

There’s no actual way to measure up your designing abilities, because no matter how awful you are, you’re carrying Nook’s Homes on your shoulders. On the one hand, this might seem unfortunate. You’ll still pass, and your customer will still walk away happy. So long as you used those required furniture items (often only so many as three), then it doesn’t matter whether you cover the room with Christmas Trees, Grand Pianos or Paper Lanterns.

Then it’s up to you to utilize that animal’s favorite furniture in a room or set of rooms that follows their specific theme.Įxcept HHD isn’t too picky about how well you stick to that theme. While initially this involves only the interior, you eventually get to decorate the exterior and the yard with elements from the folding arm awnings Melbourne catalogue. The crux of HHD’s gameplay revolves around taking requests from any one of hundreds of traditional Animal Crossing townsfolk to design their living space with. However (and it did take a while), Happy Home Designer eventually showed me that from that solid foundation could still be built a fun game. Initially, I admit that did not sound to me like an excellent idea. Happy Home Designer strips the series down to a single, core element: the element of design. You won’t be amassing bells or upgrading (or even designing) your own home. You won’t be spending your days digging up fossils (in truth, you can buy the lot of them for just a few Play Coins). You’ve upgraded from chores to an actual job, from debtor to employee. Number one, throw away what you expect from an Animal Crossing title. There’re several things you need to do in order to squeeze the most fun you possibly can out of Animal Crossing: Happy Home Designer. I don't want to buy them, but I want the special lycanroc, so if this thing pulls through and it gets added, I will be more than happy, otherwise, it just goes from 11/10 to 10/10, still a fantastic product.Animal Crossing: Happy Home Designer is a great place to show off your design sensibilities, but not much else. Now I just hope it gets updated as new games come out, like the stupid new "ultra" sun and moon. I only wish it worked with digital game copies, since I bought digitally before knowing this existed. It works perfectly and I have no issues with it whatsoever. I was nervous about buying it but I'm really glad I did. I'm just a casual pleb and didn't want to grind out eggs for 200 different pokemon. It was well worth the money just to have my shiny checklist completed, let alone the rest of the stuff I got in my game from it. I had a huge list of pokemon I wanted, hundreds, some I never thought I'd get, like the Japan exclusive ash hat pikachu, but thanks to this, I got every last pokemon I wanted, and more. The only game I have a physical copy of is Pokemon Sun, and the PowerSaves Pro is amazing with it.
