The game board has several different tiles which the player can land on: pink spaces give happy points and/or Bells, purple spaces will take away happy points and or bells, and green spaces are special event spaces that will appear when special villagers visit the town At the end of the month all Bells will be converted to happy points and the player with the most happy points wins.īalloon Island Main article: Balloon IslandĪfter playing the Game mode board mode twice the Balloon Island game mode is unlocked. Each game is set in a different month the goal is to collect as many happy points as possible during the month. This mode requires the use of at least one amiibo figure (any other players can use a preset human villager). The first mode is the traditional board game. Most of them require the use of amiibo cards instead of the amiibo figures used to play the board game.īoard Game Main article: Amiibo Festival Board Game Happy points are collected by playing the games the tickets are used to build the other mini games and add features to the game.Īnimal Crossing: Amiibo Festival has several different game modes outside of the main board game mode that can be unlocked via happy tickets. This shows how many tickets the player has and how many happy points are needed to obtain another ticket. In the top left corner is the happy ticket meter. Near the top of the hub is the train where the main board game is played. Around the board are mini games that can be played after they have been built. The middle has the area where villagers that the player inserted with amiibo cards and Lloid on top of a pedestal where they can change the human villagers names from the default Boy 1, Girl 1, Boy 2, etc. The main screen in Animal Crossing: Amiibo Festival is a plaza where the player can select which games they want to play and customize certain elements. Conversely, the large numbers of Cherry, Mint, Limberg and Muffy suggest these cards are common.įor now, we don’t know how much longer we’ll collect the Animal Crossing amiibo cards, because the more we buy, the higher the odds we’ll eventually open a package containing six cards we already own, but we also want Tom Nook and Kabuki.ĭo you collect Animal Crossing amiibo cards? Which cards do you want most? Let us know.Amiibo Festival hub world as seen in game The same goes for Timmy.Īs for the regular villager cards, we’ve yet to find Clay, Kabuki, Nate and Walker, but we’re not sure if these cards are rare. We originally thought DJ KK would be impossible to find, but now we have two. The rarest card may simply be the one you can’t find, but for all we know, someone three towns over can’t stop opening packs containing the card you need most.īased on our experience, we haven’t been able to find the following special cards: Tom Nook, Kapp’n and Redd. Which Animal Crossing amiibo cards are the hardest to find? Ultimately this is a difficult question to answer because your experience may differ from ours.
#ANIMAL CROSSING AMIIBO CARDS VALUE SERIES#
It all depends on how dedicated you are to owning Series One. If the only card you need is Isabelle and someone currently has her on eBay for $10, you might as well fork over the dough, because you could spend $50 on random packs of cards and never see her. That last one may sound horrible at first, but think about it this way. Third, you head to eBay and pay a markup for the card(s) you want. Second, you visit r/amiiboSwap in the hope of trading cards with fellow amiibo collectors. First, you continue buying card packs until (maybe) you find them all. To complete the set, you have three options.