'Life worth more than Pokemon,' Venezuela gamers told
By Daniel Kai CARACAS (Reuters) - A Pokemon Go player hides his cellphone in the carved out pages of a 19th-century French novel, hoping to avoid criminals on Venezuela's notoriously dangerous streets. "I'm afraid of insecurity, but I want to be a Pokemon trainer!" said Carlos Reina, a 22-year-old gamer wandering around a Caracas plaza with a copy of Honore de Balzac's "Eugenie Grandet." Pokemon Go, based on the popular game and TV series, uses augmented reality to send players to city streets,
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