Racoon figurine (Wild World)
| ||||||||
Buy price | Sell price | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2,000 Bells | 500 Bells | |||||||
Size |
1 × 1
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Obtain via | ||||||||
Rarity group | None | |||||||
HRA genres | Old-school / Lovely | |||||||
HRA category | None | |||||||
HRA points | 412 | |||||||
HRA penalty if facing wall | Unknown | |||||||
Colors | ||||||||
In other games | ||||||||
Doubutsu no Mori+ (tanuki figurine) City Folk (racoon figurine) New Leaf (raccoon figurine) New Horizons (raccoon figurine) | ||||||||
Names in other languages
たぬきのおきもの
N/A raton laveur figura mapache bambola procione N/A
소화전 N/A N/A N/A Waschbärfigur N/A |
The racoon figurine is a furniture item in Animal Crossing: Wild World.
The racoon figurine can be obtained from Crazy Redd's.
This item appears as a furniture item in the homes of Elise.
Real-world information
In Japanese folktale, bake-danuki (化け狸?) are a yōkai, or Japanese supernatural beings, associated with the Japanese raccoon dog, or tanuki. They're known for having the ability to shapeshift in order to fool people. Despite being coined "raccoon dogs", tanukis are not related to raccoons, but are often mistranslated as such in English translations of Japanese medias, including the Animal Crossing series.
Statues of this yōkai are spread around Japan, each having eight specific features that are said to give good fortune. These include:
- A hat for protection against bad weather or trouble
- Big eyes for good decision-making and to see the environment
- A sake bottle for virtue
- A big tail for steadiness and strength, said to bring success
- A large scrotum for financial luck
- A promissory note for trust or confidence
- A big belly for bold and calm decisions
- A friendly smile[1]
More information on this topic is available at Wikipedia.
This page uses content from Wikipedia (en). The original article was at Bake-danuki. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Nookipedia, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license. |
In other games
References
- Includes data sourced from the ACWW Spreadsheet project (Spreadsheet)
- ↑ Mark Schumacher (October 12, 2011). "Tanuki - Japanese Trickster & Spook, Originally Evil, Now Icon of Generosity & Prosperity.". Japanese Buddhist Statuary. Retrieved February 29, 2024.