The Province

Nintendo nuptials

The pandemic cancelled their wedding, so they held it online in Animal Crossing: New Horizons instead

- ARON GARST — NINTENDO

Sharmin Asha was disappoint­ed. With the COVID-19 outbreak sweeping across the globe, she and her fiance, Nazmul Ahmed, had to face a hard truth — it wasn’t safe to bring her family and friends together under one roof. They’d have to cancel their wedding.

The 28-year-old couple from New Jersey scrapped plans for their 150-person, April 12 reception in Brooklyn until next year, and pressed pause on a first dance set to Louis Armstrong’s A Kiss to Build a Dream On.

“We were basically 99 per cent ready to get married, which unfortunat­ely did not happen,” Asha said.

In the days that followed their decision, Asha and Ahmed tried to move past their disappoint­ment, taking up the new Nintendo game, Animal Crossing: New Horizons on the recommenda­tion of a friend. The couple enjoyed their time with the life simulator, harvesting resources and using them to upgrade their personaliz­ed islands with new buildings and items. Then Asha experience­d a thrilling surprise.

“Nazmul invited me over to collect resources (on his island) since he had been playing longer than me,” Asha said. “As soon as I got there, he was at the airport and there were arrows on the ground. He told me there was some special in-game event, so we followed them.”

The arrows led Asha through the town, where she picked up flowers Ahmed had left along the path, and up to the beach where their friends were waiting with their own Animal Crossing characters. Ahmed had planned a surprise beach wedding within the game. He got everything ready on the same day and had their friends in a video chat on mute until the big reveal.

“It took me around four or five hours to set the whole thing up,” Ahmed said. “Our friends played (the game) already, so they were immediatel­y on board.”

Asha and Ahmed’s story is not a rare one these days.

There have been instances all over the world of players hosting a wedding within Animal Crossing in the midst of a pandemic that has closed borders, postponed planned events and forced people to stay home. Some have even designed traditiona­l Vietnamese and Korean wedding clothing with the game’s customizat­ion options.

The in-game nuptials isn’t a full substitute for their wedding, Asha and Ahmed said, and their ceremony carries no legal bearing. But, for now, Asha, Ahmed and a host of other couples are saying “I do” through their characters in a game that has served as a popular proxy for real-world social interactio­n with much of the world forced into isolation.

New Horizons is the fifth game in a franchise whose popularity began with its first release in 2001. But this latest entry is something of a cultural phenomenon. While its previous version, New Leaf, has sold 12 million copies since its release in 2012, New Horizons has already sold nearly two million copies in Japan alone since its release March 20.

“With social distancing and the current world situation, New Horizons is the closest semblance to a normal life that some of us can have right now,” said University of Texas senior Dang Ton. Ton tweeted a video showing his Animal Crossing character accepting a diploma after the school shut down. Ton and his friends made the video as a joke, but a future graduation ceremony for him and other would-be grads around the world remains an open question.

Many Animal Crossing-imitating-life posts are about people like Asha, Ton, or Evan Latt, who held his 31st birthday party inside the game in late March. Latt said he usually gets some of his friends together for a night out in Nashville, with drinks across several bars and restaurant­s.

“It’s usually nothing horribly special,” Latt said, but his real-life plans wouldn’t work this year.

Instead of a bar crawl, Latt travelled from one of his friend’s villages to the next in the game, culminatin­g in one belonging to his friend Aaron Traylor. There his friends brought him gifts he can use in the game.

Some of the people who spoke to The Post about their recent in-game gatherings had been longtime fans of Animal Crossing. Others, like Asha, had only just started playing video games regularly. They all agreed that New Horizons came at the perfect time to give them a deeper connection with their faraway loved ones, even more than video chat alone or another game could.

“Even though it wasn’t in real life, in times like this it’s important to be connected with those that are close to you,” said Asha, whose graduation ceremony from medical school was also impacted by the outbreak.

 ?? — THE WASHINGTON POST ?? A New Jersey couple were forced to postpone their April wedding, but that didn’t stop them from getting married in the popular Nintendo game Animal Crossing: New Horizons.
— THE WASHINGTON POST A New Jersey couple were forced to postpone their April wedding, but that didn’t stop them from getting married in the popular Nintendo game Animal Crossing: New Horizons.
 ??  ?? A screen grab of the popular Nintendo game Animal Crossing: New Horizons.
A screen grab of the popular Nintendo game Animal Crossing: New Horizons.

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