Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream: How to Unlock Ferris Wheel

Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream Time Traveling Will Backfire on You

Nintendo has officially warned that changing your Switch's system clock in Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream locks all shops for 24 hours and resets on every attempt.

Eliza Crichton-Stuart

Eliza Crichton-Stuart

Updated Apr 18, 2026

Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream: How to Unlock Ferris Wheel

If you picked up Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream expecting your old Animal Crossing habits to carry over, here's a heads-up: the one trick that life-sim veterans rely on most will actively work against you.

Nintendo's official Tomodachi Plaza account posted a warning on April 16, 2026, confirming that adjusting your Switch's system clock in Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream triggers a 24-hour shop lockout. Every shop stops refreshing. Weekly offers freeze. And if you try to fix the problem by resetting the clock back to the correct time, the 24-hour penalty timer restarts from zero.

What the time travel penalty actually does

The consequences stack up fast. Here's what Nintendo confirmed gets affected:

  • All shops stop refreshing for approximately 24 hours after any system clock change
  • Changing the clock again (including reverting to the correct time) resets that 24-hour timer
  • Mii hunger does not update, meaning no extra feeding cycles and no farming happiness rewards
  • Weekly offers are also frozen, not just standard daily shop inventory

The key here is that this isn't a soft inconvenience. You're locked out of basically every time-sensitive progression system the game has, and the lockout compounds if you try to undo it.

Why players assumed this would work

Time traveling has a long history in Nintendo life-sim games. In Animal Crossing: New Horizons, nudging the Switch clock forward was a widely accepted method to refresh Nook's Cranny stock, skip bridge construction timers, or play the Stalk Market at will. The same tactic showed up more recently in Pokemon Pokopia, where players used clock changes to skip construction waits or trigger time-specific Pokemon spawns.

The overlap between Animal Crossing fans and Tomodachi Life players is significant, so it makes sense that people tried importing the same playbook. The problem is that Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream was specifically designed to push back against it.

Nintendo's own statement in the PSA put it plainly: "Time travel gives you almost no real advantage anyway, since most things in the game already happen quickly." That framing matters. The game is built around short, frequent play sessions at real-time speed, not marathon sessions accelerated by clock manipulation.

The actual pace of the game

Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream moves faster than Animal Crossing by design. Relationships progress, shops restock, and events trigger on a tighter real-time loop, which is exactly why the time travel shortcut offers almost nothing even before the penalty kicks in. The 24-hour lockout is less a punishment and more a signal that the mechanic was never meant to be part of the experience.

For players who want to get more out of their island without breaking anything, there's plenty of legitimate optimization to explore, including unlocking all of the game's personality types, which has its own depth. You can find more on that and other Nintendo titles over at our latest reviews.

The short version: play Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream in real time, check in regularly, and leave the system clock alone. For everything else you need to know about the game, browse more guides as the community figures out what actually works.

Announcements

updated

April 18th 2026

posted

April 18th 2026

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