Animal Crossing
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Animal Crossing | |
Chinese title | 动物森林 |
ISBN | 7-900427-30-9 025-2005-009 [2006]080号 |
Content ID | 21041 |
Developer(s) | Nintendo |
Publisher(s) | Nintendo |
Release date | June 1, 2006 |
Genre | RPG |
Mode(s) | Single player |
Game version(s) | 2104108 |
Manual version(s) | N/A |
Game Size | 62 Blocks, 16,138,240 Bytes (15.3 MiB) |
Manual Size | N/A |
Animal Crossing (Chinese name: 动物森林, literally "Animal Forest") was released on the iQue Player on June 1, 2006.
It was the last iQue Player game ever released.
iQue@Home description
Newer version
Chinese:
悠闲的积累财富,还是享受社交的乐趣?在这个小村庄里,一切由你主演!
创造性的真实时间制,中国特色的传统节日,以及各种有趣的突发事件,使这个虚拟的世界充满了不可思议的真实,这就是动物森林:一人一世界!
English translation:
Accumulate wealth at leisure, or enjoy the fun of socializing? In this small village, you are the main character!
Creative real-time system, traditional Chinese festivals, and all kinds of interesting unexpected events made this virtual world unbelievably real. This is Animal Crossing: An entire world for a person!
Trivia
- The game features in-depth Chinese localization, providing features including Chinese input and traditional Chinese festivals like the Mid-Autumn Festival.
- Like Custom Robo, the last two games released on the iQue Player do not have on-console manuals, nor do they appear on the older iQue@Home site.
- This is the only iQue Player title to officially use iQue Card hotswapping. To accept a visitor from another iQue Player, the host's card must be removed to read Memory Area data from the visitor card, and then continue the game using the host's OWN iQue Card.
- Animal Forest is the only game with a non-zero allowed hardware value in its CMD.
- This game was translated almost entirely by one person. The game's text consisted of millions of characters and the work took more than 2 years. iQue had only 2 translators, and one of them was studying abroad. The company did not recruit more translators until the release of the iQue GBA. [1]
- Unlike most iQue Player titles, the instruction manual of Animal Crossing was never distributed physically. This was also supported by the fact that the PDF file looked like a master copy.
- The trailer for Animal Crossing: New Horizons from Nintendo Hong Kong claimed the title to be the first in the series to receive a Chinese localization, completely ignoring the existence of this game.[2]