Each villager has three particular items of furniture they would like for their homes. After escorting the client to their new island, you’re free to start designing. There’s plenty of choice, offering countless opportunities to decorate lots of properties. Some islands are covered in snow or sand surrounded by lush forests, waterfalls, and lakes or are right in the middle of the ocean. Once they’ve had a consultation with you, your job is to find them a plot of land that’ll fit their needs. After visiting Lottie, an otter with an abundance of energy, she gives you a job to go out and find villagers who have come to the island with their own ideas of how they want their potential cribs to be furnished. The actual act of enriching empty plots of land and houses is pretty satisfying. What it boils down to is whether or not you want to spend your time furnishing new homes with plenty of freedom. Happy Home Paradise isn’t going to appeal to everyone. Happy Home Paradise: Attending the needs of the client Players venture to a new island where they get paid to decorate new dwellings for those villagers who want a vacation home to escape the day-to-day life of sitting on benches and chasing bugs. As for paid content, Nintendo has released Happy Home Paradise to coincide with the update. Much of the new content is pretty decent, however, I shan’t be exercising in front of Residential Services any time soon.
The recently released 2.0 update added coffee aficionado Brewster boat trips with Kapp’n cooking new furniture to spend those unused Nook Miles and loads more. For a long time now, fans of Animal Crossing New Horizons have been craving new content.