Nan

Nan is a normal goat villager in the. She first appeared in and appears in all subsequent games except. Her name may come from nanny, another word for a female goat, and her catchphrase may relate to a baby goat, which is called a kid.

In, Nan has the nature hobby and will be more frequently seen sitting underneath trees or observing and watering flowers. She will also fish and chase after bugs, and may also be seen carrying bundles of sticks or picnic baskets.

Appearance
Nan is a gray goat with pale freckles on her cheek. She has pink inside her ears and orange and yellow-striped horns on her head. Her hooves are tipped pink, the same color as the inside of her ears.

Personality
Nan is a normal villager. Nan will sometimes become very interested in clothes after staying for a while. She is sweet to players and is usually in a good mood, but if the player does not go to their house on time when they invite Nan over in, she will be angry with them. Like Chevre, Nan is ever so friendly; when the player feels down, she usually helps them back up again.

In
In, Nan can only move to the player's town if her e-Reader card is scanned.

In
In, Nan's house features the same furniture layout as Savannah's.

In
In, if Nan is the one who moved in during the main storyline after the villager house development quest, her house will have a combination of non-craftable furniture, plus items crafted by players during the island development storyline, primarily from the Wooden Series. Her actual house features a nearly identically-mirrored layout of Chevre's house, with different color variations for the furniture and different furniture in the music player slot. Nan's house features while Chevre's house features.

Trivia

 * In Nan's amiibo card artwork, she has what appears to be a black goatee that is the same color as the rest of her fur. This is likely an error, as the goatee is absent in-game.
 * Chevre's picture in her house is a reference to Japanese children song, Nani-tte nan-nano, about black goat and white goat sending letters to each other.