With Tomodachi Life – the quirky game starring you and everyone you know as Mii characters – set for release this Friday exclusively for Nintendo 3DS and 2DS systems, Nintendo has now updated the Tomodachi Life website with the Mii Personality Test.
Tomodachi Life Personality
The Mii Personality Test is a customised version of the personality setup feature in Tomodachi Life, which lets anyone discover which of the colourful personalities their lookalike Mii could have in the game through a series of fun questions and situations. The results will describe your character traits in Tomodachi Life, as well as which other personality type, décor and outfit would be your perfect match in the game. Anyone can easily share their revealing results on social media – and invite their friends to find out what personality type they are, too.
Tomodachi Life Wiki is a FANDOM Games Community. View Mobile Site JokeyPsych EndgameHonest GalaxyQuest.
There are sixteen personalities in Tomodachi Life which define how Mii characters of yourself, friends and family will behave in friendship, and amongst other things, their taste in fashion and interior decoration in the game. Depending on your answers to five personality traits, such as how you express yourself in words, you’ll be able to discover if you are an Energetic Charmer or rather a Reserved Thinker. You can share the Mii Personality Test with a friend to settle whether they are indeed a Confident Leader or actually an Easy-Going Softie. With such diverse personalities for Mii characters of your nearest and dearest, imagine the sparks that’ll fly when everyone lives together on an island, and you’ve got the recipe for excitement and lots of laughs that makes Tomodachi Life. Your friends. Your stories. Your life.
The Mii Personality Test is available today while Tomodachi Life is unleashed across Europe this Friday, 6th June 2014, exclusive to the Nintendo 3DS and 2DS systems, at retail or as a digital version on Nintendo eShop.
Sep 17, 2017 Tomodachi Life, famously called Tomodachi Collection: New Life in Japan and Friend Gathering Apartment in South Korea is one of the most famous life simulation video games out there. This Nintendo’s creation came out in 2013, yet is still very popular among people of all ages. What Each Myers-Briggs Type Does When No One’s Looking How we behave publicly is often in contrast with how we behave when all by our lonesome. In the presence of others, we are slightly more inhibited and self-aware and so any impulse we experience will be immediately screened through our built-in social filters so as to avoid humiliation.
By Mark Judge • Catholic News Service • Posted August 12, 2014
NEW YORK (CNS) — “Tomodachi Life,” a new title for the Nintendo hand-held consoles 2DS and 3DS, is exactly what it claims to be: a game about life.
You create characters, give them distinctive personalities and watch while they sleep, dance, fall in love, go shopping — everything.
It’s a pixilated, G-rated version of the sometimes too-revealing TV show “Big Brother.” It’s also similar to earlier games such as “The Sims” and “Animal Crossing.”
That may sound terribly dull. But playing “Tomodachi Life” is a charming experience — even, at times, a profound one.
Animated characters called Miis are programmed to act consistently with the personalities that gamers give them. But there also can be surprises, because Miis act on their own when their creator isn’t looking.
When players come back to the game after a break, Miis can be visiting each other’s apartments, napping or dancing together. They are digital creations, but seemingly not without some degree of free will.
There are no sources of moral concern in “Tomadachi Life.” Characters can argue and even fight, but this amounts to nothing more than tossing objects at one another that don’t make any contact. Miis, moreover, are not allowed to use profanity.
However, there is a forthcoming change in the game to which parents should be alerted. Upon the release of “Tomadachi Life,” Nintendo was criticized because none of the characters is allowed to partake in same-sex relationships. Nintendo is including such bonds in future iterations, so concerned guardians will be well advised to purchase the first version.
Tomodachi life 3ds save editor. “Tomadachi Life” takes place within an island community. The player names the island, and then goes about creating Miis.
A Mii is formed either from scratch by providing information via a kind of low-tech Myers-Briggs questionnaire, or by importing characteristics from photos and personal profiles found on the console. You can also use celebrity Miis, such as Christina Aguilera and Shaquille O’Neal. Your island boasts a fully functioning urban landscape, with apartment buildings, a town hall, shops, fountains, etc.
The player’s job is to make sure that the Miis are happy. Miis need to be fed, clothed and given medicine when they’re sick. They also have to be introduced to other Miis.
Miis acquire different homes, better furniture. They wear hats, get married, have children — and then have to hire baby sitters. As it turns out, it’s actually more fun to see what a Mii will do on his or her own rather than trying to over-program the figures.
By increasing the happiness of a Mii, the player earns money in a bank account. It’s almost like piling up riches for kindness and good deeds before you get to heaven.
Missing in “Tomodachi Life,” however, is the idea that people can gain greater rewards through self-sacrifice and the renunciation of materialism. A Mii priest or nun would have added a spiritual, countercultural component and made the game even more interesting.
Different generations may react in varied ways to “Tomodachi Life.” Little children and young people will delight in the game, as it provides a kind of cartoon blueprint for some of the dynamic things that happen in life. Kids also love hotels, and the apartment buildings in “Tomodachi Life” are like big vacation resorts full of diverse characters.
Adults, however, may be more ambivalent. Whether through the breakdown of the family, suburban sprawl or a digital revolution that keeps human faces glued to small screens, real-life communities are not as strong as they once were. It’s almost sad that “Tomodachi Life” is so captivating. Previously, people could have experienced something similar just by going about their nondigital routines.
Reviewers have given “Tomodachi Life” strong marks, delighting in its realism and in the sometimes oddball behavior of the Miis. But before the homogenization of modern life, such characters really existed. Now they subsist in the digital world — safe, cute and pixilated.
The game contains occasional, very mild cartoon violence. The Catholic News Service classification is A-I — general patronage. The Entertainment Software Rating Board rating is E — everyone.
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Judge reviews video games and comic books for Catholic News Service.