Pokemon Pokopia is doing really well right now. With millions of players and control over the cozy conversation, it has established itself as more than just a spin-off hit. Between strong sales, high player engagement, and ongoing update plans, the foundations for long-term success are in place. So, most players find it hard to imagine Pokemon spin off not getting DLC at some point. If Animal Crossing: New Horizons could land a full-blown expansion after launch, there’s no reason that one of the biggest cozy gaming hits of 2026 wouldn’t follow suit.
In typical cozy-gaming DLC discourse, the conversation about Pokopia DLC isn’t just “more of what makes Pokopia addictive.” If anything, Pokopia‘s early success has players thinking about how to take the game to new heights. Forums and fandom spaces are already full of wish list ideas that go beyond cosmetic additions or small content drops. Many players want expansions that will deepen the game’s soft world, fill in glaring Pokedex gaps, and refine the systems that already have them hooked.
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The Missing Half of Kanto Feels Like Pokopia DLC Waiting to Happen
One of the most immediate and obvious opportunities for DLC comes from what isn’t in the game right now. Despite being set in a Kanto with no human presence, Pokopia is currently missing a surprising number of Pokemon critters. That gap alone has sparked speculation that entire regions or biomes are being set aside for future expansion. Missing Pokemon might cluster around environments that don’t currently exist in-game. Some of these areas could be:
Guess the games from the emojis.

Guess the games from the emojis.
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- Water/Ice region (Seafoam Islands, potentially): Perfect for introducing aquatic and ice-type Pokemon
- Viridian Forest-inspired biome: a dense, bug-heavy forest that could naturally introduce Pokemon like Caterpie
- Safari Zone-style expansion: A larger, more open-ended area focused on rare encounters and even new exploration mechanics
Environmental storytelling is a crucial part of cozy games. Pokopia is no exception. Instead of just expanding the map, these ideas can expand the world-building and tone of the game, turning potentially familiar places into something just a little more eerie, reflective, and new.
The Pokemon That Could Expand the Pokedex
New biomes or areas will inevitably come with new critters to add to an island. For a spin-off, Pokopia has an expansive number of Pokemon in its roster already. However, at just about 300, players have taken note of the missing Pokemon in Pokopia. The game shines in its premise: a world shaped by the absence of humans. Naturally, players may want to see the DLC lean harder into that premise by expanding the roster. Some of the additions to Pokopia could include:
- Totodile
- Caterpie
- Metapod
- Luckitung
- Butterfree
- Hypno
- Mankey
- Tauros
- Horsea
- Kabuto/Kabutops
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Legendaries, Ultra Beats, and Bigger Lore Swings
Pokemon additions shouldn’t just pad the Pokedex. With humanity gone, there’s room to explore how legendary creatures thrive in these environments. And given that there’s so many fan theories tying back to the Aether Foundation, players want to connect the dots. Ultra Beasts could introduce a more sci-fi, destabilizing element to Pokopia’s otherwise cozy tone.
Legendaries in Pokopia are treated perfectly for the lore’s stakes, even if the game feels intimate and grounded. Bringing in more Legendaries and Ultra Beasts could give future expansions a sense of scale and mystery that pushes the worldbuilding further.
The “Little Things” That Actually Matter (Quality-of-Life Fixes for Pokopia)
While sweeping expansions and additions would be great for the game, there are some things at the microscopic level that would make more players sigh a breath of relief. It’s hard not to run into player feedback focused on quality-of-life improvements on forums. Frankly, some of these are as important as DLC. Here’s what some players keep asking for:
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Better inventory and storage management
- “Deposit all” or auto-sorting features
- Shared storage across areas (like centralized inventory systems)
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Faster, smoother interactions
- Bulk appraisal for relics
- Fewer confirmation screens for basic actions
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Improved Pokemon behavior
- Companions moving faster to keep up with the player
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Building and customization upgrades
- More flexible housing systems
- Removal of prefab limits
- Additional building pieces like slopes and half-blocks
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Clearer system feedback
- Better visibility into electricity networks and capacity
- Less guesswork when managing resources
These may not be the flashiest of features, but they directly impact how the game feels moment to moment. Pokopia‘s bugs and progression issues have already been acknowledged by developers, so there’s a strong chance that many of these improvements will arrive before or alongside any major DLC.
What makes the DLC conversation interesting is that it doesn’t quite feel hypothetical. This is a full-blown success story that makes DLC feel inevitable. The real question here is how far Pokopia is willing to expand. Whether it sticks to safe additions or weirder ideas, players aren’t just asking for more Pokopia. Most players now want a version of the game that feels bigger, smoother, and more alive than it already does. That’s a pretty good problem for a cozy game to have.









