Museum

From Nookipedia, the Animal Crossing wiki
Museum
NL Museum Exterior.png
The Museum exterior in New Leaf
Service Town museum
Services Fossil, fish, insect and art exhibits
observatory
The Roost
Opening hours Always open
Appearances Doubutsu no Mori+
Animal Crossing
Doubutsu no Mori e+
Animal Crossing: Wild World
Animal Crossing: City Folk
Animal Crossing: New Leaf

The museum is a stone building found in all the Animal Crossing series games, except for Doubutsu no Mori. It is an establishment for the collection and display of insects, fish, paintings, and fossils. The curator, an owl named Blathers, will have to be woken up during the day, but is always awake at night. Blathers is present in the main room all day, every day. Celeste, Blathers' sister, resides in the Observatory, the second floor of the museum. She will also have to be woken up during the day, but she denies the fact that she was sleeping, claiming that she was just resting her eyes. Like her brother, she is available all day and night. Upon donating every possible specimen to the Museum, the player will be awarded a Museum Model.

In Wild World and City Folk, Celeste runs the Observatory on the second floor. Here, the player can create custom constellations by connecting between stars with lines. On the basement floor is The Roost, a small café run by Brewster. Occasionally, villagers and special characters will drink coffee at The Roost's bar (such as Kapp'n, Pelly, or Phyllis). K.K. Slider will perform in The Roost on Saturday nights. In City Folk, Brewster will also store a player's Gyroids.

In New Leaf, the Museum no longer features the Observatory or The Roost. At the beginning of the game, the Museum consists of only a single floor, although a second story can be constructed as a public works project and The Roost Cafe can also be built as a public works project, though as its own building outside of the museum. With this expansion, Celeste will operate a gift shop selling unique furniture, tools, wallpaper and carpets, and will also rent out four different exhibition spaces for 10,000 Bells each. The second floor also contains lockers that can access a player's storage space. Outside the entrance to the Museum is a board that lists every exhibit and their donors, and the paintings section has been expanded to encompass sculptures as well.

History

Animal Crossing

The museum as it appears in Animal Crossing

The Museum, although absent in Doubutsu no Mori, makes its debut in Animal Crossing. At the museum, the player can donate any bugs, fish, fossils, or paintings that they find. In the case of fossils, however, the player must send any unidentified fossils to the Faraway Museum, as Blathers, the Museum owner, is unable to identify fossils himself. For each donation, the Museum is divided into various sections pertaining to whatever category the donation falls under, either as bugs, fish, fossils, or paintings. Once the player donates everything for one section, Blathers will congratulate the player for completing it. On the other hand, if everything from every exhibit is donated, than the player will receive a Museum Model to congratulate their hard work.

The Bug exhibit is one room. At the back of the room, there are around five to seven summer themed trees that have beetles and cicadas on them, once each are donated. In the middle, there is a lot of flowers, a pond and a tree, containing ladybugs and butterflies when they are donated. At the bottom area there is a pile of leaves, a big rock and a single tree that contain grasshoppers, crickets, and a few other bugs. If the player donates a Mosquito or a Cockroach, both will be seen moving freely in the exhibit, either flying around or scuttling around the floor, respectively.

The Fish exhibit is relatively small compared for future installments, as it is only one room containing six tanks for pond, river and freshwater fish. If a Frog is donated, it can be seen croaking on top of a lily pad in the topmost tank to the right. In the very back of the exhibit, there is one big tank containing seawater fish.

The painting exhibit is one room, containing many aisles of paintings. The pathway to each row of paintings curves and twists.

The fossil exhibit is, once again, in one room. The larger fossils, such as the T-Rex, are placed haphazardly and in nonlinear lines. The smaller fossils, such as amber and an ammonite, are in a line near the entrance.

Animal Crossing: Wild World

File:Blathers in WW (1).png
The Museum as it appears in Wild World

The Museum returns in Animal Crossing: Wild World, with several changes being added. The Museum now features stairways leading to an Observatory and a cafe known as The Roost, respectively. In addition, Blathers is now able to identify fossils himself, due to the Faraway Museum being absent in this game. Other than these new additions, the museum in Wild World has the same function as Animal Crossing

The bug exhibits are split into two rooms. Butterflies are in the first room, and so are all the bugs that live on palm trees, under rocks, and in the ground. Pondskaters will also apear in this room. All grass-bound bugs and bugs that live on trees are in the second room. The cockroach, once donated, skitters on the floor of the first room.

The fish section divides into two rooms. All river, pond, river pool, and waterfall fish are kept in two tanks within the first room, while all ocean fish are kept in one large tank in the second room located to the north of the first.

The painting exhibit is almost the same as in Animal Crossing, except there are more twists and turns.

The fossil exhibit contains two rooms, featuring smaller fossils in both rooms.

Animal Crossing: City Folk

File:CFMuseum.JPG
The Museum as it appears in City Folk

The Museum appears once again in Animal Crossing: City Folk, featuring redesigned exhibits from its predecessor. Other than this, no major changes are made.

The bug exhibit is one big room divided into three levels. The first level has all the butterflies, located near the entrance with insects that can be found near or in water. The second level, which is connected to the first by a small slope, is set up like a small wooded area. The rafflesia, a large flower that appears in a town when there are too many weeds, is next to the slope. The third level, which is also connected by a small slope to the second level, is open planned, with trees surrounding the wall at the top of the room with a few heat lamps.

The fish exhibit is one large room. Most ocean fish, including the hammerhead shark, are found in a very large tank that spans across the entire northern part of the room. Small ocean fish, like the surgeonfish, are kept in a long, tube-shaped tank in the southeast corner of the room. Most small river fish, like the guppy, are in the southwest corner of the room in a similar tank. All other river, pond, river pool, and waterfall fish, like the carp and char, are kept in the middle of the room in two tanks.

The paintings exhibit is split up into two rooms; a main room and a back room. Most paintings are displayed in the main room. In the back room, there is a single row of paintings along the wall of the room. The rope divider in the middle of the room guards the Famous Painting once it is donated.

The fossil exhibit of the museum is composed of two rooms and floors. Smaller fossils are kept upstairs in the second room.

Animal Crossing: New Leaf

The Museum returns once more in Animal Crossing: New Leaf, being given an extensive makeover from previous installments. For instance, the player can now donate multiple items at once, although they will not get a reaction from Blathers if this is done. The Observatory is also removed from this installment, being replaced by the Museum Shop Public works project, once the player donates multiple items to the museum.

Gallery