Could hunting for a Pokemon get any hotter? Maybe in Rio, so the city about to host the Olympic Games is urging makers of the popular app to come down to Brazil.

The app, based on a Nintendo title that debuted 20 years ago, uses GPS and mapping capabilities in smartphones to let players roam the real world to find "PokeStops" stocked with supplies and hunt cartoon monsters to capture and train for battles.

"Hello Nintendo! There are 23 days until the Rio 2016 Olympic Games. Everybody's coming. You should come on down too," Mayor Eduardo Paes said on Facebook Wednesday, with the welcoming hashtag #PokemonGoNoBrasil (Pokemon Go in Brazil).


Since its release in the United States, Australia and New Zealand last week, the free Pokemon Go smartphone game that overlays play on the real world has triggered a major craze.

READ: New app 'Pokemon Go' dubbed more popular than Snapchat, Twitter and Tinder

Some, like Paes, think people might enjoy hunting around the city's landmarks like Copacabana beach.

READ: How to play Pokemon Go

Half a million foreign tourists are expected in Rio for South America's first Olympics from August 5-21.

Ex-supermodel Gisele Bundchen will be in her native Brazil to host the opening ceremony.