Hey guy's it's me jax and today I thought I would do some research on animal crossing new leaf and I just how much it costs to fully finish your house and you probably won't believe me.
But before I talk about that let's see in the history of animal crossing new leaf for the 3ds
Animal Crossing: New Leaf was announced at E3 2010 as the first title in the series for the Nintendo 3DS.
Development of new leaf
It later appeared at the 2011 Nintendo World expo, and again at E3 2011 during a short presentation where a release date was originally announced for later that year in Japan.
Nintendo later pushed back the release to sometime in 2012 before the end of the fiscal year in March, and eventually finalized a Japanese release to Q3 of that year during a Nintendo Direct broadcast.
Its English title was revealed in October 2012, along with a tentative release date in the west for early 2013.
In February 2013, New Leaf's definite release date was announced for the following June in North America, Europe, and Australia.
The game was produced by Katsuya Eguchi and directed by the two-person team of Isao Moro and Aya Kyogoku, who had both worked under the previous director of Animal Crossing: City Folk on the Wii.
The idea for the player to become mayor did not manifest until about a year into development, which stemmed from the concept of giving the player much more freedom in designing and shaping the way their town grew.
Giving players the ability to pass ordinances and laws that involve shops being open earlier or later in the day was included to accommodate more personal schedules and play styles while still keeping the game synced with the passage of time in the real world,and The main theme of the game was composed by Manaka Kataoka (formally known as Manaka Tominaga) while she composed the rest of the soundtrack with Atsuko Asahi. Kazumi Totaka was the sound director for the game as he was for the rest of the series.plus Monolith Soft assisted on development.
Gameplay
As in the previous installments of the Animal Crossing series, we take control of a villager who is moving into a new town. Upon arrival, the player is mistaken for the new town mayor and is given that position instead of being a standard resident. Like the previous games in the series, the game enables the player to explore their town, talk with other residents, and participate in various activities such as fishing and bug catching. Doing various activities or selling various items earns the player Bells, the game's currency, which they can use to purchase various items such as furniture or clothes, or pay loans used to renovate their house. The game is played in real-time, utilizing the Nintendo 3DS system's internal clock, with aspects such as shop opening times, species of wildlife and special events varying depending on the time of day and season.
Animal Crossing: New Leaf introduces many features to the series. The Player begin the game living in a tent before their house, which eventually can be upgraded and expanded, is built.[2] Customization, a major part of the series has been enhanced, particularly in the player's ability to modify their character's appearance and decorate their house.
The character's pants can be modified in addition to their shirt, shoes, hat, and accessory; and the ability to hang furniture on walls has been added.
Features previously only found in the Japanese DÅbutsu no Mori e+ for the GameCube, such as benches and lamp posts, have returned. Another addition is the ability to swim in the ocean that borders the town using a swimsuit.
Players were once able to visit each other's towns using the Nintendo Network before it permanently lost support and service on April 8, 2024.
We fixed that with pretendo
Until that time, players were also able to add one another to a friends list that allowed them to exchange messages with one another, while up to four players at a time were able to travel to the tropical Tortimer Island to take part in various minigames that award medals.Players are able to take snapshots at almost any time, which are saved to the Nintendo 3DS Camera and can be shared.
Characters
The game features two new animal types for regular villagers: hamsters and deer, as well as two new non-player character personalities: "smug" and "uchi", the latter described as a "big sister type". New special characters include a dog named Isabelle, who acts as the player's personal assistant, her twin brother Digby who runs the Happy Home Showcase where players can view model home layouts, a sloth named Leif who runs a gardening center, and a pair of alpacas named Reese and Cyrus, who run a store called "Re-Tail", a recycling shop where players can sell unwanted items or customize furniture for their house. Tom Nook returns as a real-estate agent instead of a shopkeeper, his former business run by his nephews Timmy and Tommy. The skunk Kicks and hedgehog Labelle from Animal Crossing: City Folk are featured as shoe and accessory salespersons respectively, while K.K. Slider has a position as a DJ at a nightclub called "Club LOL". The building is run by an axolotl named Dr. Shrunk, who is a stand-up comedian who replaced frillard from city folk. Tortimer, the former mayor of the town, runs an island that can be visited by using the boat at the dock the day after the first home loan is paid off.
There is also a character that shows up during easter named zipper who is a living bunny suit
Hm sounds like someone we know pointing at you fnaf
Now it's time for me to tell you how much it unfortunately costs to pay off your house fully.
It costs 7,595,800 Bells.
I will probably never pay off my house because it's that much but maybe someone will who knows but I hope you liked this blog.
Thanks I've been getting online since I'm at my grandma's and she has a modded 2ds that she lets me borrows so I been playing with other people and met some nice friends.
I hope this blog makes you go back to acnl since I think you enjoyed it
An interesting read for someone who's spent a TON of time playing both the original AC for the GameCube and ACCF for the Wii, and it's got me wanting to start playing it now. (It was on the 3DS that @MattTheTekie gave me, I've just been so busy doing stuff on Paint that I haven't gotten around to playing it yet.)
My biggest question(s) about it remain the same as when I first heard about ACNL though: how exactly does swimming work? (Can you go underwater? Can fish like sharks attack you? How far can you swim from shore? Can you swim in the river, lakes, and ponds, or just the ocean?)
As for the price of fully paying off the house, if saltwater fishing works as well as it did in the original AC and ACCF, and if the stalk market, money trees, and/or flea markets are still things, then that shouldn't be too difficult to get. (I made millions in the stalk market in the original AC, for instance.)
The stock market was transformed into selling turnips for profits which you could only get on Sundays and you had to find the perfect day to sell them and if you had the law in where you could sell stuff for a get a higher price.
The turnips rot after the next Sunday.
And you can only swim in the ocean and the only way you can get a swim suit is if you buy it from the old lady with medals on tortimoor island and I don't know if sharks can attack you in water.
If you start playing I will boot up mine and I could help you with your town.
Ah, I see. That's more or less how the stalk market worked in the original AC too, and what I would do (once I was already reasonably wealthy) is just by an excessive amount of turnips (like 10,000, or rather 100 bunches of 100 turnips), which means that if the turnip price goes up 10 Bells, I make 100,000 Bells. (It obviously takes up a lot of space requires a lot of money to but the turnips to begin with, but you can make some CRAZY profits that way, lol!)
And I see. Definitely still curious of sharks can attack you then, as well as if jellyfish or lionfish can sting you, etc., etc.
(Since they added dangerous scorpions and tarantulas in ACCF, and bees could already sting you even in the original AC, it wouldn't be too farfetched.)
And alrighty! I'll probably be taking you up on that offer eventually, thanks!