Tomodachi Life Bath

3DS

Jun 06, 2014 Life sims typically have a core gameplay goal of self-improvement and progression, but in Tomodachi Life, that thread is virtually non-existent. Each Mii has a happiness rating, which you can attempt to boost by spoiling them with gifts, food, clothing and interior decorations, but there's no guarantee that they'll actually like your offerings. Sign in to like videos, comment, and subscribe. Watch Queue Queue. Tomodachi Life is compatible with Citra. The game will boot and run, with minor stuttering in some segments. So far the Mii’s dialogue cuts short and skips to the next line.

Tomodachi Life Review

by Zachary Miller - June 6, 2014, 11:16 am PDT
Total comments: 6

My best friend’s wife married his brother and they had a baby.

Before we dive into this review, let me make a proclamation: Tomodachi Life has quickly become my favorite 3DS game. I spend every spare minute with it. I got a download code for the review, and that’s a good thing, because I’m checking it all the goddamn time. Tomodachi Life is your life, but sillier. It’s a strangely idyllic world where you encourage your brother-in-law to go out on a date with your friend’s fiancé. You feel sorry for friends whose amorous advances are rejected by the people they love, but you do your best to cheer them up. Meanwhile, your best friend’s wife married his brother and honeymooned in Cambodia while he practiced ollies in the park with his new skateboard.

Let’s start at the beginning. I own an island off the coast of Costa Rica. It’s called “Isla Sorna.” It’s called Isla Sorna because I named it that, and then I populated this island nation with dinosaurs friends and family members’ Mii avatars. You can create Miis in-game, thankfully, but Tomodachi Life will also pull from Miis that already exist on your 3DS. Once you’ve created a Mii, you go through a quick personality creator (“is this person quirky or normal?”), the result of which is a simplified Myers-Briggs profile for that character. Then they move into an apartment and BAM—you’ve started your new, digital life.

You can buy clothes, hats, apartment décor, and food for your Mii population. You’ll have to feed them, and you’ll quickly discover which foods they like or dislike. You’ll give them clothes and hope they like the clothes you bought (sometimes they don’t). You’ll help them solve problems, like giving them medicine when they contract a cold, or a bath set when they want to relax in the tub. They’ll have spats, and you’ll mediate between spatting friends. They’ll be curious about new people in the building, and you’ll introduce them. They’ll profess their love for each other. They’ll get married and start a family.*

The more people you have on your island, and the more “problems” you solve for your citizens, the more buildings will open up, and the more things there are to do. There’s a cute, simplistic RPG (Tomodachi Quest), morning, afternoon, and evening specialty markets, BBQs, rap battles, and a concert hall where your Miis will sing songs you’ve taught them with backup dancers! Your Miis will want to play games with you, too, like “guess what this pixelated image is” and one or two-player memory games. You’ll tickle their noses to help them sneeze, see what they’re thinking about, and listen to their imitations of each other. Everyone speaks out loud in a sort of Stephen Hawking robot voice that you can modify in various ways. For the most part, it’s surprisingly competent. It even recognized “Lillianna,” my niece’s name.

You earn money every time you help somebody do something, or give them a present they like. Some of the presents are aesthetic (clothing, interiors) while others are cute time-wasters (kaleidoscope, hypnotizer). When babies start popping up, their parents will occasionally call on you to babysit or calm them down. In a surprising touch, when rocking a baby to sleep (by moving the 3DS), the parents will scold you if you rock too quickly!

So that’s the gameplay. It’s very straightforward, but you quickly develop a fondness for your islanders.

Life

But here’s the inside scoop: it’s not the best part of the game.

No sir, the best part of the game is watching your friends be silly and live out completely different lives than their IRL counterparts. There’s something adorable about watching two Miis, representing people with whom I’m intimately familiar, dancing around like jackrabbits while music plays. I checked in on my friend Courtney only to find her staring at a wall, hiccuping uncontrollably. It made me laugh. I watched my wife ride a carousel. I chuckled as fellow staffer Jared Rosenberg pretended to be an airplane in his apartment. My friend Marcus, who is Mexican, stood alone in his apartment shaking maracas. A bunch of people got together and played Wii U. Courtney and my friend Mandy engaged in a rap battle.

You’ll cheer when your friends get married, even if it’s a bizarre union between your best friend’s real-life wife and his brother, or that guy’s real-life fiancé and Jared Rosenberg. You’ll take their pictures on their honeymoon, posing in front of a Cambodian ruin or the Statue of Liberty. If I could describe Tomodachi Life in one word, it would be “charming.”

And you can take pictures anytime by pressing X (for the lower screen) or Y (for the top screen), then use an in-game application to quickly and fairly seamlessly upload those pictures to Twitter or Facebook. If you’ve been following me on Twitter (@zmiller1902), you know I’ve been getting a ton of use out of this feature, and my friends who are actually in the game seem to appreciate the pictures of their alternate lives as well. And with enough people in my town (you can have up to 24), I never run out of things to do or see. Various hangouts become crowded with people, and somebody always needs help with something.

There’s a whole StreetPass/SpotPass aspect to the game, where traveling Miis can “camp” on your island temporarily, and you can gain unique items. Of course, this was not available prior to release, so I can’t comment on it, but I can only imagine that there’s a lot of potential here.

Complaints? Nothing too serious: you’ll see pretty much every request your Miis make of you in less than a week. New content is constantly streaming in via the various stores on your island, but your Miis only do so much. The graphics are pretty bare-bones—similar to other Mii-centric Nintendo games—but some flourish here and there would’ve been nice. It’s also important to get a diverse group of personalities on your island—so even if you’re going against your friends’ IRL natures, it’s good to mix things up. There are sixteen unique personality types and it’s fun to try and “collect ‘em all.”

I’m also annoyed that I can’t use any profanity, even mild profanity, in the phrases I give my Miis to express themselves. If Nelson’s catchphrase is “DEEZ NUTZ” (which it is), I should be able to put that in the game. This must have to do with the StreetPass functionality, but would a fellow StreetPasser be able to see everybody in your town and all their phrases? I doubt it. The restriction on profanity is unusual and limiting for adults like my friends and I.

Still, this is a wonderful game that I obviously can’t stop playing, and I can’t speak highly enough of. Endlessly charming and unusually engaging, Tomodachi Life is a fantastic diversion.

*This is the part where I wonder if you can choose to be child-free or not. My wife and I have no intention of ever having children, and I wonder if that could translate to the game, as well. As it happens, my wife and I hooked up in the game (this was purely by chance). At a certain point, my wife asked me (the island overseer) if it would be a good idea to have a baby. I guess I could’ve said “no,” but I would’ve felt so terrible. Isn’t that strange? That you have a theory of the mind with a goddamn AI? I need to sit down. This is heady stuff.

Summary

Pros
  • Lots of Streetpass and Spotpass potential
  • Lots to keep you occupied; the more Miis, the busier you’ll be!
  • Maybe the most charming game I’ve ever played
  • When a character discovers their “super all-time favorite” food
Cons
  • Can’t get as creative as you might like with phrases
  • Not as fun if you don’t bulk up your island population
  • Your Miis only do so much

Talkback

AVJune 06, 2014

seems really interesting and entertaining but $40 is asking allot for this. I don't know

PhilPhillip Stortzum, June 06, 2014
ShayminDonald Theriault, News EditorJune 06, 2014

$40 Canadian ($30 on a preorder deal for me, luckily).
I have to admit I'm curious about the no-child thing, as well as how easy it is to stay a bachelor. I hope this game lasts longer with me than Animal Crossing did.

pokepal148Spencer Johnson, Contributing WriterJune 06, 2014

$40 Canadian ($30 on a preorder deal for me, luckily).
I have to admit I'm curious about the no-child thing, as well as how easy it is to stay a bachelor. I hope this game lasts longer with me than Animal Crossing did.

You could try the de- oh wait, Nintendo is being a bunch of assholes with it.

pokepal148Spencer Johnson, Contributing WriterJune 06, 2014

Just to elaborate then here
Instead of releasing the demo on the eshop like any rational company would Nintendo has decided to go for some stupid viral marketing thing.
http://www.siliconera.com/2014/06/02/tomodachi-life-comes-two-demo-codes-give-friends/
Now would someone in NA help me get the demo for this thing because apparantly Nintendo isn't going to.

LucarioJune 19, 2014
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GenreSimulation
DeveloperNintendo
Players1

Worldwide Releases

Tomodachi Life
ReleaseJun 06, 2014
PublisherNintendo
RatingEveryone
Tomodachi Collection: Shin Seikatsu
ReleaseApr 18, 2013
PublisherNintendo
RatingAll Ages
Tomodachi Life
ReleaseJun 06, 2014
PublisherNintendo
Rating3+
Tomodachi Life
ReleaseJun 07, 2014
PublisherNintendo
RatingParental Guidance

Related Content

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13 Trivia
In the Japanese version of Tomodachi Life, the Age-o-matic item worked differently, as it only temporarily turned a child Mii into an adult Mii. It is only permanent when used on child couples or mixed adult and child couples who want to marry, and the effect gets immediately cancelled when they divorce.
In the International versions of the game, this was changed so that the effect becomes permanent when used. Because of this, the Kid-o-matic item was created exclusively for the international versions as a way to reverse the effects of the Age-o-matic. (and allowing adult Miis to become children)
When a Mii gets a letter from someone asking them to go to the roof, one of the things that the Mii in disguise says is 'Our Princess is in another castle.', a clear reference to Super Mario Bros.

Tomodachi Life Bathroom

As Miis are able to play a Wii U, sounds from the Wii U games Nintendo Land and Game & Wario can be heard.
After the controversy involving the inability to have same gender relationships in 'Tomodachi Life', Nintendo later responded by saying that if the game were to get a sequel, same-sex relationships will most likely be included.
In the Japanese version of 'Tomodachi Life', between 8:00 pm and 12:00 pm, a married couple can sometimes be seen taking a bath together in their bathroom, sometimes with their child. This scene was removed from all localized versions of the game.
In the original Japanese release, the daily donations are collected in a wooden box, whereas in the western versions they're collected in a silver piggy bank.
##Nintendo## made a commercial using Tomodachi Life's Concert Hall feature to celebrate the announcement of The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask coming to 3DS.
In the Japanese release there is an event that can be seen at the Fountain called 'Shiritori', in which a category will be chosen at the beginning of the game, such as general word association or food association. Two Miis will then come up with words which begins with the final kana of the previous word, and if either Mii repeats a word that has already been said, they will automatically lose.
The North American version of the game replaces this event with one called 'Rap Battle', in which two Miis try to insult each other in rhymes until one of them cannot come up with a rhyme.
The European versions not only contain the 'Rap Battle' event, but also an English version of the 'Shiritori' event called ' Word Chain', where instead of coming up with words that begins with the final kana of the previous word, two Miis have to come up with words that begin with the letter that the previous word ended with.
The Plane (Nintendo 3DS Image Share) and the Observation Tower were created exclusively for the International release of the game, with the Observation Tower serving the role originally used by the Mii Apartments rooftop in the Japanese release.

Tomodachi Life Bath Time

The shop keepers that run the various shops have different appearances depending on the regional version of the game. The Japanese version of the game features shop keepers with Kabuki stage hand (Kuroko) masks, in the American version they have wooden block heads, in the European versions they have robot heads, and in the Korean version they are wearing a yellow racing helmet.

Tomodachi Life Bathroom Interior

The music that plays in the Café area are the songs that Miis can learn in the Japan-only Nintendo DS installment 'Tomodachi Collection'. In the Japanese version of the game, lyrics (taken directly from 'Tomodachi Collection') can be heard during each song. In the international versions of the game, the instrumentals for each song were kept, but lyrics were removed.
Before the game was released internationally, many international players thought that a patch in the Japanese version fixed a glitch that had unintentionally made gay marriages possible for Miis, causing fans to complain about this feature being removed, while in actuality, Nintendo was simply fixing a data transfer issue that corrupted save data and prevented people from progressing after they transferred Mii characters from the Japan-only Nintendo DS installment 'Tomodachi Collection'.
Gay marriages are able to be performed in Tomodachi Life due to the ability to create Miis that have the appearance of Miis of the opposite gender. While many have complained of the inability to have same gender relationships in Tomodachi Life, Nintendo has refrained from including the feature, explaining that the game is not to be looked at as though it is a 'simulation' of real life.

Tomodachi Life Bathroom

In the Japanese version of the game, there are only 6 genres of music that Miis can sing: Rock & Roll, Pop, Enka (Japanese traditional song), Opera, Heavy Metal and Rap. The International versions of the game removed the Enka genre while and adding 3 more: Ballad, Techno and Musical.