GBAtemp Recommends: Animal Crossing Deluxe

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Sometimes dreams do come true. Perhaps that’s a little hyperbolic, but Animal Crossing is a game that has a lot of meaning to me, so when it was announced that the game had been fully decompiled after years of efforts from fans, my 10-year-old self’s dreams had been realized. Years of reading the Animal Crossing wiki, and pouring over details like new villagers, additional fish to catch, and outdoor decorations were going to be fulfilled. Soon, a high fidelity, modernized, open-source version of the original Animal Crossing, Japanese-exclusive features and all, would exist, on PC--what more could a fan want?

While the team behind the decompilation have yet to port their efforts to PC, you can still experience Dōbutsu no Mori e+ in English, in widescreen, and in HD. Quietly released in November of 2024 was the first iteration of Animal Crossing Deluxe, a romhack that utilized the lessons learned from the decompilation in order to create the “perfected” form of Animal Crossing for the Nintendo GameCube.

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If you’ve ever wanted to revisit the nostalgia of the original entry into what is now one of Nintendo’s most successful IPs, this is, without a doubt, the best way to do so. Quality of life additions from 2008’s Animal Crossing: City Folk, or even aspects of 2020’s Animal Crossing: New Horizons have been amazingly backported into a 2003 GameCube port of a 2001 Nintendo 64 game. The level of detail and love that has gone into this romhack is equal parts amusing and amazing. If you really want to know how deep it all goes, there’s content from the 2006 Chinese iQue port of Animal Crossing, of all things.

At the time of writing, Animal Crossing Deluxe has just gotten patch #26, and is still seeing active development. With so many improvements, ranging from tool switching on the dpad, to removing the acre transitions, it genuinely feels like the perfect remaster. All the dated, sluggish elements have been removed, while still keeping the slow-paced charm that makes Animal Crossing so beloved. So many elements feel familiar, but there’s so much new content that it all feels fresh.

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I’ve seen quite a lot of romhacks in my time, but this manages to be the most impressive one that I’ve ever experienced; not only did this require years of hard work in order to decompile the game and recreate it from scratch, the magnitude of effort that it must have taken to add every--and I mean every--little possible detail into the game is nothing short of staggering. Playing Animal Crossing in native 16:9, with higher quality text resolution is cool, but seeing something as deep of a cut as a few lines of unused data from a beta build of the game being reimplemented in perfect working order is insane, in the best possible way. That’s right: you can now throw paper airplanes, a feature that was cut from the game and has no practical use. But the fact that the developers made it work for no reason other than the novelty of it all is a testament to how much they love this game.

Animal Crossing Deluxe Patch Notes

New Features​

  • Integrated 16:9 widescreen option.,
  • "Free" (borderless) acre camera option.,
  • All e+ villagers added to the base game.,
  • All e+ town decorations added.,
  • Blazel/Chestnut/Shaki given official feature and integreted into special event NPCs.,
  • Flower hybrids & cross breeding! (Rain only for now, watering can not yet added),
  • Jacobs Ladders spawn when you have a perfect town.,
  • All Bell denominations added!,
  • Expanded clothing list. Featuring beta shirts and shirts from N64, DnM+, and iQue.,
  • New carpets from DnM, iQue, WW, and CF.,
  • Re-added furniture removed from N64 & DnM+. Added furniture from DnMe+ and iQue.,
  • Ordinances can be placed at the post office!,
  • New town fruit types!,
  • Leaves weather type added!,
  • D-Pad tool switching.,
  • GameCube Keyboard support! Please reference the GC Keyboard layout, as keys map unexpectedly! Additionally, Wii USB keyboards are not supported.,
  • Selectable skin tones including a reworked tanning/sunburn system.,
  • Ground patterns & quick pattern controls - Hold Z and press D-Pad Up to place the most recent pattern without accessing inventory. Hold Z and press B to pick up a ground design.,
  • Fixed & craftable paper airplanes. Fold stationery to spawn one. Press A while standing on it to pick it up. While holding it, press B to delete it. While holding it, Hold Z and flick the analog stick to throw.,
  • 'New catch' messages after first catch of an insect or fish species.,
  • Optional intro chores after selecting house.,
  • Town creation intro sequence has four layout previews to pick from. Rover will cycle through the four. If you want a new four then you need to reset.,
  • Museum donation item selection restricts items which have been donated or cannot be donated.,
  • Savings account generates interest with the same rate as Wild World thru New Leaf.,
  • Max year increased from 2030 to 2099.,


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If you were too young to play Animal Crossing when it first released, but are hesitant to go back to an older game, or if you’ve wanted a reason to return to a game from your childhood, or especially if you’re someone who has always wanted to revel in the most complete experience of Dōbutsu no Mori e+ in English, then I can’t recommend this enough. This is a true love letter, by fans, for fans, just as the very best fanmade projects tend to be.
 
Oh wow, this is amazing. Looking forward to this being playable on the decomp, I'll definitely give it a go then.
 
That’s right: you can now throw paper airplanes, a feature that was cut from the game and has no practical use.

You forgot to mention that in the original GCN release, the airplane-throwing actually led to a softlock as its unfinished code never actually returned control of the player character to the player. So this being fixed is quite nice, and slightly more substantial than it first appears.
 
I convinced a friend to get this for his GameCube, I'd just seen and read about it in gaming magazines... He HATED it.

Anyway, when I tried it out I came across a ball that you could kick around, the saddest a game ever made me was when I accidentally kicked it into the river... Wonder why they never brought that back to any of the other games.

I'll have to try it out, so fantastic that some people are able to do this stuff.
 
Looking forward to this. Will order the NSO GameCube Controller and i have a IBM CRT montitor. For nostalgia's sake.

Unfortunately the buttons are a bit more plastic like than an actual Gamecube controller. Also people keep complaining about the back triggers.
 
Thanks for the write up. As I was reading, I was remembering another N64 classic with farming elements, Harvest Moon 64. I am kind of intrigued, especially since I've never played an Animal Crossing game. What better way to play than a souped up version of the original GameCube port?
 
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YES!! This is actually a thought I had to make for a while, except it was called "Internet crossing" and it used the GameCube LAN Adapter to connect over the internet to other peoples islands instead of using memory cards. But it had all the patches of Deluxe here!
 
Its still in Alpha.

If you want to use it, you need an Animal Crossing ISO (USA) and use xdelta patch.
All info on their discord.

They are called "animal crossing modding"
https://discord.gg/dRWBVdjYGK


EDIT: BEHAVE! Don't make stupid requests just be nice.
 
Last edited by linuxares,
I have never been interested in trying Animal Crossing, neither the N64 nor the GC game, despite hearing a lot about it back in the day.
However, this hack looks impressive, and has certainly spiked interest in me to finally try this game out.
I feel the exact same. Games like Animal Crossing or Sims never hooked me up. That even includes Stardew Valley.
But I'm willing to give it a shot.
 
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I feel the exact same. Games like Animal Crossing or Sims never hooked me up. That even includes Stardew Valley.
But I'm willing to give it a shot.
Its not for everyone. But for some reason AC is really fun to just play around and hour or two a day.
 
Am I stupid for not being able to find the patch for this? It’s okay if I’m stupid. I haven’t been able to find almost anything on search engines lately and it’s tripping me out.

Edit: Well I see the discord has been linked a couple posts up. Thanks!

(How much esoteric video game knowledge and romhacks are going to die in discord servers…?)
 
Always nice to get updated on this; I still haven't gotten around to playing it, but it might be finally time since I dropped off replaying the original a few years ago.
 
(How much esoteric video game knowledge and romhacks are going to die in discord servers…?)
a lot... I HATE Discord for that. Knowledge gets walled garden. And then someone disgruntled person gets the server deleted. And everything gone...

With a site like GBAtemp? Well if its gone, Internet Archive probably still got it.
 

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