Contact

Reaching out with a question about Pokémon — whether it's a ruling dispute in a Regional Tournament format, a deep dive into EV training mechanics, or a card grading question about a first-edition Charizard — deserves a real answer, not an auto-reply that redirects to a FAQ. This page explains how this office handles incoming questions, what kind of response to expect, and which channels work best for different types of inquiries.

Response expectations

Most questions submitted through the contact form receive a response within 3 to 5 business days. That window accounts for research time — vague or one-line questions about competitive VGC rulesets or card rarity tiers often require checking multiple sources before a useful answer can be assembled.

A few things genuinely help get a faster, more useful response:

  1. Be specific about the game or format. A question about "Pokémon damage calculation" could apply to the main series RPGs, the TCG, or Pokémon Unite — three entirely different systems. Naming the format saves at least one back-and-forth.
  2. Include the generation or set, if relevant. Mechanics like Fairy-type immunity, regional form availability, and breeding rules vary significantly across generations. Specifying "Scarlet and Violet" or "Gen VI" makes a factual answer possible rather than a probabilistic one.
  3. For TCG questions, note the card name and set symbol. A "Pikachu VMAX" question without a set reference could apply to at least 4 different printings with different market values and print runs.
  4. Competitive rulings questions should cite the format. Smogon's tiering system and the official Play! Pokémon VGC ruleset are different frameworks. Questions that don't specify which one tend to generate answers that don't quite fit either.

Questions that are clearly outside the scope of this site — legal disputes, Pokémon GO account bans, requests to contact The Pokémon Company International directly — will receive a brief note explaining the right channel, rather than silence.

Additional contact options

The primary contact method is the form linked from this page. For certain inquiry types, there are faster or more appropriate paths:

How to reach this office

The contact form is the single reliable intake point. Email addresses posted publicly tend to accumulate irrelevant traffic quickly — the form routes submissions into a managed queue where questions are categorized and assigned before response.

What the form collects: a name (first name is sufficient), a valid reply-to email address, a subject category from a short dropdown menu, and the question or message itself. No account creation is required. No subscription is triggered by submitting a question.

Submissions are reviewed Monday through Friday. Questions submitted over a weekend will be in queue by Monday morning. Submissions that include attachments — such as card scans for identification or screenshot evidence of a tournament ruling dispute — should note the attachment in the message body, as the form itself doesn't support file uploads. Links to hosted images work fine.

Service area covered

This site covers Pokémon as it exists in the United States market — game releases on their North American launch schedules, TCG sets distributed through the North American supply chain, and competitive play under Play! Pokémon's US Regional and Championship structure. The Pokémon World Championships coverage is oriented toward US qualifiers and the domestic competitive pathway.

That said, the underlying mechanics of the games themselves — type matchups, evolution methods, breeding and IV optimization, nature effects on stats — are identical across regions. Questions from players outside the US on those topics are handled exactly the same way.

Where regional differences matter — PAL region game distribution, Japanese exclusive sets, European VGC circuit structures — the honest answer is that this office may have limited sourced information. In those cases, a response will say so rather than approximate. The Pokémon generations overview and main series games reference note regional release variations where they're documented and relevant.

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