8 Things In Animal Crossing Games That Don't Make Sense
There are recurring questionable occurrences in Animal Crossing that players can't help but notice in the farming simulation franchise.
X Things In Animal Crossing Games That Don't Make Sense
Players of simulation games turn to Animal Crossing for a farm sim with a twist: gamers can gather Villagers to settle in player Villages, with each Villager having unique personalities and the opportunity to interact with each other. Between rushing to harvest crops and constructing upgrades of buildings are now hijinks involving Villagers talking to each other and even bickering with one another, making the Animal Crossing a rather unique experience among farm sim fans.
Thanks to Animal Crossing: New Horizons, fans get a modern take on the Animal Crossing experience, now with more Villagers and the ability to customize items and furniture. However, despite New Horizonsbecoming everyone’s comfort game in the COVID-19 pandemic, some eagle-eyed fans may still notice some oddities in the franchise that just don’t make sense.
8 Only One Human In The World
Perhaps the main appeal of the Animal Crossing series largely has to do with the fact that the farm simulator isn’t just plainly about players managing a farm they’ve inherited. Rather, the minigame-esque element of interacting with Villagers of unique appearances and personalities make the game more entertaining than players expect. With older Animal Crossing games featuring weirder Villager quirks and dialogues, the franchise easily cements itself as a classic among players.
However, one weird thing about the series as a whole is the lack of other humans in the game save for player characters. As soon as they enter the game, they’re seemingly the only human character for miles until they meet other humans via multiplayer. While there’s always the assumption that entire communities of humans may exist elsewhere, the presentation of players being the only humans in the world may get lonesome quickly.
7 The Fourth Wall Scare
Given how intense and demanding taking care of a town in any Nintendo Animal Crossing game could get, restructuring one’s island via resetting can become an important decision for the dedicated player. However, more hilarious about this matter is the fact that the game takes note of these decisions as well. When players close the game without saving or do a particular number of resets, they trigger the appearance of a repairman-looking mole named Sonny Resetti.
Whenever Resetti appears, he almost always has a lecture about properly saving the game or taking care of one’s progress. Reset the game a number of times and Resetti will show frustration at the player as well. While this tidbit can make Resetti’s appearance a bit more endearing, this piece of Fourth Wall-breaking trivia can make the rest of the game inconsistent. After all, if Resetti resides in player islands, who else in the island knows they’re in a game?
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