Itās hard to keep up with sim games. All those little virtual pets demand your attention constantly, crying out from behind the screen to make sure you know theyāre hungry or tired or lonely or bored or whatever.
āHey,ā you just want to say sometimes. āI have a life too, you know. What about my needs?!?ā
But then you remember that youāre a real human being with arms and legs and individual agency. Plus, youāre in crowded subway, and everyone around you is starting to look worried about the grown-ass man cursing at his Nintendo 3DS. So you do the proper thing, the only thing you can do: you close the screen and get on with your life.
Ok, maybe thatās just me. I really, really love Tomodachi Life. But man, Nintendoās new sim game can be tiring at times. In my original review, I liked it to a āparenting simulator.ā That means itās an amazing and charming experience most of the time. But, like real parenting, itās also exhausting.
Iāve been slacking on my Tomodachi Life duties recently as a resultāforgetting to check in on my Miis throughout the day to make sure theyāre all well-fed and happy. This morning, I opened up my 3DS on the subway ride to work for the first time in a few days. I stopped in at one of my Miisā apartments, and was immediately taken aback when he had this to say:
I know, Seth, I thought to myself. I missed you!
But it didnāt stop there. On to the next apartment:
Too long, Sasha. Too long. Here, Iāll try to make up for it with some fish cakes.
Better? Ok, phew. Letās see what Bruce Wayne is brooding about this fine summer morningā¦
Ok, ok! Iām sorry. Canāt we just move on already? Stephen, help me out here?
Thank god this is just a Mii version of my boss. Iām pretty sure the real one would have a lot more to say if I dropped off the face of the earth for a week.
As a newcomer to Tomodachi Life and Nintendo games more general, I find this gentle sort of prodding fascinating. But I should note that itās not a new technique. Nintendo has done something similar with the villagers in Animal Crossing, another of its popular sim games, for a long time now.
As far as guilt-trips go, Tomodachi Lifeās is one of the best ones Iāve seen in a game. And hey, even if it can be a tad annoying, it certainly beats getting hit up with push notifications whenever a friend is begging for extra turns in Candy Crush.
I wonāt let you down again, Miis. I promise.
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