Skip to main content

Nintendo announces two new Animal Crossing games

Even if you’re not the biggest fan of Nintendo’s properties (you soulless monster), you’ve likely heard of, seen, or briefly played Animal Crossing at some point or another. The cutesy, cartoony life simulator is a prized gem in Nintendo’s IP (intellectual property) crown, and the company knows it. This year, Nintendo’s cashing in on the continuing craze with two Animal Crossing titles: Animal Crossing Home Designer for the 3DS, and Animal Crossing Amiibo Festival for the Wii U.

Both games occupy the same universe, but couldn’t be more disparate. Home Designer is a town-building 3DS that seems to share much in common with EA’s MySims for the Wii. The goal, it appears, is to meet the individual design whims of demanding anthropomorphised animals. You plop characters’ homes from an overview map, work horticultural magic on surrounding yards, and customize their interiors with lamps, tables, wallpaper, couches, and other furnishings. In classic Nintendo fashion, the inhabitant(s) will do a little jig when everything’s up to snuff.

Wii U - Animal Crossing: amiibo Festival E3 2015 Trailer

Animal Crossing Home Designer launches September 25. Additional town residents are added via NFC cards, likely a separate purchase.

Animal Crossing Amiibo Festival is a lot more confusing. It’s basically Mario Party without the minigames: you add up to four specially designated Amiibo to play a board game with friends. Moves are determined by a die roll, and the spaces on which players land either add or deduct currency, musical notes that denote “happiness,” or both. The additions and deductions are justified narratively by activities you might partake in while playing an Animal Crossing game — getting an ugly cut at the barber, for instance, will deduct happiness and money, while playing tag with friends will boost everyone’s stats. Whoever manages to accumulate the highest number of musical notes at the end of their turn wins the round.

Animal Crossing Amiibo Festival comes to the Wii U “holiday 2015.”

Neither look too terribly exciting, quite honestly, but if you if you happen to own either console and can’t wait to get your Animal Crossing fix, they might just be worth a look.

Nintendo 3DS - Animal Crossing: Happy Home Designer E3 2015 Trailer

Editors' Recommendations

Kyle Wiggers
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
What games will Nintendo Switch 2 launch with? We have some ideas
Mario and friends zip through a race course in Mario Kart 8.

We’re officially on “new console watch.” Reports from credible publications like Eurogamer say that Nintendo secretly showed developers its next system behind closed doors at this year’s Gamescom. While it’s only a rumor, it’s a realistic one. We’re six years into the Nintendo Switch’s lifespan and even the longest-running consoles turn over at eight. If Nintendo’s next system is one or two years away, it’s time to start lining up support from third-party developers.

We’ve speculated on features we’d want in a new system before, but the reality of a new platform has me asking another question: What games would you launch with something like this? The Nintendo Switch’s launch day was crucial to its long-term success thanks to a bonafide classic in The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. While the rest of its launch lineup wasn’t as impressive, Nintendo capitalized fairly quickly with titles like Mario Kart 8 Deluxe and Splatoon 2. If Nintendo’s going to push Switch owners over to a new system, it’ll have to roll out the big guns.

Read more
With E3 2023 gone, other gaming events need to step up
A purple E3 logo floats in the air.

Despite how inevitable the complete downfall of E3 felt over the past several years, E3 2023’s official cancellation still strings as it’s a significant loss for the game industry. For gamers, press, and developers, the show served multiple purposes that digital livestreams and scattered publisher-specific events don't currently replicate. In lieu of E3’s cancelation this year, and potentially forever, it’s time for other gaming events to step up and help push the video game industry forward.
Why we lost E3
I’m lucky enough to have the experience of attending three E3 shows across 2017, 2018, and 2019 and many publisher-run events focused on specific games or tighter game lineups. In its final years, E3 felt like the perfect middle ground to the gamer-focused PAX and industry-focused GDC, where people from all walks and sides of the video game industry could come together, see what’s coming in the future, and share their love for games.

It also felt more freeing than publisher-run events, as I discovered and experienced games of all sizes that I may not have otherwise and got to meet many people from every angle of the game industry. Apparently, the Entertainment Software Association struggled to convince enough people that this style of expo was important four years after the last physical event.
In an interview with GamesIndustry.biz, Entertainment Software Association president Stanley Pierre-Louis blamed E3 2023’s cancellation on the Covid-19 pandemic, “economic headwinds” due to the current recession that impacted marketing budgets, and the fact that “companies are starting to experiment with how to find the right balance between in-person events and digital marketing opportunities.”
The first two are understandable and have impacted a lot of physical events over the past couple of years. Still, the last reason speaks to a bit more worrying of a shift for those looking to network, get attention from the press, get a broader look at the industry’s future, or even pitch a game.
What we lose
Events are a great way for indies to get unexpected and much-needed attention from players and the press; look at the chance encounter that got one of our team’s freelancers hooked on Homeseek at PAX East. Now, indies will have to hope to gain attention at those more indie-focused events like PAX or be cherry-picked to be featured in a more prominent company’s showcasing. There’s also the networking and pitch factor to it.

Read more
Grab these Nintendo 3DS games before the eShop closes
wii u 3ds exclusive nintendo games eshop closure ever oasis

While the Nintendo 3DS had a rocky launch, the handheld system recovered gracefully and ended up having one of the best game lineups of any Nintendo system. Many of these 3DS games, like Super Mario 3D Land and Fire Emblem Awakening, were very popular and well-known. Still, the 3DS had a lot of fantastic games that not as many people know about and threaten to be lost to time when the eShop closes down.
The 3DS eShop will shut down soon, preventing people from purchasing new games. As such, we've been reflecting on the system's vast library and all of the fantastic games that 3DS owners will no longer be able to buy digitally. From games that we think will skyrocket even further in price after the store shuts down to some enjoyable hidden gems that didn't get the attention they deserve, you might want to snag these 3DS games before you can't anymore after March 27. 
Ever Oasis

Grezzo is one of Nintendo's most underrated developers. It's delivered top-notch The Legend of Zelda remakes like Ocarina of Time, Majora's Mask, and Link's Awakening. So what if I told you that it used that experience to make an original IP for 3DS that's one of the best-looking and expansive games on the system? Ever Oasis, a 2017 3DS game, follows a young kid as they help a water spirit named Esna build an oasis and try to save their brother from Chaos.
The result is a mix of 3D The Legend of Zelda and city management games. Players can venture out into surprisingly large open worlds and dungeons to restock and grow the number of "bloom booths." This mix of open-world exploration, dungeon crawling, and oasis-building will keep players engaged for dozens of hours, and it also stands as one of the deepest and best-looking action-adventure games on the platform. 
Ever Oasis didn't get much attention when it launched because the Nintendo Switch had been released a couple of months earlier. Still, it stands as one of the 3DS' best games, so it's a shame that more people don't know about it. It risks being forgotten forever now the 3DS eShop is closing down, so check it out before the closure; it will surpass your expectations. 
Professor Layton vs. Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney

Read more