If you appreciate the work done within the wiki, please consider supporting The Cutting Room Floor on Patreon. Thanks for all your support!

动物森林

From The Cutting Room Floor
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page is a translated version of the page Animal Crossing and the translation is 9% complete.
Other languages:
English • ‎español • ‎lietuvių • ‎polski • ‎русский • ‎中文(简体)‎ • ‎日本語 • ‎한국어

Title Screen

Animal Crossing

Also known as: Doubutsu no Mori+ (JP original), Doubutsu no Mori e+ (JP rerelease)
Developer: Nintendo
Publisher: Nintendo
Platform: GameCube
Released in JP: December 14, 2001 (original), June 27, 2003 (e+)
Released in US: September 16, 2002
Released in EU: September 24, 2004
Released in AU: October 17, 2003
Released in CN: June 1, 2006


CopyrightIcon.png This game has hidden developer credits.
DevTextIcon.png This game has hidden development-related text.
MinigameIcon.png This game has unused modes / minigames.
GraphicsIcon.png This game has unused graphics.
ItemsIcon.png This game has unused items.
TextIcon.png This game has unused text.
DebugIcon.png This game has debugging material.
RegionIcon.png This game has regional differences.
Carts.png This game has revisional differences.


Hmmm...
To do:
  • Upload more screenshots for things missing them.
  • Stuff from the partial source code in the 2020-07-25 Nintendo leak.

Animal Crossing is a game in which you, a newly independent person of unspecified age, move into a new town and immediately become forced into labor to pay off the debt you owe to the one person who almost completely controls the local economy.

While this game was the west's introduction to Nintendo's quirky, then-budding life simulator franchise, Animal Crossing is actually a GameCube port of Doubutsu no Mori for the Nintendo 64, heavily modified in localization to give westerners an experience analogous to what Japanese players got. The localization was apparently so impressive that it got re-localized for Japan with added features, effectively making it a localization of a localization of a port.

Yeah... it's weird.

Sub-Pages

Miscellaneous tidbits that are interesting enough to point out here.
Notes (untranslated)
Animalisland logo.png
Animal Island
Even unlockable stuff has things unused.
Animalforest bluebear.png
Version Differences
A re-release of a remake of a re-release. We need to go deeper.

Debug Mode

Careful, you'll lose an eye.
This page or section needs more images.
There's a whole lotta words here, but not enough pictures. Please fix this.
Specifically: Get screenshots, post them, figure out other debug functions, make this not be walls of text.

The game has a debug mode, called "zuru mode" in the code, with two different levels. Mode 1 can be activated on a regular retail game by entering a special button combo on a controller in the second port. The full debug mode, mode 2, is activated based on the game's disc ID. If the ID is 0x99, zuru mode 2 will be activated immediately and remain on at all times. If the ID is between 0x90 and 0x98, mode 2 only becomes active when a controller is plugged in to the second port.

When debug mode is activated, the letter "D" will appear in the top-right corner of the screen. In mode 1 the letter is yellow, and in mode 2 the letter is green. Mode 1 has fewer capabilities than mode 2.

Activating

To activate mode 1 on a regular game disc, enter the following code on Controller 2 at any time:

  1. L + R, then while holding both press Z
  2. D-Up
  3. C-Down
  4. C-Up
  5. D-Down
  6. D-Left
  7. C-Left
  8. C-Right
  9. D-Right
  10. A + B
  11. Start

(If this code looks familiar, it was also used in The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time for that game's crash debugger.)

Entering the code while already in mode 2 will display a debug output for the button combination, tracking the status of the user's progression through the button code.

To activate the full debug mode, set the disc ID version field to 0x99. Use a hex editor to change byte #7 (0x00000007) of the ISO/GCM file. It works on all versions - the North American, European, Japanese (both versions), and Australian games can all be modified in this way.

Alternately, the following Action Replay codes can be used:

美国 PAL
9W27-VB23-9FC5W
P7EG-3B46-V69FV
08A4-UQH0-Q957M
P7EG-3B46-V69FV

Features

  • Shows info about the build date/version/etc. on startup, on the title screen, and during K.K. Slider’s performance.
  • Shows the ID of the current message in the corner of the screen.
  • Shows 3D arrows pointing to various special things (like event NPCs and balloons).
  • Shows a CPU/memory usage meter on the boot screen.
  • Enables button combos on Controllers 2 and 3.
  • Prevents Resetti from showing up.
  • Shows a crash dump if the game crashes.
  • More?

Controller 3 features an item select that can spawn a variety of items into your pockets:

  • This is only available when the disk version is set to 0x90 or greater (mode 2).
  • Pressing Start toggles the debug item spawner on and off.
  • When enabled, the text ナシ (nothing) appears on screen.
  • D-Pad Up cycles through the categories FTR (furniture), PPR (paper), MNY (money), TOL (tools and umbrellas and junk), FSH (fish), ELS (other junk), CPT (carpet), WLL (wallpaper), FOD (food), MSC (music), DST (calendar/diary things), LOT (raffle tickets), IST (insects), HPY (grab bags), and KAB (turnips).
  • D-Pad Left/Right change the number.
  • Holding B while changing the number will increase/decrease the number by 10.
  • Holding A while changing the number will increase/decrease the number by 100.
  • D-Pad Down puts one of the selected item in your pocket.
  • Pressing X will fill in your entire catalogue.
  • In Doubutsu no Mori e+, pressing Y will cycle your Kanji proficiency level between the different modes.


Startup screen on debug. Title screen on debug.

Controller 2 features everything else. Most buttons, when pressed once, will show or hide a debug display. The C-Stick is four separate buttons, one for each of Up, Down, Left, and Right. R changes the game speed rather than displaying something on-screen.

In the item screen, C-Down gives you one Net, Axe, Shovel, and Fishing Rod; C-Left increases your money by 1,000 Bells; and C-Right fills your inventory with 30,000-Bell bags.

Controller 2 also has two-button combinations, all of which involve holding L, R, or Start. All but one of the possible combinations opens memory editors of some kind (the exception being holding R and pressing D-Pad Down, which pauses and unpauses the game). Memory editors can be opened by holding one of the three buttons mentioned earlier, and pressing another button twice. For example, holding L and tilting the C-Stick left twice opens the "S(SREG)" editor, holding L and tilting the C-Stick left again flips to the next page, and so on. The editor closes when there are no more pages or when a different button combo starts (e.g., holding R and pressing Start once).

Editors are navigated using the D-Pad to scroll up and down between items, and left and right between possible values. The editor that opens from holding R and pressing Start, "H(HREG)", can be used to activate a debug controller input display by navigating to item 47 and setting its value to nonzero.

When playing NES games, a few debug controls will be enabled on Controller 1:

  • L + R - Freezes the emulation when held. If a certain debug flag is set, this will display the NES game file menu.
  • L + C-Stick Left/Right - Slows down or speeds up the emulation depending on how much the C-Stick is pressed.
  • L + A/B - Toggles a turbo controller function for the button pressed.
(Source: jamchamb (button code), Little_mac)

Map Select

Debug Map Select screen.

The "forest map select" from Doubutsu no Mori still exists and can be activated using one of the following Action Replay codes and pressing the Reset button once at the title screen or twice in-game:

美国 PAL
NP7E-4T7X-QX8PU
NWFQ-2WNR-99BU7
15GC-XJ2U-URG0F
K4T2-961B-NEAHM
7551-MZYA-H9J40
K662-MYEH-HT81Q
VX55-XYWW-N7YRC
EQC1-UQQR-7J0BP
BQ75-YTQZ-P89CR
5M72-K7NM-4ZJNA
8M0V-A01J-25TG2
6XAK-9W3A-RQXRA


(Source: Ralf (gc-forever))

Player Select

Debug Player Select screen.
Translated Debug Player Select screen.

The player select debug menu allows the selection of any of the four players, or any players visiting from another town. If the player selected doesn't exist, it will start the new player creation sequence with Rover.

The following Action Replay code will enable it after pressing Start on the title screen:

USA
X9JV-PZ2P-4EMT2
6PTZ-JNAH-5YMDN

The following Action Replay code will translate the menu to English:

USA
MYUW-WFRQ-TRF11
3ZRC-XED1-0TGCH
8VF9-NVUJ-BE4FA
667X-UQY2-7F048
RUFY-6Y64-1584E
RHM7-YZK4-ZHQVZ
ZT75-354R-0A79P
X10Q-QH5E-6D3XW
WBF6-59HC-XKFZ5
AMDM-4777-H8R27
F9K4-WQGR-AAQ3M
VK95-WPM8-65VJ3
3UWR-G9PJ-YFKCN
7JA7-MYGY-CVB1P
F654-Z4F5-YXUF6
P5EA-3MYJ-22TEM
GYVH-PCTC-M8ZH4
H0QA-JFUH-FNG5T
V552-NNT0-J6XMQ

Save Type Select

Debug Save Type Select screen.
Translated Debug Save Type Select screen.

The save type selection menu allowed the developers to test both saving to a Flash ROM and N64 Controller Pak.

The following Action Replay code will enable the debug save screen after pressing Start on the title screen:

USA
MN58-Q9PB-5BUE4
DRWN-C1Y8-Y9V9Z

The following Action Replay code will translate the menu to English:

USA
ZY0N-4Z6A-1AEWE
3PDA-8JDK-F38MM
GPWZ-PJFY-T1RK5
5CJ2-G09E-HK4CU
0AP0-NZNK-FQQP6
N50Y-4ZJ5-E9YWE
AT1J-E0XK-73K9C

NES Filer Mode

The NES emulator has a "filer mode" that can be used to cycle through the in-game ROMs. When debug mode is enabled, there's also a text display showing the ROM filenames and a demo mode toggle.

The following Action Replay code will enable the NES filer mode:

USA
001F6898 00000001


Unobtainable NES Games

The Forbidden Four

ACGC MarioBros.pngACGC IceClimber.pngACGC SuperMarioBros.pngACGC TheLegendOfZelda.png

In addition to the 15 available NES games, there are four normally unobtainable games dubbed "The Forbidden Four" by fans: Mario Bros., Ice Climber, Super Mario Bros., and The Legend of Zelda. Certain NES game requirements were shifted around in each regional version of the game, which resulted in some obscure methods to obtain them.

  • In the initial Japanese release, Ice Climber could be obtained as a gift when transferring save data from Doubutsu no Mori via Nintendo's now-discontinued Data Moving Service (which required mailing Nintendo of Japan ¥630, an N64 Controller Pak with Doubutsu no Mori save data, and a 59-block GameCube memory card with Doubutsu no Mori + save data), while Super Mario Bros. was given away as a limited-run Famitsu prize. Both games could also be obtained by mailing villagers passwords written on the back of associated e-Reader character cards; this process is also the sole method of legitimately obtaining both Mario Bros. and The Legend of Zelda.
  • In North America, Mario Bros. and Ice Climber were obtainable via e-Reader cards included in Series 4 of the Animal Crossing-e line of e-Reader card packs. Because the Series 4 pack was released late into the e-Reader's North American life cycle, they were produced in much smaller quantities and consequently are much rarer than cards from the first three series. Super Mario Bros. and The Legend of Zelda, meanwhile, are not legitimately obtainable in any capacity.
  • In the European release, due to the removal of e-Reader functionality (owing to the fact that the e-Reader was never released in PAL territories due to its commercial failure in North America) and the lack of a replacement system, it is impossible to legitimately obtain any of these four games.

These games can only be obtained by hacking them into the player's inventory (particularly for European versions, where none of these were ever made available legitimately), as trying to unlock them with a trade code generator will not work. Interestingly, all except The Legend of Zelda have Advance Play options, and in Doubutsu no Mori e+ the Advance Play data still remains via hacking, even though the games were otherwise erased as console items.

Games No Longer Obtainable Without Universal Item Codes

ACGC Soccer.pngACGC DonkeyKongJr.pngACGC DonkeyKong3.pngACGC CluCluLandD.pngACGC PunchOut.png

While all 19 NES games outside of the Forbidden Four are accessible without hacks, five of them cannot be obtained without the use of universal item codes or third-party code generators due to the method by which they were meant to be accessed by players. Soccer, Donkey Kong Jr., Donkey Kong 3, Clu Clu Land D, and Punch-Out!! were all only available through secret codes generated for the player's specific name and town through Nintendo of America's official website for the game. Because the site is now offline, this means that the official code generation service for these items is no longer functional.

Removed Games

On top of the 19 games that can be played, several more are referenced by the game but do not have ROMs or models in the game's data: NES Open Tournament Golf. Gomoku Narabe Renju, Mahjong, Nazo no Murasamejou, and Super Mario Bros. 2 are only included in the Japanese version (Doubutsu no Mori+), with Gomoku Narabe Renju and Mahjong taking the place of Excitebike and Soccer. Nazo no Murasamejou can be played by setting item 03 of the H(HREG) editor to 21 and starting the Famicom, and Super Mario Bros. 2 can be played by setting item 03 of the H(HREG) editor to 22 and starting the Famicom.

The only mentions for most of these games are in static.map, though Gomoku Narabe Renju can also be seen referenced at F4C2C.

External NES Games

Each of the playable NES games that can be obtained in-game come as an individual furniture item featuring an NES console with a game box on top of it (a Famicom with a unique cartridge design in the Japanese version). There is also a generic NES console item (a Famicom Disk System in the Japanese version) that can be purchased from Redd that was originally thought to be unplayable, because it would only display the message "I want to play my NES, but I don't have any software." This item actually scans Memory Cards for special files that contain NES ROMs.

ROMs loaded from the Memory Card are loaded into the same NES emulator used for the built-in NES games. The code for loading these ROMs is fully working and features an entire system for loading ROMs and ROM metadata, as well as creating save files for each external ROM. It seems that Nintendo originally intended to be able to release more NES games for Animal Crossing on Memory Cards, but never followed through with it. This functionality is present in all versions of the game.

One of the metadata tags in the ROM loader supports patching ROMs after they are loaded. This tag can also be used to patch Animal Crossing itself, allowing mods to be loaded via Memory Card.

Default message displayed by NES Console when no ROM files are on the Memory Card. Menu that appears when ROM files are present on the Memory Card. Running Mega Man from the NES console.

(Source: jamchamb)

Crisp (Unused NPC)

ACGC Crisp.png

An odd unused NPC, formerly fandubbed "Blazel" can be found within the game's code; her earlier nickname comes from the fact that her design incorporates several elements of that of both Bliss/Caroline and Hazel. However, recent digging within the files of Doubutsu no Mori+ has revealed her Japanese name to be Shaki' (シャキッ), meaning "Crisp"; immediately following this name is the text "とりゃ〜" (Torya〜), which may have been a catchphrase. These two text files are the last ones in the game's code associated with Crisp, indicating that she may have been removed late into development. Internally, her texture and model files refer to her as "xsq", which likely means "extra squirrel". Crisp's earlier translated name was "Chestnut" due to a translation error.

However, despite initial speculation that Crisp may have been a cut villager, there is prominent evidence suggesting that she was actually meant to be a special character. In the game's code, Crisp is referred to under the filename "ac_ev_dokutu", which can be broken down into "Actor Event Dokutu". Characters with "ev" in their filename are traveling characters like Redd or Saharah, while "dokutu" is most likely a Kunrei-shiki romanization of "dokutsu" (土窟/どくつ), meaning "cavern" or "hole in the ground"; most other actor characters also had their names shortened in code. Given that the player can use a shovel to dig holes and thus uncover buried items, and that real squirrels are known for burying their spare food, it's possible that Crisp's intended role in the game would've had something to do with burying special items that the player would then dig up to collect.

Crisp can be spawned into a player's town using the below Action Replay code, using xxxx as a regular villager, with yyyy being set to either D06C or E15A.

040051A0 3C600001
040051A4 3863xxxx
040051A8 7C032040
040051AC 7C832378
040051B0 4082000C
040051B4 3C600001
040051B8 3863yyyy
040051BC 4E800020
0453A198 4BACB009
04544FFC 4BAC01A5

Because her text data was overwritten, Crisp will use one of Kapp'n's dialogues when D06C is used. When E15A is used, she'll use whatever text corresponds to the villager she overwrote's gender. If she is spawned into a player's town with the above code and yyyy set to D06C, her name will be displayed as "[key symbol] ù«–•B¡¡". This is the default name for special NPCs, which was untranslated from Doubutsu no Mori+ (ジョニー・B) and translates to Johnny B; the garbled appearance of the name is the end result of the game attempting to display text characters that no longer exist in its code, instead displaying characters that occupy the same hexidecimal positions as their kana counterparts. When using E15A, she will take Jambette's name; this is because Jambette's villager index is cataloged first at E05A. Because villager text data data wraps around after E0FF, long before E15A, Crisp will use Jambette's data by default.

Crisp spawned into a player's town with yyyy set to D06C. Crisp's name as it appears on the in-game map, when yyyy is set to D06C. Crisp spawned in with yyyy set to E15A, overwriting a male villager.


(Source: bowsersenemy, Ralf, garrick)

Title Theme

In the normal course of play, the game's title theme fades out after a minute and 3 seconds, corresponding with the length of time of the demos played on the title screen. However, the full track runs for an additional 21 seconds, with this extended outro only normally being accessible by ejecting the game disc during the first demo that plays when booting the game up. Technically speaking, this means that the full title theme isn't completely unused, but it is inaccessible under typical circumstances.

In-game Full

Leftover Items

Several furniture items are leftover in the files from Doubutsu no Mori +, the Japanese exclusive GameCube version of the game released before. When spawned, they appear as a "DUMMY" model that is a white triangle with red Japanese text on it reading "ダミー" or "DUMMY". Below is a list of the item's names along with their internal hexadecimal IDs and their models from Doubutsu no Mori +.

Name ID Doubutsu no Mori + model Name ID Doubutsu no Mori + model Name ID Doubutsu no Mori + model
dresser 10 7C
DnMPlus Dresser.png
tansu 10 80
DnMPlus Tansu.png
sewing box 10 84
DnMPlus SewingBox.png
paper lantern 10 8C
DnMPlus PaperLantern.png
tea table 10 90
DnMPlus TeaTable.png
shogi board 10 94
DnMPlus ShogiBoard.png
screen 10 98
DnMPlus Screen.png
bus stop 10 A0
DnMPlus BusStop.png
hibachi 10 C0
DnMPlus Hibachi.png
tea tansu 10 CC
DnMPlus TeaTansu.png
pink kotatsu 10 D0
DnMPlus PinkKotatsu.png
blue kotatsu 10 D4
DnMPlus BlueKotatsu.png
nice speaker 11 F8 school desk 12 00
DnMPlus SchoolDesk.png
graffiti desk 12 04
DnMPlus GraffitiDesk.png
towel desk 12 08
DnMPlus RagDesk.png
kadomatsu 12 20
DnMPlus Kadomatsu.png
kagamimochi 12 24
DnMPlus Kagamimochi.png
heavy chair 12 40 school chair 12 44
DnMPlus SchoolChair.png
towel chair 12 48
DnMPlus RagChair.png
stepstool 12 50 giant dharma 13 F8
DnMPlus GiantDharma.png
dharma 13 FC
DnMPlus Dharma.png
mini-dharma 14 00
DnMPlus MiniDharma.png
striped cone 14 18
DnMPlus StripedCone.png
cola machine 14 20
DnMPlus DrinkVendingMachine.png
barricade 14 30 fence 14 34
DnMPlus Fence.png
plastic fence 14 38
DnMPlus VinylFence.png
fence and sign 14 3C
DnMPlus FenceAndSign.png
brown drum 14 4C
DnMPlus LightBrownTinDrum.png
red drum 14 54
DnMPlus RedTinDrum.png
juice machine 14 58 trash can 14 60
DnMPlus TrashCan.png
garbage pail 14 64
DnMPlus GarbageCan.png
robotic flagman 14 74
DnMPlus TrafficGuidanceRobot.png
zen basin 14 90
DnMPlus ZenBasin.png
wash basin 14 98
DnMPlus WashBasin.png
warning sign 14 A0 route sign 14 B0 men working sign 14 B4
DnMPlus WorkAheadSign.png
caution sign 14 B8
DnMPlus RequestSign.png
temple basin 14 BC
DnMPlus LongWashbasin.png
bucket 15 20
DnMPlus Bucket.png
faucet 15 28
DnMPlus Faucet.png
spa chair 15 2C
DnMPlus SpaChair.png
massage chair 15 48
DnMPlus MassageChair.png
bath mat 15 4C
DnMPlus BathMat.png
spa tub 15 50
DnMPlus SpaTub.png
clerk's booth 15 64
DnMPlus ClerksBooth.png
spa screen 15 74
DnMPlus SpaScreen.png
bath locker 15 94
DnMPlus BathLocker.png
milk fridge 15 98
DnMPlus MilkFridge.png
lucky cat 1E 74
DnMPlus LuckyCat.png
lucky black cat 1E 78
DnMPlus LuckyBlackCat.png
racoon obje 1E 80
DnMPlus TanukiFigurine.png
lucky frog 1E 84
DnMPlus LuckyFrog.png
alcove 1E DC
DnMPlus Alcove.png
hearth 1E E0
DnMPlus Hearth.png
post box 1F A8
DnMPlus Mailbox.png
moon dumpling 30 38
DnMPlus TsukimiDango.png
bean set 30 3C
DnMPlus BeanThrowingSet.png
osechi 30 40
DnMPlus NewYear'sEveFood.png
spring medal 30 58
DnMPlus SpringPennant.png
fall medal 30 5C
DnMPlus AutumnPennant.png
long-life noodle 30 68
DnMPlus NewYear'sEveNoodles.png
bass boat 30 6C
DnMPlus BassBoatWrapSushi.png
mortar ball 30 8C
DnMPlus ThreeFootBall.png
big catch flag 30 98
DnMPlus BigHaulFlag.png
hibachi grill 31 BC
DnMPlus Hibachi.png
dreadful painting 31 D8
DnM64 DreadfulPainting.png
novel painting 31 DC
DnM64 NovelPainting.png

Unused Items

Several items in the game's files are unused and unobtainable through gameplay. Below is a list of the item's names along with their internal hexadecimal IDs.

Name ID Image Notes
golf trophy 32 1C Animalcrossing dummy.png -
tennis trophy 32 28 Animalcrossing dummy.png -
kart trophy 32 30 Animalcrossing dummy.png -
Legend of Zelda 1D F0 ACGCN Legend of Zelda Unused.png Fully functional unobtainable NES game furniture and fully playable copy of the NES game "The Legend of Zelda". Has its own unique model.
Legend of Zelda 1F BC Animalcrossing zeldanes.png Broken NES game. Crashes and resets Animal Crossing when pressed and attempts to load. Model is reused from the plain game-less "NES" item.
sickle 22 2C AC Toolbox Sprite.png Handheld item, no model visible when placed in house or equipped but uses a toolbox sprite from previous versions of the game when dropped outside. Of note is that an inventory icon for the sickle is present in the 2020 source code leak for Doubutsu no Mori.
- Various ACGCN Fish Sprite Unused.png Can be spawned as an object on the ground, but is an unused object and sprite in normal gameplay. Cannot be picked up. Of note is that the 2020 Doubutsu no Mori source code leak includes three generic fish icons, one of which resembles this sprite, rather than distinct ones for each species; this appears to be a remnant of that idea.
unknown Various AC unknown.png Broken item that has no model visible when placed. When picked up, it cannot be interacted with in the inventory or sold at Tom Nook's Shop, only prompting an error noise when A is pressed on it. Has its own unique inventory icon.
DUMMY 33 C4 Animalcrossing dummy.png The model for most leftover and unused items. Unlike other items, this one can be accessed through a glitch. Winter Igloo Campers have the DUMMY in the pool of items that they can give the player.
§ÿ³„Ñ à 25 00 AC Letter Icon.png
§ÿ³„ÕØ 25 01 AC Clothing Icon.png
§ÿ³„ÁÂÖ 25 02 AC 1000 Bells Icon.png
money1000Bell 25 0D AC 1000 Bells Icon.png
爁 25 13 AC Pitfall Icon.png
🗙♀☂Þ🐷 25 1D AC Present Icon.png

Unobtainable Clothing

Eight unobtainable clothing items exist in the game. They can be spawned as items from memory and can be obtained through universal item codes, but only exist for villagers during certain events in normal gameplay.

Name ID Image Texture Notes
Plum Kimono 24 12 AC Plum Kimono.png AC Plum Kimono Texture.png Worn by villagers on New Year's Day in Doubutsu no Mori +.
Somber Robe 24 13 AC Somber Robe.png AC Somber Robe Texture.png Worn by villagers on New Year's Day in Doubutsu no Mori +.
Red Sweatsuit 24 14 AC Red Sweatsuit.png AC Red Sweatsuit Texture.png Worn by the red team during the Sports Fairs
Blue Sweatsuit 24 15 AC Blue Sweatsuit.png AC Blue Sweatsuit Texture.png Worn by the blue team during the Sports Fairs
Red Puffy Vest 24 16 AC Red Puffy Vest.png AC Red Puffy Vest Texture.png Worn by female villagers during the Fishing Tourneys
Blue Puffy Vest 24 17 AC Blue Puffy Vest.png AC Blue Puffy Vest Texture.png Worn by male villagers during the Fishing Tourneys
Summer Robe 24 18 AC Summer Robe.png AC Summer Robe Texture.png Worn by villagers during the Fireworks Festival in Doubutsu no Mori +.
Bamboo Robe 24 19 AC Bamboo Robe.png AC Bamboo Robe Texture.png Worn by villagers during the Fireworks Festival in Doubutsu no Mori +.

Doubutsu no Mori Leftovers

In addition to the items shown above, eight unused furniture items from the original Doubutsu no Mori remain in the code of Doubutsu no Mori +, Animal Crossing, and Doubutsu no Mori e+. In most cases, their models are removed; their IDs instead point to duplicates of the Spooky Wardrobe furniture item in + and the DUMMY furniture item in Animal Crossing and e+. The sole exception is the unused chair, the model for which is still present in + (though not Animal Crossing or e+, where it again just appears as a DUMMY item).

Name ID Image Notes Name ID Image Notes
zabuton 10 9C DnM64 Zabuton.png - chest 10 B0 DnM64 Chest.png -
rack 10 B4 DnM64 Rack.png - nice speaker 11 F8 DnM64 NiceSpeaker.png -
unused dresser 12 F0 DnM64 UnusedDresser.png - unused monkey 13 14 DnM64 UnusedMonkey.png Animated; perpetually claps.
modern den chair 13 44 DnM64 ModernDenChair.png Interactive; can be sat on. unused chair 14 CC DnM+ unused chair.png DnM+ unused chair 2.png Interactive; can be sat on.

Unused Seasonal Palettes

In Doubutsu no Mori e+, two unused seasonal environment palettes were added for grass. These palettes go unused in the final game. The first palette appears to be for a transition between Fall and Winter, as the grass underneath the bush is green. The second palette is likely for mid- or late Winter.

未使用的季节调色板 #1 未使用的季节调色板 #2

Unused Text

At the beginning of string_data.bin is a test line of text.

Test Line of text

Among the catchphrases are some temporary strings of text that indicate catchphrases that haven't been translated.

TRANSLATE

At the beginning of mail_data.bin is some testing related text for letters.

This is mail 0
This is mail 1.

message_data.bin contains two messages that mention E3. It appears they would be used if the player tried to send mail at the post office, possibly while playing an E3 demo.

{{DEMO_NPC0:PLAYER:WORRY}}I'm terribly sorry,{{PAUSE:0x06}} but since
{{COLOR_CHAR:e11ed7:0x02}}E3 is being held today,{{BUTTON}}
{{CLEAR}}We're not accepting any
letters.{{PAUSE:0x0c}} I apologize for
the inconvenience.{{DEMO_NPC0:PLAYER:DEFAULT}}
{{CONTINUE}}
Listen,{{PAUSE:0x06}} {{COLOR_CHAR:e11ed7:0x02}}E3 is being held
today.{{BUTTON}}
{{CLEAR}}We don't save letters during
{{COLOR_CHAR:e11ed7:0x02}}E3.{{PAUSE:0x0c}}
{{SOUND_CUT:0x00}}{{COLOR_LINE:969696}}(We're just too busy!){{SOUND_CUT:0x01}}{{DEMO_NPC0:PLAYER:DEFAULT}}
{{CONTINUE}}

Build Dates

COPYDATE contains the following final build dates:

JP + JP + Rev 1 US JP e+ JP e+ Rev 1 AU
2001/11/25 22:05:18
2001/12/04 20:33:21
02/08/01 00:16:48
03/06/12 22:19:41
03/12/19 16:56:57
03/09/11 11:32:38
EU English EU French EU German EU Spanish EU Italian
04/06/22 18:48:30
04/06/22 19:18:47
04/06/22 19:17:53
04/06/22 18:37:16
04/06/22 19:20:21

Build Directories

static.str contains the directories from which various relocatable module files were compiled:

Doubutsu no Mori+/Animal Crossing

d:\home\otsuki\Project\GCFOREST\src\bin\HW2\foresta.plf

Doubutsu no Mori e+

d:\Project\Dolphin\GCFOREST\src\bin\HW2\foresta.plf
d:\Project\Dolphin\GCFOREST\src\bin\HW2\forestd.plf
d:\Project\Dolphin\GCFOREST\src\bin\HW2\foresti.plf
d:\Project\Dolphin\GCFOREST\src\bin\HW2\foresto.plf

boot.dol Strings

boot.dol, the game's executable, has a few interesting strings.

Error Messages

Jam/seq :: Sequence Error occerd... I try to continue
OK! YOU ARE GREAT!
:::there is some error in this heap!
Sorry, not prepared for SZP archive.

Other Strings

SHOP PROMOTE VERSION
The DISP SW is JAPAN MODE now but this GAME is NES version
QFC ver.011012   (C)2001 Nintendo

Developer Credit

// Coded by Kawasedo

At D79E1 is comment that matches a string found in the Game Boy Advance Bootstrap ROM, so it is safe to assume that the .dol contains a copy of the GBA Bootstrap and it is not otherwise part of the game.

Resetti Easter Egg

The sixth time you meet Resetti, he will force you to copy what he says by typing it in. However, typing in the following phrases (or anything containing them) will trigger an Easter egg. Some of these things are somewhat vulgar.

no
nope
heck no
NO!
jerk
Die!
Loser
RESET
Freak
Creep
no way
Leave!
No way!
shut up
go away
Pinhead
Dirtbag
Scumbag
Shut up!
Go away!
butthead
Bite me!
U R ugly
groundhog
You stink
I + reset
You suck!
I hate you
Moles suck
Who cares?

Animalcrossing angryresetti1.png Animalcrossing angryresetti2.png Animalcrossing angryresetti3.png Animalcrossing angryresetti4.png

Doubutsu no Mori e+ 1.01 NES Tags

Version 1.01 of Doubutsu no Mori e+ added the following new NES Info Tags:

[.data]: Famicom.a/tags_table_external_bbram_default
[.data]: Famicom.a/tags_table_external_disksystem_default
[.data]: Famicom.a/tags_table_external_famicom_grand_prix
[.data]: Famicom.a/tags_table_wrecking_crew
[.data]: Famicom.a/tags_table_vs_excitebike
[.data]: Famicom.a/tags_table_kaettekita_mario_bros
[.data]: Famicom.a/tags_table_doctor_mario
[.data]: Famicom.a/tags_table_adventure_of_link
[.data]: Famicom.a/tags_table_adventure_of_link_rom

None of the games mentioned here are playable in Doubutsu no Mori e+, or in any version of Animal Crossing for that matter, indicating that these games were either planned for inclusion but ultimately cut, or were intended to be patched into the game through a promotional event.