Tag Archives: New Leaf

Absurdity and Terror in Animal Crossing: New Leaf

caption

Writing about the total racket Nook has been running since Animal Crossing’s debut wouldn’t be new. Contentious gamers noticed it early: he’s got to be mobbed up or something, right? He holds the purse strings, and you dance. Fruit, bugs, fish… whatever you can do to earn a buck, you’ll do, to be free of Nook and his serial-killer smile and presumptuous expansions.

You think you’re paying off a mortgage, but what you’re really trying to do is be free. Of menace.

It’s the menace, kid. That’s how he gets you. The worst part is that you don’t want to admit you’re afraid.

But you know all this already.

Cute as a button.

Continue reading…

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Video Games

Animal Crossing: New Leaf – Obsession or Obligation?

I have an Animal Crossing problem. I mean that both in the sense that I have a problem with Animal Crossing: New Leaf, and that Animal Crossing: New Leaf has become a problem.

The latter point is something I feared, and it’s why I resisted the 3DS game for so long. I worried that, as I had with previous Animal Crossings, I’d fall into a desperate routine of improving my town and ignoring everything else. I’d base my weekend plans around in-game festivals and spend my lunch breaks hanging out with needy, friendly animal-people. It’s happening again.

New Leaf occupies my entire morning. Every day, I spend my morning commute collecting fossils, plucking pears from trees, fishing in the ocean, and smashing rocks. I enjoy it. The soothing music is relaxing. Animal Crossing is so laid-back it’s hard to feel anything other than a state of complete zen while making my morning money. My museum is starting to get really impressive. My expanded home is almost paid off. My first public works project is nearly complete. I’ve enacted the Night Owl ordnance, opened up new shops, and I have three new villagers who I find endearing.

Continue reading…

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Video Games

Turning Sewage Into Success with Animal Crossing: New Leaf

One of the very first things I acquired in my first English-language session with Animal Crossing: New Leaf — due out in less than two months for 3DS — was, for lack of a more polite term, a piece of poop. I mean that literally; after trading in a bushel of free-fallen fruit for a shovel, I went fossil-hunting in my new home town of I.G.N. and dug up a fossil that turned out to be a coprolite.

But as if to prove the claim that one man’s trash is another’s treasure, I pawned off my newfound poo-rock (along with a handful of other fossil finds) to the tune of 12,000 bells (the local currency). This, in turn, was enough to cover the 10,000-bell down payment on my first home, meaning I acquired my first housing upgrade in record time for any Animal Crossing game. In fact, I upgraded so quickly that I ran out of things to do for the first day on the game’s real-time clock — Nintendo’s reps strictly forbade time traveling, though that will remain a viable strategy for gaming the system when we play New Leaf free from the corporation’s watchful eye.

Continue reading…

From: http://www.ign.com/articles/2013/04/18/turning-sewage-into-success-with-animal-crossing-new-leaf

Nissan Turns Over a New Leaf

By Rich Duprey, The Motley Fool

Ford Atlas Concept Early Design Sketches

Filed under:

It’s safe to call me something of a bear when it comes to electric vehicles. Though I find Tesla‘s luxury EVs sleek and awesome, I’m not ready to go so far with the automaker itself and am less than impressed with its quarterly profit reported the other day (at least till I see some hard-and-fast numbers).

And I’m still not willing to think General Motor‘s Chevy Volt is anything more than a taxpayer-financed, money-losing boondoggle at the moment as U.S. sales of the hybrid EV plunged 35% in March to 1,478 vehicles. And it should be noted that General Electric bought 160 of them — or 11% — for its fleet purchases. Consumer demand, therefore, is even less than what’s been depicted. Heck, even Tesla’s sold more EVs in the U.S. over the first three months of 2013 than GM has sold Volts and that was after juicing the financing with $3,000 in rebates.

While Toyota sold more than 22,000 Priuses in March, that’s 20% fewer than it sold last year.

Yet consumers are only willing to shell out $4 or $5 a gallon for gas for so long before they start looking at alternatives. And more so than Model Ss or Volts, it seems the EV they want is a Nissan Leaf, which recorded its best month ever for sales in March, moving 2,236 vehicles. Indeed, last month was the Japanese car maker’s best month ever across its Nissan and Infinity lines, with sales rising to 137,726 units, a 1% increase over 2012.

It remains difficult, nevertheless, to estimate real consumer demand for the cars since Nissan’s sales have been all over the place. Until last month, it hadn’t sold more than 1,500 cars in a month since Nov. 2012.

Along with all my other bearishness on the sector, I’m not sure the technology is completely ready for prime time. While the battery fires GM experienced has died from the headlines and the battery woes of the Tesla are no longer front and center, the implosion of A123 Systems and numerous other battery makers suggests there’s still room for technological improvement.

Yet after a sluggish start to the New Year, it could be that Nissan has turned over a new leaf and will give GM, Tesla, and even Toyota a run for their money in 2013.

Running down the highway

Near-faultless execution has led Tesla Motors to the brink of success, but the road ahead remains a hard one. Despite progress, a looming question remains: Will Tesla be able to fend off its big-name competitors? The Motley Fool answers this question and more in our most in-depth Tesla research available for smart investors like you. Thousands have already claimed their own premium ticker coverage, and you can gain instant access to your own by clicking here now.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance