Maple bonsai (Animal Crossing)

From Nookipedia, the Animal Crossing wiki
Revision as of 02:32, April 10, 2023 by HylianAngel (talk | contribs) (Text replacement - "balloons" to "balloons")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Maple bonsai
Buy price Sell price
 1,700 Bells  425 Bells
Size
1.0 x 1.0  1 × 1
Obtain via
Rarity group C
HRA points 51
HRA penalty if facing wall Unknown
Feng shui
Orange
Appearances
In other games
Wild World (maple bonsai)
City Folk (maple bonsai)
New Leaf (maple bonsai)
Names in other languages
 モミジのぼんさい
 N/A
 bonsai acero
 Ahorn-Bonsai
 枫叶盆栽
 bonsaï érable
 arce bonsai
 N/A
 N/A
 N/A
 N/A
 N/A

The maple bonsai is a furniture item in every first-generation Animal Crossing game. It can be placed on the surface of tables and other similar furniture that have surfaces for items.

The maple bonsai can be obtained from Tom Nook's store for  1,700 Bells.[nb 2] For the purpose of fêng shui, its color is orange.

In Doubutsu no Mori, this item appears in the homes of Admiral, Huck, and Rollo.

In Doubutsu no Mori+, this item appears in the homes of Admiral, Huck, and Rollo.

In Animal Crossing, this item appears in the homes of Genji, Rasher, and Rollo.

In Doubutsu no Mori e+, this item appears in the homes of Genji, Jūbei, Rasher, and Rollo.

In Dòngwù Sēnlín, this item appears in the homes of Admiral, Huck, and Rollo.

For villagers who have this item placed on the floor in their house, there is a chance that the villager will gift it to the player.

In other games

Notes

  1. Animal Crossing catalog number; #330 in Doubutsu no Mori; #331 in Doubutsu no Mori+; #436 in Doubutsu no Mori e+; #327 in Dòngwù Sēnlín
  2. As a standard item available from Tom Nook's store, this item is also available from the following sources: Redd; the dump; shaking trees; gifts from villagers, campers, and Mom; the player's birthday; Wisp; Chip; balloons (if the item's rarity group is rare); Sale Day (if the item's rarity group is rare); and the Lost & Found (if the item's rarity group is common)

References