Animal Crossing: New Horizons for the Nintendo Switch launched last week and its been taking this weird quarantined world of ours by storm. Its the second biggest launch on the Switch ever in terms of physical sales in the UK (after Pokemon Sword & Shield), and every Switch owner I know wont shut up about it.
Im no better than them. I got the game last Friday and Ive barely stopped playing since just like I couldnt stop playing Animal Crossing: Wild World for the Nintendo DS back when I was 17.
So what is Animal Crossing, you ask? Well its incredibly complicated and simple at the same time. I dont have a good shorthand to describe it, and theres no other game like it. Wikipedia calls it a social simulation video game, but I dont think thats accurate.
I can tell you what you do in Animal Crossing: You do chores. To pay off a mortgage. Chores like chopping wood, catching fish, and plucking fruit. You pay off your mortgage so you can get a bigger house, with a bigger mortgage.
You fill your house with furniture, you collect fossils to donate to the museum, you decorate, you garden. Its all very mundane and chill. Theres no challenge, no game-over. Everything is cute, and nothing is stressful.
Its also the opposite of what I normally like about video games. I play frustrating games like Dark Souls and DOOM Eternal, because Im a sadomasochist and I want my games to punish me for playing them. Animal Crossing never punishes.
Long story short: I love Animal Crossing but I dont know why and thats a problem when youre tasked with reviewing it.
I had no choice but to get some people who are way smarter than me to do my job for me. I hopped on Twitter, and DMd some friends in the game industry to help me answer my two big questions: Why is Animal Crossing so addictive? And why dont more games like this get made?
Martijn van der Meulen, co-founder and development director at Snap Finger Click with nearly two decades of game industry experience, says Its the pressure of wanting to do the best you can for your village and your villagers. Collecting the fruits, catching the fish you want to get as much as you can every day. It feels like a waste if you dont shake one of the trees! Thats a few more bells you couldve given to [your loan shark landlord] Tom Nook.
Daily tasks and appointments are a big part of the loop in Animal Crossing. In order to get as much as you can out of the game, youll have to jump in every day to check on your villagers to make sure theyre happy.
Van der Meulen says, If you dont visit your neighbor, they might leave and thats personal. That would really hurt your feelings. Everything about the game makes you want to do your best which means spending as much time in it as possible. Animal Crossing has almost perfected the distribution of these tasks.
Sam Sharma, a veteran game producer whos currently working on a secret project at Electronic Arts, believes New Horizons couldnt have come out at a better time. He says theres definitely the comfort of doing daily tasks that weve been missing in self-isolation, that makes it a relaxing escape.
He continues, Even without that though, the game gives a lot of autonomy to the player, to discover and explore. [Animal Crossing] has completion levels and checklists for anything you can do.
He says this creates a virtuous cycle for both kinds of players. Those that like structured tasks have an unending list of things to accomplish all of which are rewarding, and those that like exploration and discovery are constantly rewarded for their curiosity.
Dennis van den Broek, senior designer at Guerrilla Games, expands; Looking at it from a game design perspective it has a level of psychology involved.
He draws a comparison with free-to-play mobile games: They often establish a hook which keeps you returning to it. The basic principle behind this is the player gets a feeling of accomplishment and euphoria when doing small tasks, constantly repeating this, and giving the player simple rewards (things like a different color wallpaper). He says this is exactly how mobile games get players addicted.
Van den Broek says that once this addiction has been established, these games ramp up the time it takes to get rewards, and push you towards paying to cut down the wait by spending real money. Animal Crossing doesnt let you use real money, but the cycle is similar otherwise.
Once the baseline is established, they scale it up. It takes longer to get a reward, but the reward itself is bigger. This means you arent hooked on paying your mortgage, but youre actually addicted to getting rewards.
Eline Muijres, whos currently a producer at Mipumi Games after a long stint as the communications manager at the Dutch Game Garden, says its the ultimate game for completionists like her. Collecting animals, decorating houses, fashion design, meeting neighbors, all at your own pace without time pressure. She adds that she loves the puns. I agree, the puns are so good that even a pun-skeptic like myself gets a chuckle out of them.
Rami Ismail, co-founder at Vlambeer and renowned industry spokesperson, says that Animal Crossing does three things very well:
First, its a game about you it gives you full ownership of your island, along with ways to make it feel yours very quickly, and finally, a loose structure to play. In Animal Crossing, you decide the goals, you set the pace, you decide the priorities and thats how its meant to be played.
His second point is the aforementioned daily tasks. He says Animal Crossing subtly uses a form of FOMO, the mechanic a lot of mobile free-to-play games use to bring you back each day. Animal Crossing expertly uses that by having you check back the next day for things, Rami says.
The final trick Animal Crossing uses is its social aspect. Players want their island to look nice and feel nice. The game allows you to customize your island to the minute details, which means that you can be judged by all [of those little details].
In addition, Ismail says theres actually a bunch of existential and social fear built into the core of the game design, but since it manifests in what is effectively a pleasant grind, I dont think anyone really minds.
Rami has a final word on what he believes makes Animal Crossing feel so good to play: Animal Crossing is also expertly tuned into what creates joy. Small animations, messages of thanks, little progressions, rare occurrences its all there to give a sense of joy and discovery. Nothing can actually harm you in the game and everything in the game builds towards something.
Together with a sense of progression whether its being able to drop off items faster, get more places to find cool stuff, or having a tent evolve into a building, it all combines into play sessions that are frequently almost entirely purely joyful even if you get stung by a bee.
The previous proper Animal Crossing came out eight years ago. In the meantime, weve had the phenomenal Stardew Valley and Dragon Quest Builders games, but beyond those, titles in this genre seem to be pretty rare, despite its popularity.
Martijn van der Meulen says its hard to make a seemingly simple game like Animal Crossing and have people genuinely care about it.
Animal Crossing has charming characters and a rich world with lots to do. Building a game that your players want to invest their time in takes some careful balancing. Its also a huge project. When you think about all the mechanics in Animal Crossing, theyre all minigames that have had tons of thought and effort to make them fun. Its a big risk to try and succeed in this genre.
Eline Muijres agrees that games like this are deceptively complicated. My guess is that because the replay value is so high, its hard to top existing games. These games have long development times and are complex to make; it might not be worth the risk for most developers. She says its especially risky for smaller indie developers who dont make free-to-play games.
Sam Sharma thinks there are two major reasons why these games are few and far between.
Its possible that the data on building and farming games suggest that the audience size for them is such that the peak of the market hits every three or four years or so. He adds that the low rate at which these games come out helps to ensure that the audience stays large enough and hungry enough for the next one to get popular.
His second reason is market dominance. Between Stardew, The Sims, Minecraft, and Farming Simulator there are games that cater to that audience in a big way and dominate the market for long periods. (The Sims 4 came out in 2014, Stardew Valley released in 2016, and Minecraft in 2009!)
Add to that the slow shift of many exploration/building/farming hybrid games to the mobile and free-to-play space, away from consoles; it could mean that its a fragmented and saturated market, that it takes a while for a franchise to find a renewed interest big enough for them to release a new iteration.
That being said, I see a shift towards more crafting- and exploration-based play in games coming soon, as the events we are going through shape our appetite and the tastes of our game developers. Itll start with film, as films have shorter development cycles, and then well see the cultural zeitgeist change in games as well.
Dennis van den Broek disagrees its a rare genre; he says theyre just on different platforms, with different revenue models.
The basis of these games can be found everywhere in mobile games, they just dont let you spend money up front to get it, and often end up hiding content behind a paywall.
But he agrees with the rest that these games are harder to produce then youd think. Making a game like this requires tremendous effort you need a LOT of items to fill your world (rewards), and the economy needs to be tested and tweaked to perfection.
In itself, that is a task that can take months to years; as a developer you then want a quick return on your investment. He concludes that this is why most of these games end up being mobile free-to-play titles.
Rami Ismail tells me developing games like this is like a little puzzle, where nothing really works until everything works. The economy, the activities, the storylines, the movement, the characters, the pacing, the world it all has to be tweaked well to even know whether it might work. The mechanics on their own are meaningless.
And like the rest, Rami emphasizes the perceived market saturation. Its one thing to develop in a difficult-to-develop genre that nobody has made a game in, its an entirely different thing to make a game in a difficult-to-develop genre in which the universally loved multi-million player game Stardew Valley exists, and where your upcoming competition might be a new [and almost certainly immediately popular] Animal Crossing game.
I havent been able to look at Animal Crossing: New Horizons the same way since these experts explained to me exactly how intricate and well-crafted this seemingly simple game is.
If you have a Switch, I cant recommendAnimal Crossing: New Horizons enough. When youre stressed out about this nasty virus, Animal Crossing is just the thing to take your mind off it and help you relax. I guarantee you wont be bored any time soon.
Read next: Instagram now lets you share posts with your friends directly in video chats
Read our daily coverage on how the tech industry is responding to the coronavirus and subscribe to our weekly newsletter Coronavirus in Context.
For tips and tricks on working remotely, check out our Growth Quarters articles here or follow us on Twitter.
The rest is here:
We got 5 game devs to explain why Animal Crossing is so damn good - The Next Web
- Fixing Our Broken Relationship with 'Stuff': A Q&A With Sandra Goldmark - State of the Planet - December 19th, 2020
- Viola Davis, Colman Domingo on the Importance of Telling August Wilson's Stories on Screen (Exclusive) - WUSA9.com - December 19th, 2020
- Best movies of 2020 - WTOP - December 19th, 2020
- How 2020 Changed the Way That Protests Are Organized - 5280 | The Denver Magazine - December 19th, 2020
- Aldis Hodge (One Night in Miami): This film can be a great asset toward the conversation about systemic racism and injustice [EXCLUSIVE VIDEO... - December 19th, 2020
- Covid pandemic prompts a surge in appreciation for local nature and rewilding cities - iNews - December 19th, 2020
- Is Silicon Valley Sinking And How Can You Benefit? - Forbes - December 19th, 2020
- Feinberg Forecast: The Oscars Landscape Heading Into the Holidays - Hollywood Reporter - December 19th, 2020
- Duluth's best bites of 2020 ranged from fresh herring to ice cream - Duluth News Tribune - December 19th, 2020
- The Best Albums of 2020 - The Ringer - December 19th, 2020
- Julie Mehretu on the Right to Abstraction - Ocula Magazine - December 19th, 2020
- The Best Music Videos of 2020 Year in Review - IndieWire - December 19th, 2020
- Soul Citys Year of Transformation - Mail and Guardian - December 19th, 2020
- The Dream of the Swimming Pool - Los Angeles Review of Books - lareviewofbooks - December 19th, 2020
- Live4ever's Best Of 2020: A terrible year soundtracked by brilliant music - Live4ever - December 19th, 2020
- How David Hockney Trolled the New Yorker - The Bulwark - December 19th, 2020
- Was 2020 the year of BTS? Here's why 'Time' magazine thinks so - Film Daily - December 19th, 2020
- The 11 Best Comedies Of The 21st Century (So Far), Ranked - GameRant - November 29th, 2020
- Feinberg Forecast: Updated Oscars Projections as Thanksgiving Approaches - Hollywood Reporter - November 29th, 2020
- The rise and fall of Sir Philip Green, the retail king who fell to ground - Evening Standard - November 29th, 2020
- Finding Hope in America's Pandemic Dystopia - The American Prospect - July 5th, 2020
- This Isn't the First Time Christians Have Opposed A Racial Justice Movement - Sojourners - July 5th, 2020
- Hamilton already feels outdated - The Week - July 5th, 2020
- Spirit of '76: The year the Dallas Cowboys wore red, white, and blue - Cowboys Wire - July 5th, 2020
- Washington Redskins To Review Racist Team Name - HuffPost - July 5th, 2020
- How Black Lives Matter fits into the long history of American radicalism - Vox.com - July 2nd, 2020
- Opinion: Decisions on Stamfords Columbus statue, park decisions need to be informed - The Advocate - July 2nd, 2020
- Detroit jazz fest goes virtual for 2020; Labor Day weekend event to air on web, TV, radio - Detroit Free Press - July 2nd, 2020
- New wave of sustainable start-ups from Poland - Innovation Origins - July 2nd, 2020
- About bloody time: is cinema finally going with the flow of period sex? - The Guardian - July 2nd, 2020
- Animated 'Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse' Is a Pop-Art Masterpiece - PopMatters - July 2nd, 2020
- The Cyberlaw Podcast: Using the Internet to Cause Emotional Distress is a Felony? - Lawfare - June 24th, 2020
- 'There Is No Year' is Prescient Protest Art | Arts - Harvard Crimson - June 24th, 2020
- Meet the Brothers Behind an Extreme Gun Rights Network Republicans Call a Big Scam - The Daily Beast - June 24th, 2020
- Why race will continue to vex American newsrooms - The Economist - June 24th, 2020
- Using the internet to cause emotional distress is a felony? - Reason - June 24th, 2020
- The Brothers Behind an Extreme Gun-Rights Network That Republicans Call a Big Scam - The Trace - June 24th, 2020
- Trump the Troglodyte - The New York Times - June 24th, 2020
- Belonging in Fashion, Equality in the Spotlight - Yahoo News - June 24th, 2020
- BACK THE BLUE: Former Superman, UFC Hall of Famer join PPD as reserve officers - Idaho State Journal - June 24th, 2020
- Here Are the Best Hip-Hop Songs of 2020 So Far - XXLMAG.COM - June 24th, 2020
- ALERT: The Church in Danger - Capstone Report - June 24th, 2020
- Soulwax and the hunt for the EMS Synthi 100 - Engadget - June 24th, 2020
- Why Bostock will never have the final word on human sexuality - Christian Post - June 24th, 2020
- Where would menswear be without Black British designers? - i-D - June 24th, 2020
- A woke new world: Who deemed the outdated attitudes on display in 2019s Aladdin movie unacceptable in 2020? - RT - June 24th, 2020
- Why Indians Angered by the Racism and Police Brutality in the US Dont Care About the Same Issues in Their Own Country - VICE - June 6th, 2020
- Fixing What's Broken: If We Build a Moral Economy, the Future Will Be Better - Singularity Hub - June 6th, 2020
- In Exciting Times, Echoes of Sally Rooney, but With a Queer Twist - The New York Times - June 6th, 2020
- This docu on Jeffrey Epstein is a harrowing watchalmost too harrowing, in fact, to stomach - ABS-CBN News - June 6th, 2020
- 3 Questions: Sandy Alexandre on the literary roots of technological innovations - MIT News - June 6th, 2020
- Black Lives Matter: Resources and Responses - Creative Review - June 6th, 2020
- 3 people who correctly predicted $10,000 Bitcoin (and how) - finder.com.au - June 6th, 2020
- 411 Readers Poll Results: The Top 20 Songs Of The 2010s - 411mania.com - June 6th, 2020
- A retrospective view of Ireland from the far Left: The Irish Catholic considers Navigating the Zeitgeist - Monthly Review - May 22nd, 2020
- 'Acts of Kindness Are Really Contagious.' Historian Rutger Bregman Argues for a New Way of Thinking About Humanity - TIME - May 22nd, 2020
- My husband isnt working and its affecting our marriage - Albuquerque Journal - May 22nd, 2020
- The Notorious B.I.G.: The makings of the King of New York - REVOLT TV - May 22nd, 2020
- One last chance to binge-watch movies you've meant to watch - NOLA.com - May 11th, 2020
- Joe Biden and the Moralizers - The Wall Street Journal - May 11th, 2020
- CBR Takes Issue With The Rising of the Shield Hero's Socially Contentious Undertones and "Incel" Fanbase - Bounding Into Comics - May 11th, 2020
- Rage is a quiet thing: How Hayley Williams and other female artists are writing their way out of trauma - The Independent - May 11th, 2020
- How Art Movements Tried to Make Sense of the World in the Wake of the 1918 Flu Pandemic - TIME - May 6th, 2020
- The Punk Movement Was Over Before It Began - WhatCulture - May 6th, 2020
- 5 Recent Comic Book Movies That Were Better Than The MCU's Offerings (& 5 That Were Worse) - Screen Rant - May 6th, 2020
- The Rising of the Shield Hero Is Absurdly Popular for NO Good Reason - CBR - Comic Book Resources - May 6th, 2020
- Empowering, alluring, degenerate? The evolution of red lipstick - Myjoyonline.com - May 6th, 2020
- 'Crip Camp': two disability rights activists and their summer of love - The Jewish News of Northern California - April 26th, 2020
- The Labour Left Didn't Start With Jeremy Corbyn's Leadership, And It Won't End There Either - Jacobin magazine - April 26th, 2020
- The Best Value in Watches Comes From These Three Brands - Gear Patrol - April 26th, 2020
- 'The Last Dance' - Dennis Rodman embodied the pop culture phenomenon of the '90s Bulls - ESPN - April 26th, 2020
- Continued adaptation a new normal - The Star Online - April 26th, 2020
- Best Earth Day Songs: 20 Tracks That Make The World A Better Place - uDiscover Music - April 26th, 2020
- #blackAF Struggles, Mrs. America Shines, and Netflix, Hulu Weigh the Future Streaming Wars - IndieWire - April 26th, 2020
- Covid-19 conjures up days of apartheid - News24 - April 26th, 2020
- Nick Fuentes and his white nationalist Groyper Army have a new home on TikTok - The Daily Dot - April 26th, 2020
- Transmyscira: Exorcising the Ghosts of the 20th Century with IRON MAN: EXTREMIS - Comicosity - March 26th, 2020
- About | The Zeitgeist Movement - March 24th, 2020
- Online movie screenings support Zeitgeist and local theaters across the country - NOLA.com - March 24th, 2020
- How Kinfolk Magazine Defined the Millennial Aestheticand Unraveled Behind the Scenes - Vanity Fair - March 24th, 2020