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Dōbutsu no Mori: Difference between revisions

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m (I'm sure there were other villagers not in Animal Forest (not counting any that debuted from Wild World onwards).)
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[[File:Herabunafishyfishy.png|thumb|A player catches a [[Herabuna]], an {{AF|nolink}}-only fish.]]
[[File:Herabunafishyfishy.png|thumb|A player catches a [[Herabuna]], an {{AF|nolink}}-only fish.]]
[[File:NINTENDO64--Animal_Forest_english_translation_Sep26_20_42_44.jpg|thumb|The dial input system in {{AF|nolink}} (taken from a fan-translated copy)]]
[[File:NINTENDO64--Animal_Forest_english_translation_Sep26_20_42_44.jpg|thumb|The dial input system in {{AF|nolink}} (taken from a fan-translated copy)]]
*[[Punchy]] and [[Cheri]] were absent in {{AF|nolink}}.
*[[Punchy]], [[Ankha]], and [[Cheri]] were absent in {{AF|nolink}}.
*The real-time clock must be set manually in-game, as the Nintendo 64 lacks an internal clock.
*The real-time clock must be set manually in-game, as the Nintendo 64 lacks an internal clock.
*The [[Able Sisters]] and their shop are not in {{AF|nolink}}; thus, designs are not available for use and the player must rely on pre-made clothing and umbrella designs from [[Tom Nook]].
*The [[Able Sisters]] and their shop are not in {{AF|nolink}}; thus, designs are not available for use and the player must rely on pre-made clothing and umbrella designs from [[Tom Nook]].

Revision as of 23:04, 31 January 2024

Template:Cleanup Template:Animal Forest Template:GalleryTabber Template:Infobox VGinfo Dōbutsu no Mori (どうぶつの森 Animal Forest in English), is the name of the first installment in the Animal Crossing series. It was released only in Japan for the Nintendo 64. The reason it was originally released as a Japan-exclusive game was because Nintendo was uncertain whether a worldwide release for the game was viable, due to it being text-heavy and containing Japanese references and holidays that were untranslatable at the time.[1] It was later remade for the GameCube in 2002, and released worldwide as Animal Crossing. This game is compatible with the Expansion Pak and is displayed in a higher resolution when it is used (640x480 as opposed to 320x240). Since 2010, a fully playable fan translation patch is in existence which ports dialog directly from the Nintendo GameCube release, but there are glitches with long blocks of text such as mail and the Bulletin Board being cut off suddenly.

Differences from Animal Crossing

File:0BellShrine.PNG
The Bell Shrine in Animal Crossing: Amiibo Festival.
File:Herabunafishyfishy.png
A player catches a Herabuna, an Animal Crossing: Amiibo Festival-only fish.
File:NINTENDO64--Animal Forest english translation Sep26 20 42 44.jpg
The dial input system in Animal Crossing: Amiibo Festival (taken from a fan-translated copy)

References

Template:Video Games

fr:Animal Forest ru:Dōbutsu no Mori (игра)