Tomodachi life hacks. Though Tomodachi Life is a rather simple game, there are always some glitches to be had, with any game. These are the following glitches that have been found so far. Though Tomodachi Life is a rather simple game, there are always some glitches to be had, with any game. These are the following glitches that have been found so far. The best place to get cheats, codes, cheat codes, walkthrough, guide, FAQ, unlockables, tricks, and secrets for Tomodachi Life for Nintendo 3DS.
- The CAMPGROUND. How do you send a traveler or have a traveler visit your island? I have a friend that plays Tomodachi Life and we have Street-passed with each other many times before. Not one of those times have we gotten travelers from each other? It seems like is is impossible to unlock this feature/store, how do we do this?
- Jul 17, 2014 StreetPass in Tomodachi Life is an important aspect which is primarily used to interchange Export Items between two islands and to send/receive traveler belonging to other island.
A traveler (JP). Travelers are special Miis that travel to and from the player's island and other islands via StreetPass, with these Miis being exclusive to Tomodachi Life.In order to receive and send travelers, the player must have StreetPass enabled on their system and on Tomodachi Life.The player can obtain their own traveler Miis when two married Miis have a baby. Jun 09, 2014 How to get a traveler to camp on your island in Tomodachi Life? I've unlocked literally every shop/tower/house in my game. Except for the one that needs a traveler to camp on my island. You have to streetpass someone who chose to have a child Mii be sent as a traveler. You can also choose to send one of your own babies as a traveler when.
As a grown-up, it’s hard to commit to a game like Tomodachi Life. Nintendo’s latest life-sim game for the 3DS is a hands-off, no-action experience that asks players to pop in and out of the game briefly and frequently. It hinges on weird skits and childish writing, and it wrests a lot of control away from players who might expect to sink time into exploration and tinkering with a slew of virtual characters.
Games like this can do quite well, of course. But Tomodachi Life's best qualities—quick-burst play, cutesy situations, touchscreen controls, camera integration, social-media tie-ins—are the stuff you’d be more likely to find in a cheap smartphone game, one that you can pull out of your pocket randomly to enjoy for a few minutes before getting on with your day.
Nintendo spent a ton of effort translating this odd game for an international audience—and thereby bucking our collective annoyance at the company’s case of sequelitis—which makes this title a welcome breath of fresh 3DS air (and an easy recommendation for tweens). But in spite of a slew of scripted content and an evident helping of Nintendo quality control, this game is not worth both the price and the requirement of lugging a 3DS around.
Window dressing
Tomodachi Life drops players onto a sunny, tropical island (if you’re keeping score, Nintendo historians, this isn’t Wuhu Island from various Wii and 3DS games) that, for whatever reason, contains only one apartment complex, and an empty one at that. You’re asked to fill the first unit with your personal virtual likeness, either taken from your 3DS’ primary “Mii” character or created on the spot.
![Send A Traveler Tomodachi Life Send A Traveler Tomodachi Life](/uploads/1/2/5/5/125509822/346453345.jpg)
After fake-you moves into a small room, you can add up to 99 more occupants, and you’ll want to add at least ten Miis to unlock many of the island’s attractions. Once you’ve filled enough vacancies, the dollhouse comes to life, and your denizens will begin nagging you for food, clothes, entertainment, and more. You’ll accumulate cash and rare items by catering to their every whim, forming the game’s basic feedback loop: Resident wants something; you buy said item at a shop on the island (if you don’t have it already); resident responds by gaining “happiness” points (which unlock certain items) and giving you in-game cash.
Tomodachi life nintendo ds xl. The Nintendo DS a handheld game console developed and released by Nintendo. The only game in the Tomodachi series to be released for Nintendo DS is Tomodachi Collection. The Nintendo DS went on sale in North America on November 21, 2004. The DS, short for 'Developers' System' or 'Dual Screen.
That means you’ll spend most of the game glancing at the apartment’s windows, which give hints about which residents are in need of something, then tapping and assisting. Pretty quickly, their needs go beyond material items. Sometimes, they’ll invite you to play dinky mini-games: you can play a matching card game, tap the screen like mad to knock an opponent’s toy over, play a simplified JRPG, or guess what a super-zoomed photo is displaying. Other times, residents will seek your advice and start prodding you about becoming friends—or more than friends.
The rest of the island is made up of quirky moments that your Miis are inserted into, as if Nintendo wrote up a kid-friendly sketch comedy show while dropping acid. Instead of jokes and punchlines, your characters get into awkward situations, like PG-rated rap battles, Twin Peaks-style dream sequences, or standing around a barbecue and commenting frequently about the meat (all while speaking with synthesized voices that actually handle a giant range of English words quite well).
There’s a certain age range that this content seems written for, and we at Ars feel squarely aged out of it. More importantly, these zany activities rarely dole out cash or points; if you go to the beach or the lookout point and hang out with a Mii there, he or she won’t react giddily like a virtual pet. You’re just hanging out with Nintendo’s so-so writing at that point.
Exploiting your friends
Comparisons to Nintendo’s Animal Crossing series—another cutesy, written-for-kids life-sim with little in the way of endgame—crumble pretty quickly upon closer examination. Tomodachi relies almost entirely on the touchscreen for control, and you don’t control characters directly. In fact, you rarely get to customize or rearrange anything in the apartments or on the island, and there’s nothing in the way of Animal Crossing-esque discovery or exploration. Tap to warp to different spots on the island, then talk, shop, watch, and repeat.
You might expect to export your 3DS online friend list or Miiverse roster to fill out the apartment building, but for whatever reason, Tomodachi doesn’t support such automation. If you want to export characters online, you’ll have to create a QR code within the game, then send that code to your friends. Otherwise, you’ll have to meet your friends in person to wirelessly transfer your Miis, so unless you already have Miis loaded in your 3DS’ Mii Maker, you’ll have to build island residents from scratch.
The way the game plays, you’ll want to go to the trouble of making personalized residents. I used that QR code functionality to import a random person online, and I had a lot less patience for his neediness and requests than I did for people who resembled celebrities or my friends. In real life, I’d hang out with friends while tapping away in a brief session and mention whatever weird activities “they” had been up to, and we’d laugh while I held the 3DS up.
Oh, and we used the Y and X buttons to capture screenshots. That’s probably the coolest part of Tomodachi, by the way: the ability to take screenshots at any time and then upload them through Nintendo’s admittedly clunky social media sharing service. One friend rode another friend as a horse in a dream sequence—saved and sent. Same when actress Kristen Bell turned my good friend down for a date, or when my friends were backup dancers for my singing performance at a giant music hall.
Ars has recently reported on Nintendo’s choice not to support same-sex romance in the game, along with the company’s official response—namely, that such a thing would be too difficult to patch into the game at this point. While such a change does seem pretty steep to pull off with final, retail code, after playing the game for a while, I’m shocked that Nintendo never considered the issue during the design process.
The game wants so badly for players to empathize with the apartment’s residents, particularly in crafting their personalities (quirky, reserved, polite, etc.) during character creation, and it also makes sure to accelerate the romance process when a new character is marked as a “spouse” in relation to the game’s “primary” Mii. Tomodachi Life also awards happiness points for relationships, marriages, and having children, and it smothers characters in unhappy rain clouds when their strides fail.
In short, this isn’t optional, easy-to-ignore content. If you’re gay, Tomodachi will reinforce feelings of exclusion regularly. And if you find that criticism irrelevant, consider how much of the game hinges on you investing personally into its content. When bizarre dreams happen, or Miis gather for a Frisbee match, or residents rip into karaoke songs, you don’t accrue money or points or any other “useful” stuff. Instead, you attach those moments to the real people the Miis have been modeled on.
Tomodachi is most successful, most amusing, and most striking when it exploits your friendships and relationships—when you feel compelled to capture and share a screenshot of your brother and your childhood friend throwing trash at each other while fighting over a teddy bear. It would be a brilliant social smartphone game to pull up in incredibly brief, few-times-a-day sessions, a feeling reinforced by the fact that the game uses no traditional buttons.
It would also be an easy port, at least on a technical level, but Nintendo will need to overcome its aversion to smartphones before Tomodachi Life reaches its ideal platform.
The good
- Goofy situations tend to be hilarious when real-life friends are involved
- Screenshot tool works wonderfully with social media sharing options
The bad
- Tween-targeted writing makes many of the skits and situations not stand up on their own
- Wimpy mini-game selection
- No opportunities for exploration on tiny island
The ugly
- Neither of the 3DS' friend-list options work for importing friends
Verdict: Try it if you're a tween (or a tween-at-heart). Otherwise, avoid it.
Nintendo 3DS
Send this demo to your device
To get started, simply log into (or create) your Nintendo Account.
Tomodachi life xd. She’s gonna outrun her daddy any day! CxIzumi and Andrew watching something on the sports-channel.
Before downloading, be sure to link your Nintendo Network ID to your Nintendo Account and visit the Nintendo eShop on your device at least once.
Log in or create an accountPlease link your Nintendo Network ID to your Nintendo Account.
Visit the 'Linked accounts' section under your account settings to get started.
Go nowThank you!
Your demo is on its way. Please check the status of this download on your device.
Expect the Unexpected in Tomodachi Life
Send A Traveler Tomodachi Life Video
Try before you buy! Download the free demo version on Nintendo eShop to experience a bit of Tomodachi Life for yourself.
Tomodachi Life Personality
What happens when friends, family, and celebrities become Mii™ characters and live together on an island? Tomodachi Life happens! Start by creating Mii characters and customizing everything about them. Have fun recreating your best friend, your favorite actor, mom and dad, co-workers..whoever! Then watch as they rap, rock, eat donuts, fall in love, break up, go shopping, play games, and live their crazy Mii lives.
Tomodachi Life How To Send A Traveler To Another Island
*MSRP: Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price. Actual price may vary. See retailer for details.
*To enjoy the 3D effect of Nintendo 3DS software, you must experience it from the system itself. All screenshots and videos on this website have been captured in 2D mode.
Tomodachi life pity party under way. The Miis will also throw the disc to each other.Before throwing, a Mii will say a sentence, such as, 'Here it comes!' The object of the mini-game is to throw the frisbee to another Mii. When they do throw, then that Mii will say something like, 'Don't drop it!' It is unlocked by having a Mii confess their love for the first time.In the flying disc event, two Miis are randomly selected, and the player is put into a mini-game where the two Miis and the player are playing with a frisbee.
Use Parental Controls to restrict 3D mode for children 6 and under.
Tomodachi Life How To Send A Traveler From Your Island
*If eligible for a Just for You offer, the final price reflects the combined Sale and Just for You offers. The Just for You offer is discounted from the sale price.