The launched about a month and a half ago, and now rumours are swirling around what’s going to appear in the first-ever Switch 2-focused Direct. Top of the list is a new , which is rumoured to be set for a reveal in the showcase ahead of a 2026 💟launch date.

As someone who spent almost 1,000 hours play♔ing , I’m ready to see the next entry💯 in the series so I can do that exact thing again. But I’m also hoping it draws more from the previous entry, , to fill in the gaps in New Horizons.

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Fans Want A New Animal Crossing, But I'm Still Not Ready

It's not you, Animal Crossing, it's me.

New Horizons Missed What Made New Leaf So Great

Decorating is the core of New Horizons. You can customise your island completely to your liking by terraforming rivers, lakes, and cliffs, crafting and painting furniture, and planting flowers and trees, all with the goal of 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:earning a visit from K.K. Slider. But once you’ve done that? You can… wander around the island admiring ꦦyour work, I guess.

Animal Crossing wasn’t always like that. In fact, for all the time I spent playing New Leaf, I barely customised my town at all, besides planting flowers and bushes and placing a few public works projects. There was so much more to the town, the vil𝕴lagers, and what you could do.

Dr Shrunk on stage in Club LOL in Animal Crossing New Leaf.

Even just on Main Street, you could go to Dr. Shrunk’s night club, explore the three floors of the Nook store, or get your hair done in a salon rather than just with a mirror. Beyond your town, you could take a boat out with Kapp’n for a visit to Tortimer Island and do even more activities there. I know New Horizons’ whole thing is you’re on a deserted island and you make a small community, but🦩 the devs ♛could have given us a bit more to work with than just two shops and the museum.

Even Brewster’s Cafe is relegated to being back inside the museum in New Horizons like older AC games, rather 𒉰than its own building.

The Villagers Became Props, Not Friends

The most detrimental change to New Horizons, though, is to the villageꦉrs you invite to live on your island. After two or three conversations, you’ve pretty much exhausted all the dialogue you’ll ever get from them. To m🌳ake matters worse, there are only eight personality types in the game, compared to the nine spots on your island, so you always have at least two villagers with the same personality, repeating the same few lines of dialogue, day-in, day-out.

While you’d eventually run into this issue in New Leaf, it wasn’t nearly as egregious. I had a lot of Normal and Peppy villagers in New Leaf, and didn’t really notice they were all the same personality type. If you have the same personality types in New Horizons, you will definitely know about it.

Why are all the Lazy villagers obses🌞sed with bugs?

There also just isn’t that much you can do with your villagers in New Horizons, which makes the lack of dialogue so much more obvious. I mean, it took the 2.0 updaܫte for them to be able to visit your house without you inviting them first.

In New Le🏅af, you could play hide-and-seek with them around your town. They could even ask you to bury a time capsule somewhere, and then ask you to d💝ig it up weeks, months, or potentially even years later. There’s a lot you can do with villager interactions, and New Horizons did… well, nothing.

What Was Even The Point Of New Horizons’ Multiplayer?

New Horizons’ multiplayer is similarly hollow. Up to seven players can visit your island at once, but whওat can you do once everyone’s there? Walking around and admiring the scenery is pretty much the only thing on the itinerary, plus a K.K. Slider show if it𝄹 happens to be Saturday.

Seriously, where were the minigames? Fans started making up their own games to play on each other’s islands because the game offered nothing, which isᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚ pretty shameful. New Leaf’s Tortimer Island minigames would have worked perfectly here - they’re all already set on an island, after all. Throw a few new ones in, and New Horizons’ longevity would have skyrocketed.

Five years on from launch, all I can see are the glaring missed opportunities in New Horizons. Hopefully the next t൩itle, whenever it’s revealed, draws more from the series’ past to make it even better.

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The Co𓃲mpletionist Struggle To Replay Animal Cr🐷ossing: New Horizons

You want me to get all this stuff a second time!?

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