Pokémon Champions is taking over from Scarlet and Violet as the official game for next year’s Pokémon World Championships. For the first time, the VGC stage won’t use a mainline entry. Instead, a new battle-focused title will define the format, breaking a long tradition built on games like Sword and Shield or Scarlet and Violet.
Pokémon Champions changes the competition format

Pokémon Champions is not a full RPG. It’s a multiplayer-focused game coming to both Switch and mobile. Training is streamlined, so building a competitive team should be faster and less intimidating. The game connects to Pokémon Home, letting players transfer monsters from older titles. Which ones will be legal in tournaments is still unknown.
Mega Evolution returns in Pokémon Champions
The game mixes mechanics from across generations. Mega Evolution, first seen in X and Y, is confirmed for ranked play in next year’s format. Mega Dragonite, teased in a Pokémon Legends: Z-A trailer, is also joining the roster. Terastalization from Scarlet and Violet will appear as well, creating a blend of past and present systems to shape the meta.
Here’s what trainers can expect in Pokémon Champions:
- Mega Evolution in Ranked Battles
- Terastalization from Scarlet and Violet
- Faster training and team prep
- Pokémon Home support for transfers
- Multiplayer battles as the main focus
Pokémon Champions development and release window
Game Freak and The Pokémon Works are developing the title for a 2026 launch. That schedule could disrupt the competitive season, since Championship Points usually start right after Worlds. How organizers adapt is unclear, but the timing ensures the new game will dominate discussion heading into the San Francisco finals.
A year of firsts for the Pokémon World Championships
The 2025 event already set records. Kevin Han became the first competitor to win both the Junior and Senior titles in back-to-back years. Championship Sunday was staged in a full arena for the first time as well. Next year, the finals move to Chase Arena in San Francisco, where Pokémon Champions will headline. The format shift shows that competitive Pokémon thrives on change, and this is its boldest step yet.

