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  • ESRB Rating: Everyone

Offical GamePro Score: 4.50

Average User Score: 4.3

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Animal Crossing

The best part of Animal Crossing for the Gamecube was using a Gameshark. I could fly away while people talked to me,get unlimited bells, and by everythin for 1 bell. I also liked how you could hook up your GBA to the Gamecube to get to that island. Plant them coconut in your town and your rich! I enjoyed spending hours fishing. The suckiest part is that if you don't play for a while, there will be a lot of weeds to pick up. But withthe Gameshark, all those weeds would be gone in seconds. Whoo-hoo!

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very addicting

this is a really fun game. it is extremely addicting and worth all of its money. if your not an animal crossing player or you have never heard of it thist is how the game goes. you start out in a train. and some little guy asks you who you are and where you are going if your a boy or a girl. that is how you make your character. after you get of the train your are in the trown you said you where going to. you step of then you meet nook, the dude that gives you a job cuz you have no money and you rent his house. you get a job, and nook asks you to do little things for him like delivering goods to the ppl of your town. after your done with your job the town is yours to explore. you can make your house bigger buy paying of the rent. there is a lot more to do in the game...but what i said are the main things. overall its worth buying!

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One of my first GC games.

Yay Animal Crossing! Fun game! The 24 hour clock stretches out events and gameplay to the point where you cant possibly find everything there is in a short period of time as with traditional games. There are always things to do and the game reacts to your actions. No two games are ever alike, a randomizer feature determines that. Places on the map, villagers, starting conditions, even your face are all different. You can be nice or mean as you see fit. There is very little structured play and gamers will find that they have the freedom to do almost anything they can imagine. The possibilities when more human players are involved is even more tremendous. The game can be played with any level of cunning, skill, or fun. You start out working for Tom Nook and you have to do small tasks for him. Once those are finished youre free from him. You then have to pay off your house by earning money from selling sea shells, fossils, finding money in trees, planting trees and selling the fruit for money, etc. Your house grows each time you pay it off. You gain rooms and floors and rooms can increase in size, too, allowing you to place more furniture in the house. In the game you can buy clothes to wear, umbrellas, or even make designs for said items. You can buy furniture for your house. Theres endless things to buy like beds, cabinets, sofas, televisions, clocks, tables, chairs, etc. You can also go around town and do things like catching bugs, fishing, digging for fossils, plant trees and flowers, etc. When it snows you can find snow balls and make two different sizes and put one on top the other and make a snow man! The game runs on the clock of the Gamecube, as mentioned before and if you dont play for a while and come back, your house will be infested with cockroaches. So you have to run around in your house and step on them. Sometimes youll even have to move the furniture. There are many many different neighbors in your town. Theres penguins, rhinos, chipmunks, cats, dogs, ducks, etc. If you dont interact with them enough, in time, theyll move away to another town. You also gain new neighbors throughout the game. I think thats enough explaining the game -_- The sound is annoying but good. When animals talk its a squeaky fast noise. But you can buy music that you play in your house which is neat. Theres also NES games that you can get! Graphics are good for the time. Characters look good, rain looks good, snow looks good. As far as replay value goes, I wouldnt ever consider erasing my file to play again. Overall, Animal Crossing will last you a long time. Its very addictive and fun.

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My AC review from 2.5D

Touted as The Sims for kids, Animal Crossing is Nintendo's cutesy spin on the life-sim formula.

AC is quite essentally a game about nothing. You play as a horned boy or girl (your choice) who moves to a randomly generated town that you name with randomly generated residents. The only constsnt character besides a few that show up on rare occasions, and the museum cureater, is Tom Nook the local shop owner, and slum lord extraordinaire. The whole premise behind AC is...well, whatever you want it to be. There are tons of activities that your character can partake in. You can spend the whole day decorating your house that's provided to you by said slum-lord Tom Nook by choosing the floor, the wall paper, and what furniture or knicknacks goes into it; you can choose to fish all day, and sell the fish for cash, donate them to the museum, or even use them in your home decor; you can even run errands for the residents of your town who will reward you handily with new clothes for your character, furniture, and even fruit. There is so much to do in this game. You even have to upkeep your town by pulling weeds that pop up from time to time. You can even save your character to a memory card, and take it to a friend's house and explore their town.

AC runs off your Gamecube's internal clock, and calender, so there are some activities that only take place at certain times of the year. Tell one of the residents your birthday, and every year on your birthday, you'll be showered with gifts, cards, and a cake. Not only does the game celebrate birthdays, but every holiday, and the seasons also change with the calender. In autumn the leaves on the tree will change colors, in winter rain will turn to snow, and in summers everything's green and lightning bugs appear. It's a really fun concept, and it adds so much to the experience. The Gamecube's internal clock is also put to good use in this fashion. Tom Nook's store closes at 9:00 pm every night in your time, and there are certain activities like the summer yoga that takes place at certain times during the day. I can actually see some people getting up at 6:00 am just to catch it (I'm not one of those people).

For as addictive and fun as AC is, it does have it's faults. Once you've paid off your house and have decorated it to your liking, there's not much else to strive for in the game. After that, you might be entertained a little while longer by the quest to complete the museum's collection (my friends and I had a little competition going), and maybe by certain yearly events, but for the most part, there's nothing left to strive for after you've got everything to your liking. Also, even though the size of your house is upgradeable via Tom Nook, the final size of your house is still too small. You get so much furniture throughout the game, that you end up having to store it all by putting it into letters, and then storing those letters in the post office. This can be combated by filling the three other slots with new characters you've created (assuming you've got no one else playing the game along with you), and then having four houses to decorate, but even then you'll have more stuff that you know what to do with.

Bottom Line: Animal Crossing is a super addictive life-sim game that you won't be able to get enough of at first. However, once you complete certain aspects of the game, there's nothing else to strive for.

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Buy it or Borrow it 3

The game play really had two different parts to it. Real life and fun. The real life part would consist of paying off loans and interior design. The fun part consists of interacting with other little critters, fishing, visiting other people's cities through their memory cards, and even bug catching. As much as this may sound childish (which it is...) it is extremely addicting. Even to the point where i sat down for five hours playing it. I would recommend buying this game if you want to experience the real world through the eyes of a horned creature (that has no apparent life...).

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Suprisingly fun

Animal Crossing looks pretty lame & unispired. But once you start playing it, there's a lot under the hood. Everything from working and helping neighbors, to planting your own orchard and customizing your house is possible. Cross over

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Addicting; like cocaine

If you like games like The Sims, you'll love this one. There is something to do everyday. There is fish and bugs to always catch, furniture to collect, Bells to earn, and friends to make. The graphics are cute for this game. The gameplay is simple and easily mastered. The voices are just awesome. Sure, you can barely understand them, but they are so CUTE. The creativity levels of this game are through the roof. The game cannever be beaten, you could never collect every single piece of furniture unless you had so much time on your hands. A very interesting game, but it could have had more fish and insects, and get rid of weeds. But a very original game that is very esy to enjoy.

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Never Ending Game

Into a market dominated by action games, Nintendo has released the quiet, happy, and group-oriented Animal Crossing. Though not a challenging game by any means, nor one with any sort of plot or tension to draw the player, Animal Crossing more than makes up for that with its sheer number of activities and a good sense of humor that is both kid-safe and capable of making older kids and adults snicker. The premise is simple: Animal Crossing is a role-playing-style game where you play as a human leaving home to make your way in the countryside village of the same name as the game's title. The game itself is not so easily pigeonholed. When you arrive, since you have no money and no place to live, the owner of the general store loans you a house. Where the game goes from there is really up to you--there is no time limit to repaying the loan, and the game does not push you toward any particular course of action, unlike in a typical RPG. The goal of the game, if it can be said to have one, is to simply live in the village and amuse yourself. You have no need to eat or sleep. As you play, you'll meet the animals of the village, see some move out and some new ones move in, find various ways of making money, and begin to get a picture of just how much there is to do and see. Events happen in real time through use of the GameCube's internal clock, allowing for daytime and nighttime activities, along with special events like holiday celebrations and seasonal changes. At its heart, Animal Crossing is very much a game for a family or someone looking for a change of pace. Nintendo dubs Animal Crossing as a "communication game," and it's a somewhat accurate label. Talking to your animal neighbors and sending them letters are large portions of the game. Of course, the animals don't understand what you write, and in conversation they do most of the talking and leave you with only two or three response choices if you get any at all. But each animal has a distinct personality and will talk about a wide variety of subjects. Rarely do you have a conversation or receive a reply letter that feels like a repeat. What they actually say is sometimes amusing. Sometimes they'll insult other animals or even you, and sometimes they'll say things that can be taken as a double entendre. There are also many moments in the game that you'll want to describe to the people you are playing the game with, whether it is because the event is something you hadn't seen before or because it was just funny--like your hound dog neighbor, Butch, switching his clothes to that pink and purple design one of you made at the pattern shop.

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Woo!

I love this game. It is the best ever for the gamecube. Despite the kiddish look and feel, it reins all over the other gambcube's games. I love the Real life feel also. Best game in the GC

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this game is fun when your bored....

Animal Crossing, a very fun game when you first get it, you will be addicted for hours on end, but once you have the game for a good amount of time, it will pretty much bore you to death! There are good things and bad things about this game, which pretty much balances the game in half, at least that's what I think about it. What i absolutly loved about this game was that you could create your own town, random people would move in, and you actually get to celebrate holidays in real life. But it had some downfalls as well, like that you don't get to create your own person, the main people that talk to you a lot are the most annoying people in the world, the people say the same things a lot of the times, and it's very hard to get a complete set of furniture that you like. The graphics are really really bad, worse than their language that they speak. Also, what I noticed playing through the game is that you have to have no life and stay up 24/7 to keep your town looking perfectly clean because about every hour or two, weeds start going around in your town. To sum this all up, if you are a big fan for animal crossing games or you really love to play simulation games, then you would probably enjoy this game, but if your not, don't even look at the game cover in the store, it's not even worth it!!!

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