Animal Crossing: New Horizons - Happy Home Paradise (DLC)
A full-featured interior design sandbox bolted onto Animal Crossing: New Horizons, sending you to a resort archipelago to build and style vacation homes for a rotating cast of animal clients.
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About Animal Crossing: New Horizons - Happy Home Paradise (DLC)
Happy Home Paradise is the only paid expansion Animal Crossing: New Horizons ever received, and the framing alone tells you everything about its ambitions. You are hired by Paradise Planning, report to Lottie the otter, and spend your days designing vacation homes and public facilities for a rotating roster of animal clients on a dedicated resort archipelago. The progression structure is more explicit than anything in the base game: you start as a Beginner Designer earning 6,000 Poki per job and can eventually claw your way up to the GOAT Designer rank at 40,000 Poki, with new tools gated behind completed-home milestones the whole way. Partition walls unlock at 8 homes, lighting customization at 12, soundscapes at 17, pillars and counters at 24, and full Home-Design Consulting on your own villagers at 30. That is a genuine progression ladder, something the base game conspicuously lacked. The design toolkit itself is the headline feature. Each client presents a theme and a handful of required furniture pieces, but beyond those constraints the catalog is effectively unlimited, no Bell grinding required. You can resize rooms once you earn the Pro Decorating License from Lottie, place accent walls and ceiling lighting, drop furniture across an outdoor plot using the grid-based exterior editor, and even set the weather, time of day, and season for each property to nail the atmosphere. Furniture is still gridlocked to four rotational positions, which does cause occasional clutter in smaller starting rooms, and the unlock flow for some features like soundscapes can be opaque enough that players have reported finishing what they thought was the trigger condition and still not seeing the unlock. Neither issue is a dealbreaker, but they are friction points worth knowing about. The facilities add the best variety. After enough homes, you unlock the ability to design and refurbish communal buildings: restaurants, cafes, schools, hospitals, and more. These have different spatial constraints than standard houses and keep the loop from going entirely one-note. The skills you earn here also feed back into the base game permanently. Room resizing, partition walls, polishing effects, and soundscapes all transfer to your home island and your villagers' residences once unlocked, meaning every hour you put into the archipelago is paying a dividend on your main save file. The special Poki currency earned on the job can even be converted to Bells via the Poki ABD, a small but satisfying systemic link between the two play spaces. Here is the honest caveat though, and it is important: if you find New Horizons' decorating loop tedious rather than meditative, Happy Home Paradise will not convert you. The entire expansion is that loop, concentrated. There is no combat, no competitive mode, no fail state, and clients love whatever you produce regardless of quality. That pressure-free environment is intentional and it works well for the audience it targets, but strategy and systems chasers looking for decision-making stakes will find it shallow. For dedicated Animal Crossing fans, particularly anyone who enjoyed Happy Home Designer on the 3DS, this is the most mechanically complete Nintendo has ever made that formula, and the permanent skill unlocks give it a reason to exist beyond pure sandbox play. Approach it as a slow-burn creative career rather than a content sprint and the hours add up faster than expected. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Nintendo
- Publisher
- Nintendo
- Release Date
- Nov 5, 2021