Release info at a glance
| Title | Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream |
|---|---|
| Japanese title | Tomodachi Collection: Exciting Life (トモダチコレクション わくわく生活) |
| Platform | Nintendo Switch (playable on Switch 2 via backwards compat.) |
| Global release | April 16, 2026 |
| Developer | Nintendo EPD, with Intelligent Systems and Bandai Namco Studios |
| Two-week sales | 3.8 million+ copies worldwide |
| Demo | Available since March 25, 2026 — progress carries over |
| File size | ~10 GB |
What's actually new vs. the 3DS Tomodachi Life
If you played the 2013 original, the core loop is intact: create Miis, watch them live, intervene when asked. But Living the Dream changes how the world around them works in five major ways.
1. The island, not the apartment building
The iconic Mii Apartments skyscraper from the 3DS game is gone. In its place is a horizontally expandable island where each Mii starts with their own home. You can terraform — moving shops, repositioning houses, even painting ocean tiles into solid ground to grow your island's footprint over time. The whole game feels less like managing a dollhouse and more like running a small town.
2. Shared housing for up to 8 Miis
Miis can choose to live together, with a single household holding up to eight residents. Roommates fight over the TV remote, get into group debates, and create what Nintendo calls "unexpected dramas" — the kind of emergent comedy the series was built on, but with more people in the room.
3. The Palette House (the creative breakthrough)
The Palette House is the new creative hub. Using the touchscreen or controller, you can hand-draw:
- Custom pets like dogs and other companions
- Latte art, food items, drinks
- Original TV shows for Miis to watch
- Custom patterns for house exteriors and clothing
- Ground tiles and decorative items for the island
This is the single biggest reason fan creativity has gone viral on social media since launch — it's Animal Crossing-level UGC inside a Tomodachi Life shell.
4. Real inclusivity, finally
The 2014 controversy over the lack of same-sex relationships in the original is fixed here. Each Mii can be set as male, female, or non-binary, with custom pronouns, and romantic preferences are fully configurable — including same-sex, bisexual, or aromantic. This was confirmed early in the marketing and has been one of the most praised aspects of the launch.
5. Face paint and expanded Mii Maker
The new Mii Maker has more hair options, face shapes, eyes, ears, and a face paint system that lets you draw freely on top of the standard features. This is how players have been recreating extremely specific characters — from the cast of Breaking Bad to every Pokémon starter — that were impossible in the old preset-only system.
What's missing or limited
The biggest legitimate complaint at launch: there's no full online Mii sharing system.
Nintendo has restricted online sharing significantly. Local wireless still works for trading Miis and Palette House creations. Miis can also be transferred via Miitopia Access Keys with a Nintendo Switch Online membership — though custom Miitopia wigs and makeup don't carry over. The 3DS-era global QR code sharing is gone. Read our QR codes guide for the full picture of what works in 2026.
Some 3DS facilities, most notably the Concert Hall, were not carried forward — though they are referenced in dream sequences, leaving the door open for future updates.
How it's been received
- Sales: 3.8 million copies in two weeks worldwide. In Japan, it sold 565,405 physical copies in its first three days — about 15× the second-place title that week.
- Critics: Generally positive. Praise for humor, customization, inclusivity, and creative tools. Repetition over long sessions and the missing online features are the recurring criticisms.
- Community: The two main subreddits combined for around 2 million weekly visitors in the first month, with viral Mii recreations driving organic word-of-mouth.
Should you buy it?
If you loved the 3DS original, the answer is almost certainly yes. If you never played the original, Living the Dream is a better, more inclusive, more creative entry point than the 3DS game ever was. The one warning: this is not a game to binge. It's a 20-minutes-a-day game that rewards real-world patience while Miis develop relationships in the background. Players who try to play it for hours straight tend to be the ones who call it "repetitive." Players who treat it like a daily ritual tend to be the ones still playing months later.
Next steps
- Confused by Mii sharing in 2026? Read the QR codes & sharing guide.
- Building your starter island? Browse all 16 personality types for compatible pairings.
- Stuck for who to make? Get Mii ideas from anime, games, memes, and more.