Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Android
  4. Apple
  5. Gaming
  6. Mobile
  7. News

‘My Tamagotchi Forever’ is an endless barrage of microtransactions

Add as a preferred source on Google
Image used with permission by copyright holder

If you’re looking for a full-on blast from the past, look no further than My Tamagotchi Forever for iOS and Android. Since it’s now officially available worldwide — aside from Japan and China– you’re no longer required to carry around a brightly colored egg-shaped keychain to get your Tamagotchi fix.

With My Tamagotchi Forever, you’re still raising your Tamagotchi the same way you normally would — feeding it, washing it, cleaning up after it, and putting it to bed. It also places you in the heart of Tamatown, where you get to customize the village with different things like a swing set or soccer a goal.

Recommended Videos

You will get to see your Tamagotchi evolve through its different stages as you continue to play the game. But the type of character you get will always be a surprise — it’s all dependent on how you take care of it. You won’t have to worry about checking in on it either since your phone will provide you with notifications when it is in need of attention.

In true millennial fashion, you can even take photos of your Tamagotchi completing different activities. The pictures are stored in a photo album which you can then share with others through text or email. Completing pages of the album will also earn you different rewards like clothing or forms of currency.

It also supports augmented reality functionalities using ARKit for Apple and ARCore for Google, which allows you to play hide-and-seek games with your Tamagotchi in real surroundings. So basically, your Tamagotchi can come to life in your very own living room —  which sounds kind of terrifying, but we all know it’s a feature we would’ve begged for back in the 1990s.

Even though the game is free to play, it’s highly reminiscent of Animal Crossing where you will only really get ahead by making in-app purchases. It isn’t free from advertisements either — to receive free gifts, it will often ask you to watch a 30-second video. But you can still gather coins and level up by playing mini-games.

We played around a bit with My Tamagotchi Forever and thought the experience was interesting. We thought it was a refreshing change to be able to see our Tamagotchi in color and interact with it via touchscreen rather than tiny buttons on the original device. But the addition of in-app purchases and currencies made it feel like more work than it should be.

You can download My Tamagotchi Forever from the App Store and Google Play Store. For now, we think we’re going to stick to our keychains — it’s much cheaper, anyway.

Brenda Stolyar
Former Staff Writer, Mobile
Brenda became obsessed with technology after receiving her first Dell computer from her grandpa in the second grade. While…
My old Pixel keeps getting AI features Apple wants a newer iPhone for
Google still has exclusives, but its habit of backporting Gemini tools makes Apple’s new 12GB hardware wall look unusually stingy.
A person taking a photo with the Google Pixel 8a.

My Pixel 8a launched in 2024 as a $499 midrange phone with seven years of software support, which isn’t usually the kind of device anyone buys expecting years of special treatment. It now sits behind the Pixel 9a and Pixel 10a, yet Google is still adding features through Pixel Drops. The seven-year update promise has so far meant more than fresh security patches and a polite place on a support page.

Apple’s latest AI cutoff makes that feel unusually generous. The standard iPhone 17 launched at $799 and remains part of Apple’s current lineup, but it can’t run the company’s newest on-device AI model. Being new apparently isn’t the same as being new enough.

Read more
Android can now back up more of your phone, but Google is also letting you say no
Users can opt out of message, call history, and settings backups even as Google expands Drive backup to cover documents stored locally.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Google is reshaping Android backup in two directions at once. New switches let you stop several types of phone data from being uploaded, while a separate Documents feature can save local files to Google Drive.

The controls cover messages, call history, and device settings. Each category can now be turned off individually instead of being backed up automatically, joining the newer per-app switches already appearing through Google Play services.

Read more
Fresh Galaxy Z Fold 8 leak suggests US buyers won’t escape a price hike
A new report puts the Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra at $2,099 in the US, a $100 jump over last year's model.
Leaked render of Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8.

Samsung has confirmed its next Galaxy Unpacked event for July 22, where it's expected to unveil its next-gen foldables. Recent reports suggest the devices may be priced significantly higher in Europe compared to their predecessors. Now, a new leak claims the same could be true for the US market as well.

US buyers could see a $100 jump

Read more