Pokémon All Stars 1025: Masayoshi Oishi to Release Song Listing All 1,025 Pokémon

The Pokémon Company has announced a new music project titled Pokémon All Stars 1025, a multipart song that will feature the names of every Pokémon in the current national dex.

The project is credited to artist Masayoshi Oishi and aims to include all 1,025 Pokémon that exist in the franchise today.

The announcement was shared publicly via fan-tracking outlets and social channels, with detailed timing for the first release window.

According to a Serebii.net update posted on April 21, 2026, the first installment of Pokémon All Stars 1025 will list 213 Pokémon and is scheduled to be available on April 22, 2026 at 13:25 UTC.

In journalistic terms: The Pokémon Company confirmed a multipart song project called Pokémon All Stars 1025 by Masayoshi Oishi, and Serebii.net reported that part one—featuring 213 Pokémon—will be released on April 22, 2026 at 13:25 UTC.

The project represents a large-scale naming composition, with subsequent parts planned to cover the remaining entries up to the full count of 1,025 Pokémon.

The Pokémon Company did not attach platform-specific distribution details in the initial notices; no information has been provided about availability on game-focused channels such as the Nintendo eShop or announcements via Nintendo Direct.

Fans should monitor official Pokémon channels and reputable news outlets like Serebii.net for distribution and streaming updates.

Masayoshi Oishi is listed as the performing artist for Pokémon All Stars 1025.

The involvement of a named musician and the publicized release time underscore the franchise’s continued investment in cross-media content tied to Pokémon’s brand, extending beyond games to music and promotional media.

For industry observers and fans, Pokémon All Stars 1025 will be notable both for its scale—listing every Pokémon in sequence—and for the staged release approach.

The first 213 names arriving on April 22, 2026 at 13:25 UTC mark the start of that rollout.

Readers looking for follow-up information should check The Pokémon Company’s official channels and Serebii.net for confirmations, track listings, and links to streaming or purchase options.

What do you think about a song that names every Pokémon?

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