Unless you’ve been living under a rock for the last several days, you’ve either found yourself addicted to the new mobile game Pokémon go or you’ve noticed everyone within close proximity playing it.

The game, the first big push into the mobile space by creator Nintendo, uses your phone’s GPS and clock to detect where and when you are in the game. it then makes Pokémon "appear" around you (on your phone screen) so you can go and catch them.

Sounds a bit simplistic — but unlike so many mobile games, Pokémon Go is actually encouraging people to get up off their butts and explore the city around them, even engaging with other people. The game — which is free and therefore an instantly popular download — fulfills a fantasy Pokémon fans have held for years. What if Pokémon was real and inhabited our world?

Well the Pokémon Go craze also scored a bit of a home run for the LGBT community over the weekend. You see, Pokémon Go allows players to use real locations to serve as pokestops to collect pokeballs and gyms to battle your Pokémon.

Yes, that sounds ridiculous if you’ve never played the game, but over the weekend, players took the notoriously anti-LGBT Westboro Baptist Church in Topeka, Kansas and transformed it into a gym. User Pinkrose named the gym “Love Is Love.”

Last month, Westboro made headlines for picketing outside the funerals for victims of the Orlando shooting at Pulse nightclub. Westboro has built a legacy out of protesting funerals.

Westboro Baptist Church was understandably not pleased and attempted to combat the new name with some homophobic rhetoric, which in the notoriously liberal gamer space fell on deaf ears.

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