Animal Crossing: New Horizons hasn’t received a major update since 2021, and Nintendo previously showed no interest in continuing development on the five-year-old game. It was a huge surprise when Nintendo, in October, announced that Animal Crossing: New Horizons would get not only a Nintendo Switch 2 edition, but a 3.0 content update, too. On Oct. 30, Nintendo dropped a 12-minute video breaking down the new details and gave press an early, hands-off look earlier in December.
Nintendo previewed the update in a 25-minute demo covered by IGN, which said the update is largely focused on design and decor and Nintendo Switch 2 quality-of-life improvements. Here’s what we know so far.
When’s it coming out?
Animal Crossing: New Horizons‘ 3.0 update and Nintendo Switch 2 edition will be released on Jan. 15, 2026. The Nintendo Switch 2 Edition costs $64.99 on its own, or $4.99 for people who already own the game on Nintendo Switch. All players will get the 3.0 update content for no additional cost.

What’s new in the Switch 2 version?
Animal Crossing: New Horizons on the Nintendo Switch 2 will benefit from the console’s mouse controls, which will make placing decor a bit less fiddly. And that makes sense, paired with a content update that’s largely centered on decor. Using the Joy-Con 2s as a mouse makes clicking and dragging stuff around the map much simpler.
IGN said the Animal Crossing: New Horizons Switch 2 edition also has an exclusive device—a megaphone. It’s used to call out to villagers and other visiting characters so they’re easier to find. To do so, you literally have to say a character’s name into the Switch 2 microphone, according to Polygon. However, the megaphone can only be used for characters that are outside of buildings—ones that would actually “hear” you—so it isn’t as useful for anyone inside a structure, IGN said.
One initial draw is the upgraded multiplayer; up to 12 people can congregate on an island. But IGN reported that this feature requires everyone to be on a Switch 2. Plus, the edition makes use of the new camera system to display a player’s face near their character.

How about the 3.0 content update?
The big addition in Animal Crossing: New Horizons‘ 3.0 update is the Kapp’n family’s hotel—your Animal Crossing island is now a destination not only for your friends, but visiting Animal Crossing characters. Leilani, Kapp’n’s wife, runs the hotel and gives you the opportunity to decorate up to 10 rooms, per Polygon. IGN said it’s something to be unlocked, but it’s tied to the pier—not optional or moveable. It’s similar to the Happy Home Paradise DLC, IGN said, in which you’ll decorate rooms, just by theme and not to a specific character’s interests.
Designing hotel rooms
IGN said that you’ll be able to design around themes—like, say, seaside—but don’t have to. You’ll be able to choose from different items, but aren’t required to use anything in particular, unlike in Happy Home Paradise. You’ll have your full catalog of items to use, as well as items related to the specific theme.
Hotel shopping and new items
You earn hotel tickets by designing rooms, and then use the tickets to earn more things from a hotel-specific shop manned by Gran. Polygon said that a number of new items were left out of the preview, but that it’s a “very large amount of furniture.” There are new Nintendo-themed items, too, like the Ultra Hand and different NES games playable on classic consoles purchasable from the hotel lobby shop. (These need a Nintendo Switch Online subscription to play.)
Other new items include Splatoon, Lego, and The Legend of Zelda stuff.
Crafting tweaks
One of the quality-of-life adjustments in the 3.0 content update is the ability to craft several items at once, using materials from storage instead of inside a player’s pockets, Nintendo announced during its October preview. Simply put, crafting could be a pain in the ass before; this should help, especially when you’ve got a lot to make.
With so much new design and decor content, easing the pain of crafting a lot of stuff feels essential to the experience. Making things easier once again, there’s also a Resetti “reset” service to quickly clear a part of your island.
Slumber Island
The Verge described the Slumber Island feature, seen in the December preview, as “extra sandboxes” to decorate and play in. You’ll be able to set the time of day and weather to create whatever vibe you’re into—without messing about on your permanent island. The Verge said it looked like a “quicker and smoother” way to dream up a design and build it all out: Items from your in-game catalog appear immediately, and terraforming has a little quality-of-life improvement, it seems, to help make the process less painful. Plus, Lloyd can build bridges and inclines immediately, according to The Verge. No waiting around.

