Nintendo just dropped a new trailer for Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream that walks プレイヤー through exactly what to expect when the game launches on April 16 for $59.99. The short version: you build an island, fill it with Mii characters, and then watch the chaos unfold. The longer version is a lot more interesting.
Two ways to build your Mii, one way to get attached
The original Tomodachi Life on 3DS gave プレイヤー a single path to Mii creation. Living the Dream splits that into two distinct modes. Get Help walks you through a short questionnaire about face shape, hairstyle, and eye style, then generates a Mii based on your answers. It's fast, approachable, and good for プレイヤー who just want to get their friends onto the island quickly.
From Scratch is where things get personal. Every individual feature, from eyebrow shape to face paint, is selectable by hand. Nintendo even included a drawing tool inside the Face Paint option, so you can stamp or freehand details that don't exist in the preset library. That's a meaningful upgrade over the original game's more limited editor.
Once the face is done, you set height, body type, and personality traits through another short questionnaire. The personality system directly affects how your Mii behaves on the island, which means the time you spend here actually shapes the experience you'll have later.
What changed from the 3DS original
Here's the thing: the original Tomodachi Life launched in North America back in 2014 and never received a sequel. Over a decade later, Living the Dream isn't just a port. The island-building layer is new, Palette House is new, and the ability to house up to 8 Miis together in shared living spaces is a significant expansion of the relationship system that made the original so memorable.
Palette House deserves special attention. プレイヤー can draw and design their own food, clothing, buildings, and even pets, then distribute those creations to island residents or place them as decorations. The original game had some customization, but nothing close to a full freehand creation tool.
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If you download the free demo before April 16, your save data transfers directly to the full game. You won't lose any island progress when you upgrade.
The Quick Build system handles faster island decoration for プレイヤー who don't want to spend time in Palette House. Think of it as the difference between placing furniture from a catalog versus building it yourself.

Palette House custom creator
The relationship system is still the real draw
Miis don't just stand around looking cute. They develop relationships with each other based on proximity and interaction, moving from acquaintances to friends to something more. プレイヤー can nudge things along by physically picking up a Mii and dropping them near another one, but after that introduction, the Miis take over.
Small icons appear above Mii heads when they need something, from food to home redecoration to relationship advice. Responding to those moments levels up your Miis and unlocks new interactions. The loop is genuinely low-pressure, which is exactly what made the 3DS version a cult hit.
Local wireless lets プレイヤー share Miis and Palette House creations with friends, which means your island can absorb characters built by people you actually know. That social layer was part of what made the original work, and it's back here in a more fleshed-out form.

Miis meeting on the island
The free demo is already live
Nintendo made the demo available ahead of the April 16 launch, which is the right call for a game that lives or dies on whether プレイヤー connect with the Mii creation process. Spending 30 minutes with the demo tells you more about whether Living the Dream is for you than any trailer can.
For プレイヤー who remember the 3DS original fondly, the save transfer feature alone makes the demo worth downloading. You can start building your island today and carry everything forward at launch. For more on what's coming to Nintendo Switch this year, browse the latest gaming guides to stay ahead of upcoming releases. Make sure to check out more:
