This summer's blockbuster is neither the "Ghostbusters" remake, nor "The Secret Life of Pets." It's Pokemon Go.Pokemon Go, the game/cell phone app based on the characters created about 20 years ago, is out of control. It's insanity.If you don't think so, look around. Wherever you are or wherever you've been in Harford County this week, Pokemon has been there. Perhaps you haven't seen the animated characters, but that's only because you're not playing the game, which makes them invisible to you.But there are countless other characters you can see; that's all of those folks walking around even more entranced by their cell phones than usual. And that's saying something for a generation addicted to their phone, or whatever smart device they carry around and use.In front of our office on North Main Street in Bel Air, there's been a steady flow of cell phone wielding folks this week. Yes, there's some sort of Pokemon character out front and a lot of folks have to catch it.It's the same thing everywhere. The popular Promenade in Havre de Grace has become more popular than usual as people flock there to catch Pokemon critters.On a broader scale, it had to be banned from Arlington National Cemetery and the Holocaust Museum in Washington, D.C., two somber places if there ever were any. The notion that people would disturb the sanctity of those two, or any other similar place, is mind-boggling. It's insanity.And yet the game goes on. It goes on after a motorist, according to Bel Air Police, was so distracted playing the game that they drove their vehicle the wrong way on Route 22.It goes on after criminals used the app to lure people to a place in neighboring Baltimore County, where they were robbed, and to locations in College Park, where four different people were robbed.The game goes on despite, as with just about everything these days, concerns that hackers will find a way to steal personal information from those playing that will make it easier to either steal from those playing or use their information to steal from others.There have been a lot of crazes – that's how some companies make their riches – around here, but none that seems to have captured so many people so quickly.As with any of the other must-haves that have come and gone, this Pokemon Go, too, shall pass. We just hope when it does, it was a lot of harmless fun, and not too many players fell prey to bad guys.