and the other half were novice players. The experienced players were all met with the same three criteria:

  • They had started playing Pokemon between the ages of 5 and 8 on the original GameBoy.
  • They had continued playing the Pokemon franchise throughout their childhood.
  • They had either continued playing Pokemon into adulthood or revisited the games at least once.

The novice group, by contrast, was made up of participants “who had never played aĀ PokemonĀ game and had little to no interaction withĀ PokemonĀ otherwise.” The aim of the study was to see if, becauseĀ PokemonĀ is pretty unique-looking and featured heavily on small, pixelated screens in the early days, earlyĀ PokemonĀ players had some kind of special ability to recognize Pokemon when presented with a collection of similar, non-Pokemon characters. And it turned out they did.

Related:

While Pals of Palworld Have No “Rights,” Pokemon Do: The Pokemon Company Ready To Take Legal Action of Possible IP Infringement

But How Did They Test It?

A new study tests Pokemon player's brains.
Image source: Pokemon via The Nerd Stash

In order to get a peek inside the brains of the study’s participants, Stanford’s researchers put both theĀ PokemonĀ veterans and the novices through a series of MRI tests. As part of the tests, the participants were presented with pictures of a Pokemon, an animal, a non-PokemonĀ cartoon, a human face, a human body, a word, a car, and a randomly selected corridor. All of the images were scrambled, like something you’d see in a CAPTCHA test, and the participants were asked to pick the Pokemon from the bunch.

To no one’s surprise, the experienced player group was much better than the novices at recognizing Pokemon over non-Pokemon, but the surprising part of the test came when the MRI results revealed that a specific area of the Pokemon game veterans’ brains lit up whenever they recognized a Pokemon sprite.

Related:

Ranking Every New Indigo Disk Pokemon (Scarlet & Violet DLC)

As for why the brain reacts the way it does when recognizing Pokemon – that’s the next question for researchers to answer. According to the results, though, the study has put forward the theory that “early childhood visual experience” – aka, looking at Pokemon as a kid – shapes the part of the brain that receives a visual stimulus and plays a hand in determining why your brain is organized the way it is when you’re an adult.

These new Pokemon-related findings mean that scientists could use this data to develop a new way to map how your brain responds to the things you see. This could help deal with things like dyslexia and face blindness, conditions caused by a roadblock in the path between your brain and your eyes.

Related:

Designer Pokemon: Pokemon x Fendi Team Up For A Collab

So, to all the adults who warned their kids about this – yes, maybe playing Pokemon did rot our brains. But maybe – just maybe – it’s for the better.

Related Topics
Nintendo Pokemon
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Reddit Email
Taylor Coffman
  • Website

My name is Taylor Coffman, and I'm a writer and creative at heart - I graduated college with a degree in creative writing, and for as long as I can remember, I've loved all sorts of nerdy pursuits - superheroes, comic books, Dungeons & Dragons - you name it, I've done it. I enjoy staying up-to-date on the latest news about new season releases, upcoming movies, and new game releases.

SUGGESTED READS

Dying Light The Beast Franchise Update 2025
Game News

The Whole Dying Light Franchise Is Preparing to Welcome ‘The Beast’ Into the Fray

Path of Exile 2 The Third Edict Update
Features

Path of Exile 2: The Third Edict Brings Act 4, a Support Gem Rework, and More

Cronos: The New Dawn Into the Factory Gameplay
Game News

Cronos: The New Dawn Latest Trailer Is Packed With Top-Notch Survival Horror Atmosphere

Genshin Impact Flins Teaser
Game News

Genshin Impact Just Gave Us a Glimpse of One of Nod-Krai’s New Characters During Gamescom 2025

LEGO Voyagers Hands-On Preview
Features

LEGO Voyagers Hands-On Preview – Teamwork Makes the LEGO Dream Work

Gamescom 2025 Opening Night Live Announcements
Features

Biggest Gamescom Opening Night Live 2025 Announcements

Trending
A Tennessee teacher tells an embarrassing story.

Tennessee Teacher Hands Out Wrong QR Code for Classroom Wishlist ‘But it definitely could have been worse’

A picture of the Florida Karen couple.

Black Florida Woman Kicked Out of Movie Theater After White Karen Couple Tries Hitting Her With Umbrella: ā€˜I Am So Exhausted’

Brave California Woman Traded Her Fiance For Independence After Catching Him Using Three Apps to Cheat ‘I’ll be okay alone’

A picture of the Ohio squatter.

Ohio Homeowner Refuses to Pay Squatters $15,000 and Gets House Back After Arrest: ā€˜Get All the Locks Changed’

The Nerd Stash
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
  • About Us
  • Join Our Team
  • Meet the Team
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Use
  • Sitemap
  • Editorial Guidelines
  • Advertising Policy
© 2025 The Nerd Stash. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.