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Whose Pokémon ran out of the Baby Ball!? On September 2, a raccoon suddenly appeared on the road in Shinjuku, Japan, and was shopping in the street, with many people standing in bookstores, station entrances, and curbs

author:Interesting facts

Whose Pokémon ran out of the Baby Ball!? On September 2, a raccoon suddenly ran out of the road in Shinjuku, Japan, and went shopping in the street, and many people hit the bookstore, the station entrance and the roadside, and the cute figure was shared on the Internet, and everyone said: "I met Yay!"

Yesterday, there was a strange scene on the streets of Shinjuku, Japan, there was a raccoon shopping around on the road, and there was no owner or person around to follow, and there was no way to know why it appeared in downtown Shinjuku. Many people have collected its presence in the local area, whether it is in bookstores, IN JR Shinjuku Station, or even on the street, there are people who photograph it walking back and forth.

Netizens replied "Wow, so cute (^ω^) Walking feels very proud", "Raccoon: At first, I walked around the bookstore, and then I went out for a walk", "The raccoon has to take the train home after work", "I also saw the raccoon on the road yesterday"

Whose Pokémon ran out of the Baby Ball!? On September 2, a raccoon suddenly appeared on the road in Shinjuku, Japan, and was shopping in the street, with many people standing in bookstores, station entrances, and curbs
Whose Pokémon ran out of the Baby Ball!? On September 2, a raccoon suddenly appeared on the road in Shinjuku, Japan, and was shopping in the street, with many people standing in bookstores, station entrances, and curbs
Whose Pokémon ran out of the Baby Ball!? On September 2, a raccoon suddenly appeared on the road in Shinjuku, Japan, and was shopping in the street, with many people standing in bookstores, station entrances, and curbs
Whose Pokémon ran out of the Baby Ball!? On September 2, a raccoon suddenly appeared on the road in Shinjuku, Japan, and was shopping in the street, with many people standing in bookstores, station entrances, and curbs

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