The Pokémon Company has quietly taken one of the most sweeping safety measures in its history at their Pokémon Centers. On March 31, the company announced that every scheduled event at Pokémon Center stores across Japan has been cancelled for the entire month of April, with only two competitive tournaments allowed to continue under heavily restricted conditions.
This isn’t a marketing delay. It isn’t a scheduling reshuffle. It’s a response to something far more devastating.
These cancellations come in the immediate aftermath of the fatal stabbing of 21‑year‑old Pokémon Center Mega Tokyo employee Moe Harukawa, who was attacked inside the store on March 26. The incident has shaken the company, its staff, and the broader Pokémon community to the core — and the ripple effects are now being felt nationwide.
Across all Pokémon Center locations, the following April events have been cancelled:
The only exceptions are:
Even these will be held without spectators, without livestreams, and without the previously planned commemorative gifts. These aren’t events anymore — they’re controlled, closed‑door competitions designed to minimize risk and protect staff.
The message is clear: safety first, everything else second.
Pokémon Center Mega Tokyo — one of the most iconic Pokémon retail locations in the world — has been closed since the night of the attack. There is no timeline for reopening.
The Pokémon Company has stated that it is prioritizing the mental health and emotional recovery of its employees, many of whom witnessed or were directly affected by the incident. Given the severity of what happened, it’s entirely possible the store will remain closed well beyond April.
According to police reports, Harukawa was attacked by her former partner, 26‑year‑old Daiki Hirokawa, who had a documented history of stalking her. He approached her while she was working and stabbed her multiple times before turning the weapon on himself. Both later died in the hospital.
The details are heartbreaking:
This can be seen as a systematic failure of the police force. And it has sparked renewed conversations in Japan about stalking laws, victim protection, and the gaps that allow dangerous individuals to slip through the cracks.
The company’s decision to cancel events nationwide isn’t just about logistics. It’s about giving staff space to grieve, recover, and feel safe again. It’s about cooperating fully with the ongoing police investigation. And it’s about acknowledging that the Pokémon Centers — normally some of the most joyful retail spaces in Japan — are not emotionally ready to return to business as usual.
This isn’t a story about games or merch or event calendars. It’s a story about a young woman who loved her job, a community in mourning, and a company trying to protect its people in the wake of something unimaginable.
Pokémon Center Mega Tokyo remains closed. April events are cancelled. And for now, the priority is exactly where it should be: the safety and well‑being of the staff who bring these stores to life.
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