- Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream closed the last Nintendo Direct
- This is the continuation of a very appreciated Nintendo 3DS life simulation
- It is currently planned for a “2026” liberation window
I could not believe my eyes when Nintendo Direct of March 27 finished with a trailer for Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream. The rest that I would never have thought of happening, and she arrived in 2026 for Nintendo Switch and probably Nintendo Switch 2.
In terms of gameplay and features, this initial announcement trailer does not reveal much. Even Nintendo’s own registration page for the game is naked bones, offering nothing of a handful of screenshots of the trailer, and a description of a line that simply indicates after more than 10 years is back. In pog form.
But Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream strikes the right notes; An island populated by MII characters created by the players, an abundance of stores and monuments so that they can interact, and the sense of openly stupid humor that made the game 3DS before its memorable.
To watch
There is an interesting thing to note Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream. The American and British trailers both present votes of vocal text text which are found in their respective regions. Like the 3DS game, if you play in the United Kingdom, your Miis will have British accents, for example.
Sometimes a good laugh is all you need
So why do I compare a Nintendo Switch game extremely not put Inzoi, The Korean Simnes competitor who makes waves in Steam Early Access? Well, it’s largely because I think inzoi Can learn one or two from the cheeky life card of Nintendo.
It is clear that inzoi did not take the best start, with a significant content shortage in addition to sound (certainly incredibly Impressive) Tools for creating characters and objects for importing objects. Its relatively high system requirements are also something that could firmly keep many pleasure in life The Sims 4 For now.
But what strikes me the most inzoi At this stage early – in addition to his lack of reasons to play it – is that he sounds like a soulless experience. It is an extremely impressive visual showcase, that’s for sure. But it clearly lacks the charm of the games like Sims and indeed Tomodachi life It regularly keeps me smiling through the pure absurdity of all this.

For the record, I am not wasted Tomodachi life Like a kind of innovative comedy masterclass. His sense of humor is incredibly stupid, abandoning the lively spirit and rather leans in the completely ridiculous. But it is sort of why I love it.
Whether it is a new one broadcast on a MII swim in a bathtub filled with ravioli, a feverish dream sequence showing a flock of ritualist dancing guys around a giant corn ear, or simply a Mii telling you in uncertain terms that they have a brewing of pet, or simply Tomodachi life rarely manages to make me laugh hysterically.
The Tex-to-Vocal incredibly impassive (and highly customizable) also makes things funnier. Yes, it is beyond the child, but I would not have it otherwise.




