Clu Clu Land (Animal Crossing)
| ||||||||
NES game | ||||||||
Buy price | Sell price | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
3,000 Bells | 750 Bells | |||||||
Size |
1 × 1
| |||||||
Obtain via | ||||||||
HRA points | 412 | |||||||
HRA penalty if facing wall | Unknown | |||||||
Feng shui | Red
| |||||||
Appearances | ||||||||
Names in other languages
クルクルランド
N/A Clu Clu Land Clu Clu Land
红白机
Clu Clu Land Clu Clu Land N/A
N/A N/A N/A N/A |
Clu Clu Land 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 player can interact with this item to play Clu Clu Land.
Clu Clu Land can be obtained from Crazy Redd's Furniture Emporium, Wisp, a treasure hunt, or trees when the player has good luck. In Doubutsu no Mori+, it could also be obtained from any villager after sending them a letter with a secret code that appeared on the game's official site in January 2002.[1] For the purpose of fêng shui, its color is red. This item is lucky, meaning it gives a 777-point Happy Room Academy bonus when placed in the player's house.
No villagers have this item in their home.
Version differences
In Doubutsu no Mori, Clu Clu Land is simply known as ファミコン (Famicom). Additionally, in Doubutsu no Mori and Doubutsu no Mori+, the item is modeled after a Famicom rather than a Nintendo Entertainment System. The label on the cartridge differs between Doubutsu no Mori and Doubutsu no Mori+. Doubutsu no Mori e+ retains the design from Animal Crossing.
Game overview
Clu Clu Land is a puzzle game published by Nintendo for the Nintendo Entertainment System in 1984. An expanded version known as Clu Clu Land: Welcome to New CluClu Land was released exclusively in Japan for the Famicom Disk System in 1992.
In Clu Clu Land, the player controls Bubbles, who must uncover all of the Golden Ingots in a maze while dodging enemies known as Unira.
See also
Notes
- ↑ Animal Crossing catalog number; #429 in Doubutsu no Mori; #431 in Doubutsu no Mori+; #581 in Doubutsu no Mori e+; #423 in Dòngwù Sēnlín
References
- Includes data sourced from the ACGC Spreadsheet project (Spreadsheet)
- ↑ Nintendo Kōshiki Guidebook: Doubutsu no Mori+, page 119. Shogakukan. Retrieved October 26, 2022.
External links
NES/Famicom games | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|