Pokémon Champions just dropped on Switch, and honestly, it’s been a wild ride from day one. Players are running into all sorts of bugs, missing Pokémon, weird performance issues, and even some head-scratching gameplay quirks. The developer has stepped up with a heartfelt apology and a roadmap of fixes, but right now, the game feels more like a rough draft than the polished competitive experience many hoped for.
Missing Pokémon, Mega Evolution Problems, and a Gender Bug That’s Got Fans Talking
First off, a big chunk of Pokémon fans are upset because the game launched with only 186 Pokémon – all fully evolved forms – leaving out tons of favorites. Some items that players expected, like Rocky Helmet and Heavy Duty Boots, are nowhere to be found either. To add salt to the wound, Mega Evolutions, which were hyped heavily in trailers, aren’t working properly or are missing entirely. The developers acknowledged these issues and promised fixes soon, especially targeting Mega Evolution glitches and incorrect tutorial Pokémon genders.
– Fake Out cannot be selected after it’s used once
– Many widely-used items (Choice Specs/Bands, Life Orb, AV) are just missing
– Less than 200 Pokémon currently
– NS2 version is still low-res/30 FPS
– Stalwart Mega Skarmory
Genuinely, who was this game made for.
— Fran (@FranDarkstar) April 8, 2026
The worst part about the limited item selection in Champions is that THEY LITERALLY SHOWED A BUNCH OF ITEMS IN THE OVERVIEW TRAILER AND JUST DECIDED NOT TO PUT THEM IN THE GAME https://t.co/Yl2b2GL95v pic.twitter.com/BRehkOGbSL
— I’M GOLISOPODING IT (@Poke_kaiPJ) April 8, 2026
>in the pokemon day trailer from a month ago
>isnt even in the fucking game
what did they mean by this pic.twitter.com/ssdJ3Rn6YE
— Lewtwo (@Lewchube) April 8, 2026
Speaking of genders, there’s a surprising twist that caught the community’s eye. Gallade, a Pokémon that was always male-only in past games, is showing up as female in Pokémon Champions’ tutorial. The game even uses she/her pronouns for this Gallade, leading fans to dub her a “trans icon.” It’s unclear if this was a bug or an intentional nod, but it’s definitely sparked conversations online.
FEMALE GALLADE CONFIRMED REAL????? pic.twitter.com/4CPQhY4njE
— JustIvenHere (@justivenhere) April 8, 2026
Wait this is a huge thing to casually throw in champions lol https://t.co/0nU6elgyVh
— ☆Mirai_Draws🇵🇷☆ (@mirai_fanarts) April 8, 2026
pokemon officially has 4 transgender characters https://t.co/GGLIhM4eyd pic.twitter.com/p5tDd2yFzY
— jin (@jingercookiee) April 8, 2026
congrats on her transition https://t.co/zTZogPNCZx
— sunny 🍓 gardevoir posting (@sunnydr0pdraws) April 8, 2026
Performance Woes and a Strange Switch 2 Visual Bug
Performance hasn’t been great either. The game runs locked at 30FPS on both the Nintendo Switch and Switch 2, which frustrated some players expecting smoother gameplay. On top of that, Switch 2 users discovered a bizarre bug where the game won’t use its higher 4K visuals unless you undock and then re-dock the console manually. So yeah, graphics quality isn’t just automatic – you have to mess with your hardware mid-session.
Menus are another pain point, with players calling them slow and clunky. Navigating these can feel like a chore, especially when you’re trying to jump into battles quickly.
Pokémon Transfers Stuck in Limbo, and Some Are Losing Their Favorite Monsters
One of the more alarming problems is with transferring Pokémon from the Home storage app to Champions. Some players have found their Pokémon trapped in a weird “visiting” state where they can’t bring them into the game or send them back to Home. This limbo bug has caused panic, especially for folks with rare or long-loved Pokémon. While some have found temporary fixes like reinstalling Home or clearing caches, there’s no universal solution yet.
And Here’s Where It Gets Weird: You Can Basically Cheat to Keep Your Rank
Competitive players are also annoyed by a bizarre rule in Champions’ ranked battles. If you’re losing and don’t want to drop rank, you can just stall until the match timer runs out. The game then calls the match a draw – no winner, no loser, no rank lost. This “feature” is baked right into the gameplay guides, and it’s already expected that some players will build stall-heavy teams to exploit this loophole.
In-game tips specify that if you run out of total time in a casual or ranked battle, the battle is now a draw?!!?!? pic.twitter.com/bkSF9cc6y7
— Leonard Craft III (@DaWoblefet) April 8, 2026
This goes against how timeouts usually work in competitive games, where the player ahead usually wins if time runs out. Instead, Champions hands a free pass to anyone who drags the match long enough, making ranked play feel frustrating and open to trolling.
Developers Respond With Apology and Fix Roadmap
The developer, The Pokemon Works, has apologized for the rocky launch and laid out a list of fixes coming soon. These include correcting Mega Evolution order bugs, fixing move descriptions, adjusting incorrect Pokémon genders in tutorials and coordinated teams, and resolving issues with abilities like Lightning Rod during Encore states. They’re also looking into communication errors when sending Pokémon on expeditions from Home.
While the patch notes and apologies show they’re listening, the community’s patience is running thin. Many hoped Pokémon Champions would be the future of competitive battling, but for now, it feels like a game that needs a lot more polish before it can truly shine.
So if you’re diving into Pokémon Champions, brace yourself for some quirks, missing content, and the occasional frustrating bug. But hang tight – things should get better once these patches roll out.












