3/12/17 an hour and a half of playing around Autzen stadium on my phone. There are five gyms located around Autzen stadium, and nine poke-stops, and with a single lap around the stadium being about a mile in length, I was able to just make circuits around the stadium, hitting all of the same poke-stops over and over, catching a whole bunch of Pokemon that don’t normally appear around Eugene, because the stadium technically counts as a different climate (Stadium/landmark/arena as opposed to just wetland). This allowed me to work on catching fighting and fairy types. I was getting sick of seeing so many grass and water types so it was nice to get a little variety. Also, interestingly, near the soccer field I have found the fire types regularly spawn (particularly Ponytas). Either way this method has allowed me to gather a good amount of candy for otherwise difficult Pokemon around Eugene, while at the same time increasing my stock of poke-balls and potions (which I had run down on my previous play session in gyms). Also I found out that if I am on my skateboard, that Pokemon go doesn’t register me as moving fast enough to count as a car, so i glided on my board along the river path for several miles and hatched quite a few of my eggs, which was good, seeing as I had an overstock of 2 kilometer eggs. Finding out these loopholes has gotten me thinking about how no matter how many restrictions and obstacles that a producer places on a game like Pokemon Go, people will find ways to subvert the system. Another example of this would be the people who tape their phones to ceiling fans, and that counts as enough motion to record distance. This ingenuity is part of what drive innovation in gaming, and it is a shame that Niantic is trying to stifle that in their clientèle.