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April Fools' Day: Google begins search for official ±Ê´Ç°ìé³¾´Ç²Ô Master

April Fools' Day kicks off with Google on the hunt for ±Ê´Ç°ìé³¾´Ç²Ô. The company says it is accepting applications through April 2. 

There's got to be some ±Ê´Ç°ìé³¾´Ç²Ô down there somewhere.

Google

April 1, 2014

Google has a long, storied (and very colorful) history of April Fools' Day pranks.

There was Gmail Paper, its "96 percent post-consumer organic soybean sputum," and Project Virgle, its promise of "the first permanent human colony on Mars." And in 2013, there was the Google Wallet Mobile ATM, a smart little  that "easily attaches to most smartphones and dispenses money instantly and effortlessly." 

In 2014, one of the most high-profile gags involves ±Ê´Ç°ìé³¾´Ç²Ô, the massively popular video game franchise. In an impressively high-quality video yesterday, Google took the wraps off the ±Ê´Ç°ìé³¾´Ç²Ô Challenge – a race to capture a bunch of little monsters from far-flung hideouts around the globe. The winner, Google says, will receive the position of ±Ê´Ç°ìé³¾´Ç²Ô Master. 

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"It's always been important to us to have the most qualified employees at Google," Google exec Brian McClendon in the video (with an admirably straight face). "Now using the technology created by the Google Maps team, we've prepared the most rigorous test known to man to find the world's best Pokemon Master." 

And herein the root of the aforementioned hoax. Because although the video promises an , action-packed cliffhanger of a monster hunt – starring you – the real ±Ê´Ç°ìé³¾´Ç²Ô Challenge is a mini-game layered on top of the Google Maps interface.

And no, there's no actual ±Ê´Ç°ìé³¾´Ç²Ô Master gig. 

Which isn't to say it doesn't look fun. Assuming you've got the latest version of Google Maps on Android or iOS, you can get started here.Â