Hotel Guests Only: Animal Crossing’s | Analysis by Brian Moineau

Hotel guests, not new neighbors: why the Animal Crossing 3.0 Resort is bittersweet

The first time I checked into Kapp’n’s Resort Hotel, I squealed when an old favorite — a villager who used to live on my island years ago — wandered past the pier and sighed about missing “the old place.” For a second, I dared to hope: could this be the moment my dream villager would finally move back in? Spoiler: no. The new hotel is joyful, adorable, and full of little stories… but it won’t let those guests unpack for good.

The 3.0 update for Animal Crossing: New Horizons added a lot of shiny stuff — a Resort Hotel where you design themed rooms, new souvenirs, island cleanup services, and Slumber Islands. One of the update’s most lovable hooks is the hotel’s ability to bring huge variety to your island for short visits: up to eight rooms, lots of possible villagers (including former residents), and charming interactions. But there’s a catch that’s left many players deflated: hotel guests are strictly temporary tourists and cannot be invited to permanently move to your island like campers or expedition encounters can. (tech.yahoo.com)

What's happening (and why people are bummed)

  • The resort unlocks once your island hits a certain threshold and Kapp’n and family appear — then you can decorate rooms, earn hotel tickets, and attract visitors. It’s a delightful new loop of creativity and rewards. (gamesradar.com)
  • Guests will roam your island, take part in Group Stretching, buy souvenirs, and even reminisce if they used to live with you. Those nostalgic lines make the limitation sting more. (tech.yahoo.com)
  • Unlike visitors from the Campsite or Island Excursions — who can be persuaded to move in if conditions are right — hotel tourists check in and check out on Nintendo’s schedule. There’s currently no mechanic to make a hotel guest become a resident. (tech.yahoo.com)
  • The result: the hotel is a fantastic way to sample the game's enormous villager roster, but it’s not a shortcut to filling an empty plot with a long‑wanted dreamie.

Why Nintendo might have made this choice

We don’t have an official line that spells out the full technical reasoning, but a few sensible possibilities emerge from how the game handles NPC roles:

  • Role separation: hotel tourists likely use a different NPC state and dialogue tree than moveable villagers. Letting them switch roles mid-visit could create dialogue, AI, or save‑data complexity. (vice.com)
  • Design intention: the hotel is built around short, colorful interactions and collectible souvenirs; making it a recruitment channel might undermine those design goals or the balance of other recruitment systems.
  • Stability and save-data safety: other updates have addressed tricky bugs around villagers moving in or plots left sold; Nintendo historically errs on the side of caution with permanent changes to resident status. (en-americas-support.nintendo.com)

What players are saying

The fan reaction is a mixed stew of delight and disappointment:

  • Many players love the hotel’s atmosphere, the design opportunities, and how lively it makes islands feel. Decorating rooms and watching a full set of guests mingle is pure vibe. (gamesradar.com)
  • Others feel frustrated because the hotel is the most efficient way yet to encounter lots of different villagers at once; not being able to convert that into a permanent recruit feels like a missed chance. Social posts and comment threads lean into the yearning — especially when a beloved ex-resident shows up and can’t stay. (tech.yahoo.com)

Practical tips if you want a specific villager

  • Use the hotel to scout: if you spot your dream villager at the hotel, pay attention to their house style, voice lines, and general vibe so you know what to expect when they appear elsewhere. (tech.yahoo.com)
  • Keep using Campsite and Island Excursions: those remain the reliable recruitment paths for permanent moves. If you have amiibo cards, campsite invites are still a way to bring particular villagers back for good. (gamefaqs.gamespot.com)
  • Stockpile Nook Miles and tickets: more excursions and hotel visits give you more chances to encounter your dream villager through the methods that allow moving in.

A few bright sides

  • The hotel is genuinely delightful for island roleplay, photography, and giving your island new energy.
  • It’s a great way to re‑meet villagers you haven’t seen in years and to collect new souvenir items tied to decor themes.
  • Nintendo has a history of refining mechanics post‑launch, so the community’s feedback could influence future updates. (gamesradar.com)

My take

The Resort Hotel is one of those updates that makes New Horizons feel alive in a fresh way: more faces, more micro‑stories, more scenic chaos. But the inability to recruit tourists into permanent residents is an understandable design decision and yet a bit of a heartache for collectors and sentimental players. For now, treat the hotel as a joyful preview space — a place to fall in love with villagers all over again, then go dig them up the old-fashioned way when you want them home.

Final thoughts

Players will keep sharing screenshots of wistful villagers walking past windmills and beaches, and that emotional pull is a feature, not a bug. The hotel deepens the game's social texture even if it doesn't hand you a new neighbor on a silver platter. If enough players yearn for a bridge between vacationer and resident, Nintendo has shown it will listen — and New Horizons' post‑launch life has taught us that small wishes can become big updates.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

Nintendo Revives Nostalgic Icons for 2025 | Analysis by Brian Moineau

Nintendo’s nostalgia trick: old icons, new buzz for 2025 releases

Nintendo quietly knows how to tug at our nostalgia strings. This fall it rolled out a promotion for Nintendo Switch Online that brings back a stack of profile icons tied to big 2025 releases — including waves inspired by Super Mario Galaxy + Super Mario Galaxy 2, F‑Zero 99, and Kirby and the Forgotten Land. It’s a small feature on paper, but it tells a bigger story about how Nintendo keeps fans engaged between game drops.

Why icons matter more than you think

  • Icons are tiny, but they’re social: your profile avatar is how you present yourself in friends lists, lobbies, and party chats.
  • Tying icons to game releases turns a low‑friction cosmetic into a micro‑marketing channel: collectible waves, limited availability and the Missions & Rewards system push both attention and playtime.
  • For Nintendo, this is a light, low‑cost way to refresh interest in older IP (Super Mario Galaxy), support live services (F‑Zero 99) and spotlight newer hits (Kirby and the Forgotten Land).

What Nintendo brought back in 2025

  • Super Mario Galaxy + Super Mario Galaxy 2: multiple waves of character and background icons launched around September–October to coincide with the remastered bundle’s release, offering Mario, Rosalina, Lumas and other Galaxy staples via the Switch Online Missions & Rewards system.
  • F‑Zero 99: classic F‑Zero visuals resurfaced as icons alongside renewed interest in the franchise (and the battle royale spin).
  • Kirby and the Forgotten Land (and other Kirby games): icons tied to Kirby’s 3D comeback were rotated through Nintendo’s rewards lineup.

These icon drops are typically split into waves and cost small amounts of Platinum Points (the My Nintendo currency) — usually 10 points per character icon and smaller prices for frames or backgrounds. Availability tends to be limited, with each wave active for a week or so before rotating out. (See Sources for specific coverage and dates.)

Context: a pattern, not a one‑off

Nintendo has been leaning into collectible, limited‑time cosmetics across its ecosystem:

  • The Switch Online Missions & Rewards overhaul made profile icons a recurring reward that can be scheduled around releases.
  • Reissues and remasters like Super Mario Galaxy + Super Mario Galaxy 2 are natural anchors for nostalgia-driven drops.
  • The GameCube library and other retro pushes for Switch 2 also created opportunities to repurpose classic art into modern social cosmetics.

This is consistent with Nintendo’s broader strategy: marry premium releases with small, free/cheap engagement hooks that keep subscribers logging in and talking about their ecosystem.

The user experience side

  • It’s friendly to casual players: icons are cheap in My Nintendo points and don’t gate gameplay.
  • Collectors get a chase: limited windows create urgency and social bragging rights (“I grabbed the Rosalina icon”).
  • It nudges play: some icons require “Play and Redeem” style tasks (play a linked game X times) — that’s clever cross‑promotion.

For many fans, these small touches deepen fandom. For others, it can feel like manufactured scarcity — but compared to paid cosmetics in other platforms, Nintendo’s implementation leans light and community‑focused.

My take

Nintendo’s icon drops are a deceptively effective tool. They’re inexpensive to produce, resonate strongly with long‑time fans, and slot neatly into a subscription model where retention is king. By pairing iconic assets (literally) with marquee releases like Super Mario Galaxy + Super Mario Galaxy 2, Nintendo gets free social marketing and a steady trickle of engagement without heavy investment.

If you care about profiles and collector status, keep an eye on Switch Online’s Missions & Rewards during major release windows — these small items are often the most fun, smashable pieces of nostalgia Nintendo hands out between big game announcements.

Things to watch next

  • Will Nintendo expand rare icon drops to paid DLC-style bundles, or keep them mostly in My Nintendo’s Platinum economy?
  • How often will Nintendo synchronize icons with remasters and live‑service releases (e.g., F‑Zero 99)? Regular cadence could make these drops predictable — and predictable can be both comforting and stale.
  • As Switch 2 evolves, will higher‑resolution consoles get upgraded icon art (animated avatars, for instance)?

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

Nintendo Holiday Game Sale: Big Switch | Analysis by Brian Moineau

Spread the Cheer: Nintendo’s Hits for the Holidays Sale Is Here (and it’s worth a look)

Nothing says cozy holiday evenings like a couch, some snacks, and a stack of games ready to play. Nintendo has rolled out its seasonal “Hits for the Holidays” sale across Nintendo.com, the My Nintendo Store, and the Nintendo eShop — a timely reminder that even last-minute gift-givers (or self-gifters) can snag big-name titles without breaking the bank. The sale runs through January 4, 2026 at 11:59 p.m. PT, and discounts reach as high as 50% on select digital games for both Nintendo Switch and Nintendo Switch 2 systems. (businesswire.com)

What to expect from the sale

  • Discounts on first‑party Nintendo favorites and popular third‑party hits.
  • Coverage for both Nintendo Switch and the newer Nintendo Switch 2 (where applicable).
  • Digital purchases that can earn My Nintendo Gold Points (useful for future purchases). (businesswire.com)

Games mentioned in the press coverage include headline franchise entries and perennial crowd-pleasers like Princess Peach: Showtime!, The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom, New Super Mario Bros. U Deluxe, Fire Emblem Engage (bundles), Just Dance 2026 — plus sports, RPGs, and indie hits included across the catalog. If you own a Switch 2, you’ll also find titles that support the newer hardware. (businesswire.com)

Why this sale matters (beyond the discounts)

  • Holiday buying patterns: Consoles and games are top-of-mind this season, so price drops increase the chance of a game making someone’s wishlist come true. With the Switch family still dominating many gift searches, discounted software is a fast way to boost value. (nypost.com)
  • Digital-first convenience: Shipping delays and crowded stores make digital purchases attractive — you buy and the game is ready to play immediately.
  • Cross-generation appeal: Nintendo continues to support both the original Switch and Switch 2, so families with mixed hardware can still shop the sale and find something for everyone. (businesswire.com)

How to make the most of the sale

  • Check the official Nintendo sale page from your console (or Nintendo.com) to see the full list and price breakdown — some titles are deeper discounts than others. (businesswire.com)
  • Look at bundled offers (game + DLC) when available — sometimes bundles offer better overall value than buying add-ons separately. (gonintendo.com)
  • Consider Gold Points: buying digital games earns My Nintendo Gold Points (5% of purchase amount in most cases), which you can later redeem on qualifying purchases. Over multiple buys this can add up. (businesswire.com)
  • Plan for multiplayer and family play: a well-timed purchase like Super Mario Party or Just Dance is an instant party-starter for holiday gatherings.

A quick look at notable entries (high-level picks)

  • Family-friendly highlights: Princess Peach: Showtime!, New Super Mario Bros. U Deluxe, Just Dance 2026 — perfect for mixed-age groups. (businesswire.com)
  • Big single-player adventures: The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom — a title for longer play sessions and solo exploration. (businesswire.com)
  • Third-party and indie gems: From RPGs to action and indie curios, the sale mixes familiar blockbusters with pleasant surprises (Hades II has appeared on sale for the first time on Switch platforms in some listings). (gonintendo.com)

Practical reminders and small print

  • Sale end: January 4, 2026 at 11:59 p.m. PT (double-check local time conversion if you’re near the deadline). (gonintendo.com)
  • Availability: Offers differ by title and region; some deals may be digital-only or limited in stock for physical retailer tie-ins. (businesswire.com)
  • Points and refunds: Gold Points apply to digital purchases and there are usual refund/return policies for digital storefronts — read Nintendo’s terms before buying if that’s important to you. (businesswire.com)

Holiday shopping, simplified

For gift-givers scrambling near the holidays, this sale is the kind of thing that can turn a frantic store run into a five‑minute, joy‑filled checkout. For players treating themselves, it’s a chance to try something new or finally grab that long-sought title. And for households with mixed consoles between Switch and Switch 2, it’s a thoughtful way to find something that will work across the family.

Final thoughts

Nintendo’s holiday sales are rarely groundbreaking surprises, but they’re reliably useful: carefully curated discounts, family-friendly options, and timely inclusion of both first- and third‑party hits. Whether you’re hunting for a stocking stuffer or planning a post-holiday gaming spree, the Hits for the Holidays sale is worth a quick browse — especially before the January 4, 2026 deadline. Happy gaming, and may your new year be full of high scores and good company. (businesswire.com)

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.