Animal Island (minigame)

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This article is about the Game Boy Advance minigame. For the island as it appears within the GameCube game, see Animal Island.
Title screen
Developer(s) Nintendo EAD
Publisher(s) Nintendo
Platform(s) Game Boy Advance
Release date(s) Japan December 14, 2001
United States of America Canada September 16, 2002
Genre(s) Simulation
Modes Single-player
Input
methods
Game Boy Advance

Animal Island[nb 1] is a minigame on the Game Boy Advance featuring the eponymous island that can be played when the GBA is connected with a link cable to Doubutsu no Mori+ or Animal Crossing on the GameCube. By speaking to Kapp'n when returning from Animal Island, the player can save their island to the Game Boy Advance.

Connection[edit]

Kapp'n waiting at the pier.

A Game Boy Advance connection is required for Kapp'n to appear at the town's dock. When spoken to, he will ferry the player to Animal Island. When returning to the mainland, Kapp'n will offer to save a record of the island to the GBA with whatever changes the player made to it on the GameCube.

If on the mainland and the connected GBA already has an island loaded with changes made from the minigame, these changes will reflect on the GameCube save file. Even if the GBA has an island from another village, the player can temporarily visit that island and save any changes made back to the Game Boy Advance while retaining the save file's main island. If two GBAs with the game loaded are connected with the Game Boy Advance Game Link Cable, then they will have the option to trade islands, which will save the new island to the GameCube town's save file when it is loaded at the mainland dock. This is the only way to change the islander.

Gameplay[edit]

Drift is moved about the island

Once the island is loaded onto the Game Boy Advance, the player can use a cursor to interact with the islander living on the island and any items dropped there. Once the islander's house is clicked, they will exit and wander around the island regardless of whether they were asleep on the GameCube. Islanders can pick up items, eat fruit, and equip tools (the player must leave the tools there for them on the GameCube). Islanders can catch fish, items or trash with a fishing rod, chop down trees with an axe, catch flying presents with a net, and bury and dig up items with a shovel. The cursor can be used to guide them to do these.

The actions an islander performs will affect their mood, which will be reflected by their emotional cues and changes in the music. If the player gives the islander fruit, the islander's mood will improve; giving them additional fruit will result in them dropping varying amounts of Bells. Each islander has one mainland fruit that is their favorite and one they dislike. Giving the islander their favorite fruit will improve their mood more quickly, while giving them the fruit they dislike will upset them, causing them to stop giving the player any Bells until their mood is improved again. It is also possible to upset the islander by tapping on them repeatedly. Catching items and fish while fishing will make the islander happy, whereas catching trash will disappoint them. Occasionally, floating items can fly by which the islander can capture with a net; these can be a wide variety of items determined by the islander, their mood, the time of day, and whether they are carrying a regular net or a golden net. Islanders can use a shovel to dig up buried furniture and replace them with other furniture, including island-exclusive furniture such as the NES games Wario's Woods and Baseball if they are in a good mood. They will also replace gyroids with other gyroids in this way.

Faith fishing on the Game Boy Advance island.

Making the islander happy makes it more likely for them to give the player Bells and trade items, and using golden tools for various tasks can also improve results. Interacting with islanders can be a useful tactic for making Bells and is the only way to obtain island-exclusive items. Any changes made to the island in the minigame will be transferred to the island on the Nintendo GameCube by talking to Kapp'n with the minigame connected. This feature was removed in Doubutsu no Mori e+, due to the player no longer requiring a linked Game Boy Advance to access the island.

Gallery[edit]

Names in other languages[edit]

Japanese どうぶつの島
Doubutsu no Shima
Animal Island

Notes[edit]

  1. Japanese: どうぶつの島 Hepburn: Doubutsu no ShimaAnimal Island

See also[edit]