Animal crossing wild world map




Animal Map is a map editor for the Animal Crossing DS. This will allow you to do all kinds of editing including infinite wealth and being able to decorate house.

Installation

Download and extract file.

Unzip to PC.

User guide

Hardware Requirements


The NDS game Animal Crossing: Wild World (or the Japanese version Oideyo Dobutsu no Mori).

A homebrew capable NDS.

A backup tool (like ETool) or the NDS Homebrew trainer.

Windows PC to run the map editor program (AnimalMap.EXE).


How to use


Select a game save to open. This must be a valid Animal Crossing game save (English or Japanese version).

It is recommended making a backup copy of this file first. Perform the desired editing operations described below.

Once you finished editing, press the Final Save button. This will replace the original save file with the changes you have made.

Restore that game save file to NDS (details will depend on your hardware).

Play the game as normal. Changes made to inventory, cash balance (Bells), world map or room layout should appear.


Tutorial can be found here.

External links




Animal Crossing: Wild World










This game/console's online features are no longer supported.


While this game/console's online features were once accessible, they are (as of May 20, 2014) no longer officially supported and online-exclusive features may be documented as now-unseen content.













To do:

Document more stuff that isn't shown here.

Region Differences

The Letter Header glitch is present in the Japanese version

Several conversations are longer than the US version



Possibility of unused animations, which some can only be used via a cheat device via emotions.








Animal Crossing: Wild World

is Nintendo's DS sequel to the surprise hit
Animal Crossing
. This is the game that would become the basis for every following game in the series, replacing the top-down, grid-scrolling view with a front-facing, log-scrolling one, and adding a slew of new features that would become commonplace in later games (among other things, you finally have hair). As a result, it and later main-series entries provide a vastly different experience compared to the N64 and GameCube entries.

Sub-Page

Unused Items









To do:

Some of these need some elaboration.





Map




The
map
is a key item in the
Animal Crossing
series that gives a top-down overview of the player's town. In
Animal Crossing
, the player will get it while working part-time for Tom Nook, and will be allowed to keep it through the whole game. In
Animal Crossing: Wild World
, Pelly will show the player how to use it in the town hall. Rover gives it to the player in
Animal Crossing: City Folk
on the bus ride. The player receives one from Porter after leaving the train in
Animal Crossing: New Leaf
. In
Animal Crossing: New Horizons
, the map is now an app on the player's NookPhone.

The map shows the player where buildings are, along with the town's geographic features. Geographical features shown include sea, rivers, ponds, bridges, grassy areas, and dirt/sandy areas. Maps do not show the location of trees, rocks, flowers, rafflesias, dropped items, cracks in the ground (where fossils, etc. are buried) signs, other animal villagers, bugs, or fish. There will be an actual list of each building on the side of the map.

Appearances[edit]

In
Animal Crossing
[edit]


A typical town map in
Animal Crossing



The map in
Animal Crossing
is organized in a grid, with

Seeds (hacking)





Please proceed with caution when following directions from this page, and be aware that saving the game can make undesired effects permanent. Nookipedia is
not responsible
for any damage that may occur to games as a result of this information.


A
seed
is an item originally used as a debugging tool in
Animal Crossing: Wild World
to test the placement of map objects found all over town, including buildings, trees, rocks, and other structures. When a new game is created, the game automatically drops these seeds in random (but somewhat consistent) placements to create the new town, which leads to the addition of full-grown trees in random parts of the town, the locations of buildings such as neighbor homes and shops, and so forth. An example of consistent seed drops include the checkpoint, which will always be dropped on the farthest north of town.

As of May 20th, 2014, Nintendo Wi-Fi connections have been shut down, so accessing
Animal Crossing: Wild World
and
Animal Crossing: City Folk
online (therefore encountering seeds online) is impossible without custom servers.

Seeds in the inventory[edit]

Since seeds are not designed to be accessed in nor