Today’s game is some more Animal Crossing New Horizons. After last night I got some much needed rest. Afterwards I decided to check in on my island. I haven’t been on in a bit, and I needed to keep an eye on my pets anyways today. So I kicked back and opened up my island I never visit.
Last time I was on I got a room expansion. Not because I wanted it, but because I needed the storage space that comes with it.
It kind of strikes me as odd how little storages space the game has to start. It just always felt to me the game has this identity of being catering to players in a way it doesn’t really tell them no. Maybe I was wrong about that or misunderstood.

Anyways, after that I went digging around my island. No idea why but I found so much random crap in the ground. I found a sand dollar, a pet bowl, and a table. I must have buried it all previously. Either that or the game has some very interesting choices in what it spawns in the ground.
I finished collecting my fruit and stuff, sold it and donated my fish. And then messed around for a bit longer.

The last thing i chose to do was place the dog bowl in front of Lyman’s home. He hasn’t done anything to me, but he hasn’t done anything for me either. So, since I don’t really like him I chose to place it there.
I’ll probably check in again in a few months. It sucks I can’t keep a constant dedication with this game. Honestly something I’ve always struggled with. Any game that expects regular attendance is an immediate mood killer from me. Animal Crossing is a little forgiving. But still.
Any game that expects regular attendance is an immediate mood killer from me.
This is my biggest issue with mobile games. Log in every day to get a gift, or keep a streak, annoys me too much so I mostly just end up deleting them.
Animal Crossing was different, I mostly played it cause I wanted to, and since whole family was playing it, it was a completely different experience.
Mobile games are the bane of my existence for purely that reason. (That and I don’t keep games in my phone because I know I’ll get distracted).
Some Social Media is the same way, which drives me crazy. It’s like they expect me to get on regularly
I remember getting a notification from one that basically said “hey. You haven’t looked at anything today” and I immediately went to settings and turned off notifications.
Ironically I found my way over here to Lemmy and get on daily for my screenshots. So… I guess I ended up doing that anyways lmao
Same here, I turn off most of the these kind of notifications.
Ironically I found my way over here to Lemmy and get on daily for my screenshots. So… I guess I ended up doing that anyways lmao
Well, those daily check-ins are just for consuming content, turning you towards what some people call “zombie”. You are here creating content, that is much different, having a daily streak for something positive is a great way to keep the momentum going. Jerry Seinfeld’s “daily chain” strategy is one of the famous examples.
They’ve progressively added storage upgrades (the last ones are not cheap, but at the point they added them I had way more than enough bells and basically nothing else to use them).
I do the whole catalog hunt, so storage was kind of a struggle initially. I don’t keep orderable or easily craftable stuff if I don’t need it. I just “scan” them by having it in my inventory and then I can re-obtain them whenever I want (easier when you can exchange your finds with other people too). But lots of items are not orderable so those I had to keep. Also lots of bugs and fish for models. Literal walls of cages and tanks crammed on a corner of my island.
But now I am wasting space with the random crap I find and still can’t reach the ludicrous new max limit.
Furniture can’t spawn in the ground. However, every day, two trees can have furniture shaken out of them. You shake the tree, a green leaf floats down. You pick it up, it’s random furniture. Be warned however. While 10-15 trees also contain one gold coin worth 100 Bells, five trees also carry wasp nests that, when they hit the ground, spawn a wasp that will attack you. It’s one of four creatures that will attack in Animal Crossing: New Horizons. The wasp will give you a swollen eye. A villager may give you medicine to cure you. (Also there are mosquitoes that don’t do real damage, they just stop you for a minute and your villager will remark on the bite. And tarantulas and scorpions, which are mutually exclusive to one another by time of year but only appear at night, which will attack you on sight if you have a net out, but will otherwise retreat from you, and those will KO you, which returns you to your house with no loss of any progress.) You can also cure a wasp bite/sting by waiting a day. And you can avoid getting shamed by villagers with lower friendship by wearing any mask or sunglasses (they won’t see the swelling).
Lyman is a cool character, but like any animal villager, it depends on your relationship level with him. You can give already-donated fossils (duplicates) to villagers to vastly increase the friendship. Fossils are worth over 1,000 Bells, so they count as an expensive gift. None of them will be displayed in their home. They are worth a lot to sell, but if you want your villagers to like you, shower them in duplicate fossils. I think once you hit max, it can’t go down (or it can’t go down very far) but I’m not 100% on that. You know you’re at 100% when they gift you a photo of them. They always gift you something when you gift them something, so when they give you their photo for a gift, you’ve hit 100% and you can stop giving them gifts.
As far as regular attendance goes, Animal Crossing is great for older gamers who are weirded out by social networks. If you think about it, it kind of functions the same way as, say, Facebook, just minus all the political BS, and the consequences with people you know IRL for saying the wrong thing. You have friends who say random things and do random things, and you interact with them and show them your appreciation, and they return it to you. I think it’s meant to give that same dopamine hit. Anyway, New Leaf (3DS) is a bit rougher with that. If you don’t talk to a villager in a few days, they’ll whine about having feelings, too. I’m honestly beginning to get a bit tired of it. These games were big during the pandemic when everyone had to stay indoors and isolated. Now that most people aren’t doing that anymore, a game designed to be needy is easier to drop than it is to meet its needs.