Maroon 5 released the music video for their new single, Don t Wanna Know , a short few days ago, and while it isn t an official tie-in to the Pokemon franchise, it is very clearly a scathing satire of the craze shot from the perspective of the creatures being relentlessly hunted down.The video, seen above, follows the band as they are dressed up in not-quite-Pokemon costumes, balancing a life of stardom with the fact that some people are pursuing them constantly in an effort to capture them and add the band to their collection. It s a very strange video that also happens to feature a number of guest celebrity appearances Shaq, who is inexplicably part-owner of an esports team, appears alongside other celebrities like Vince Vaughan as Maroon 5 lead singer Adam Levine tries to make sense of the world he finds himself in.The music video does a fine job capturing the bizarre lengths somePokemon GO gamers are willing toRS 2007 Gold travel in order to capture a rare Pokemon, including an amusing scene that finds Levine waiting at a stop sign in his car as he observes hordes of people on either side of the street converging on one of his fellow creatures. While critics were initially skeptical of the game s ability to make people exercise, a recent study found thatPokemon GO users have collectively taken 100 billion steps, which is certainly enough to work off one of those Pokemon-themed Krispy Kreme donuts.Like it or not, despite Niantic s stubborn refusal to improve a number of features that have been criticized for months now,Pokemon GO remains a big part of technological culture.