December 19, 2024

Club Week: Pokémon Club offers fun console, card gaming opportunities

In the first installment of the TNJN Club Appreciation Week, TNJN Social Media Director Drew LaFasto profiles the UT Pokémon Club.

Club Week: Pokémon Club offers fun console, card gaming opportunities
Galon Greer, left, battles Tanner Biederman in Pokémon Alpha and Omega.

Many would assume no one’s around on a Monday night at 5 p.m. in the Humanities building, but if you look through the slit glass of the door to Room 57, you can see a group of 20 to 30 people.

Some are playing Pokémon on their Nintendo 3DS consoles asking about whether or not someone has a perfectly bred Ditto that they can borrow. While on the other side, some gather to battle with their Pokémon cards.

This is the Pokémon Club at the University of Tennessee hosted by Rewarded Play. Everyone wants to trade. Everyone wants to battle. Whether or not it’s through the 3DS games or the card games, anyone, at any level of experience, can come.

Tanner Biederman has been the president of the Pokémon club for the past two and a half years.

“It started out really small,” Biederman said. “I just made some flyers, found an empty room in HSS and claimed it as my own for Pokémon Club.”

The Pokémon Club became an official club last year, although students have been coming for the past two and a half years for movie showings, Pokémon battles and pre-releases for new Pokémon cards.

A club member owns a Pokémon X/Y Special Edition 3DS.
A club member owns a Pokémon X/Y Special Edition Nintendo 3DS.

“It’s been pretty great,” Galon Greer, a long-time Pokémon Club member, said. “Just having an open time dedicated to where I can just play Pokémon without sacrificing homework … has really helped out.”

Not only are people capable of exchanging friendcodes to access new friend Pokémon Safaris in their games, they also become friends in real life. Biederman even met his roommate at the Pokémon Club, where they bonded over their love for Pokémon and discussed video game cheats.

“We can just come here, and we can either play video games for the entire hour or talk about what’s going on in the world … or something completely unrelated but somehow still relates to Pokémon,” Greer said.

Even while in the heat of a battle, everyone will still help each other in getting whatever Pokémon they need afterwards.

Pokémon Club member, Katherine Forgy, collects a few Pokémon.
Pokémon Club member Katherine Forgy collects a few Pokémon.

“I like getting to meet a lot of people with a similar interest,” Biederman said. “Especially since it’s kind of a nerdy thing, and we have a stereotype of being an antisocial bunch; it’s a place where people who may be like that can feel comfortable.”

For more information on the Pokémon Club, check out their Facebook group here.

For any questions about Pokémon Club, contact Tanner Biederman at mbiederm@vols.utk.edu.

Edited by Maggie Jones

Drew LaFasto manages the Tennessee Journalist Facebook page and contributes articles for the news website. She is a senior in journalism at the University of Tennessee and works as a video editor at WBIR. With a broadened scope of passions within the realm of journalism, LaFasto enjoys all media formats as well as combining them. When she isn't at work or at school, she is most likely playing video games, looking at weather maps or making art. She aspires to become a meteorologist at a news station or the National Weather Service.