Hunter Taming Luck

I’ve continued to poke around in World of Warcraft over the last few days. As I said yesterday I managed to get Belgrace my formerly-Tauren now Blood Elf Paladin to 120. After that I have begun the process of gearing through abusing the World Quest system to cherry pick rewards until I get my item level up. I started by mailing all of the Benthic gear I had laying around and then buying whatever I happened to be missing. I am still annoyed that there is no catch up mechanic for weapons, rings or trinkets. Thankfully World Quests seem to reward rings fairly often, but Trinkets and weapons still are a constant problem. In theory it even looks like the highest level crafted option I could find is 400, which is fine but also seems like a waste of resources when you are going to ultimately need to push past that. I look like a mess but I also cannot be bothered to spend the gold to fix that until my item level stabilizes a bit.
I’ve been enjoying tooling around by air as I zip between World Quests, and as a result I have been noticing levels of detail that you just can’t see from the ground. Over on the coast of Zuldazar there is an area near Xibala where apparently there is a giant dinosaur skeleton exposed in the side of the mountain. I would have had no clue about this, as from the ground it just looks like a normal hill. I am wondering what other gems can be seen form the air that are not quite visible from the ground. I will say that air travel helps a lot in the end game, but I still find myself mostly moving around on ground while leveling because you end up getting so much experience killing random stuff while you travel between point A and point B.
I had every plan yesterday to pick up and start leveling my Warlock, which ultimately was my next highest in level. However I am finding it sorta hard to get into the swing of leveling a caster right now. I flipped back to Demonology from Affliction and I think it makes me a bit happier. All of the Warlock specs seem super fiddly at the moment, when I am mostly looking for some “mash button, get reward” classes to level. I am sure I will rotate back to the Warlock at some point, but it is going to require a bit more time “back” in the game for me to get to it. I do not love being squishy.
So instead I flipped over to my Hunter which was level 79 and sitting in Netherstorm. I dinged 80 and swapped over to Pandaria over the other option which was Catalcysm. I do not love Cataclysm, and revisiting Pandaria has made me realize how much I actually like that expansion now that some time has passed. However it did not take long before I realized that due to the pet changes in Battle for Azeroth… I don’t actually have a tanky pet anymore. I WISH pets were account bound, so that you could share them among multiple hunters. Instead I decided to make an attempt at taming Arcturis the Spirit Beast bear. I probably spent every last bit of luck I had in the game because by the time I flew over to Grizzly Hills he was just sitting there waiting on me to tame him. I made passes through to see if any of the other Northrend spirit beast were up, and tamed King Krush along the way but came up empty on the others. So at least for now I am going to be in a mode of soaking up the loot from World Quests and then swapping over to the hunter and leveling. Having quite a bit of fun right now, and it has made me realize that I seem to really enjoy the end of expansions. I’ve come back at the tail end of most expansions and had a grand ole time thanks to the various catch up mechanics. I sorta wish I could play this mode of the game indefinitely. However I know an expansion will release and I will get caught up in the race of grinding to the top once more. I did not get an Alpha invite to Shadowlands, because I assume at this point they have gone out. Quite honestly I am not really sure if I would want one at this point, because on some level I kinda want to hit the ground running fresh. That said if I ended up getting one I am not sure I would be able to stop myself from logging in and playing with it. I’ve said enough bad things about Blizzard over the years that I am certain I am no longer on the “friends and family” list.

Regularly Playing: April 2020 Edition

Okay folks, this is Topic Brainstorming week for Blapril 2020, and I thought I would use that as an opportunity to talk about one of the things that I have traditionally done where I update you all on what I have been regularly playing. I use this opportunity as a time to update the sidebar of the blog and talk about my feelings about some of the games that are in heavy rotation. I have been exceptionally bad at keeping this updated over the last few months, but that isn’t really a new thing either because I have gone through serious lapses before. The idea is that you have a dialog with your readers and talk about what has been going on in your gaming life. This topic could be adopted to pretty much any subject, talk about movies you have been watching, music you have been listening to or any number of other hobbies. Since this is mostly a gaming blog I have simply chosen to call that aspect of my life out, and as such I talk about the games that are new to the list, the games that are still in regular rotation and the games that are departing the list. Last edition of this feature I also included the “ships passing in the night” feature where I talk about games that I have been enjoying but that won’t really have much staying power.

To Those Remaining

Destiny 2 – PC
Destiny sweet Destiny… I am not sure what is going on between us. You right now are hanging by a thread and are just barely making the list. I am not sure what it is about the seasonal format but it actually disincentives me from playing, because deep down I know I won’t have the staying power to unlock everything and squeeze every last drop of good from the season before it expires. I think mostly I just have a problem with expiring content. If the seasonal content allowed me toe work through it at my own pace like something along the lines of Elder Scrolls Online, I would feel significantly better about playing Destiny on a regular basis because it doesn’t feel quite so much like wasted effort. I hope they re-evaluate the seasonal formula and make the additions to the game stick around a little longer. If they maybe give you three seasons to complete the content before it expires that might go a long way towards making this feel like a better experience.
Diablo 3 – PC and Switch
I had an awful lot of fun at the beginning of the season hanging out with Grace and Byx and have since then sorta faded away. Diablo 3 is never really far from my mind however and I am sure at some point I will finish building a reasonable set and push toward the end goal. I did at least get the 4 chapters of the seasonal journey knocked out, but Set Dungeon Mastery right now is what is holding me up because it is the one step I hate doing each season. I end up delaying it until I finally can’t anymore and now it is holding up two separate seasons journey ranks. I just really don’t like being on a timer when I am gaming.

To The New and Returning

Animal Crossing New Horizons – Switch
This is effectively my very first Animal Crossing game, and as a result there has been a mountain of knowledge that I needed to climb in very short order in order to figure out what the hell was going on behind the various mechanics. This is a game that is exceptionally bad at explaining itself, and really this should have been their “Monster Hunter World” moment, because given that the Switch is an extremely popular console makes it attractive to a whole new generation of players. This should have been the title that they added a bit more scaffolding to the game in order to hand hold you through the process of engagement. There are so many things that I have had to take to external sources to figure out, and I feel like maybe some hand holding would have been nice at least to have an option to say “Hey I am a First Timer, Explain to me like I am 5 Years Old”. All of that said it is adorable and while I am not playing with the length I was in those first few days I am at least logging in each day to move the bar forward a bit.
Atom RPG – PC
This one is making this part of the list because I feel like there is a lot more here to explore. I have not finished the game, and I want to spend time once other things calm down a bit getting back in and roaming around. Essentially this poorly named game is “What if Fallout 1 and 2 were Russian themed and came out recently”. It is a re-imagining of the Fallout genre and plays like you remember those games playing, which is to say it plays much better than they do if you were to buy a copy from GOG and play it today. It can be brutally hard, and I seem to have more issue with ammunition than I remember having back in the day, but it did serve for several fun nights of gaming and I want to return to it.
Wolcen – PC
While I have not been playing this a lot recently, there is still a lot of meat on these bones and I want to return to it. Wolcen has released a bunch of patches and tweaks since I last played and it will be interesting to see if my tanky spin to win build is still functional. Wolcen is the best Diablo game we have gotten in recent memory and does a great job of sorta cherry picking the best features of both Diablo 3 and Path of Exile… in a formula that feels closer to D3. Essentially it is a recipe for what I like in an ARPG, but I realize for the folks that hold Diablo 2 up in high esteem it might not be their jam. I wish this was available on the Switch because as much as I like playing D3 from the bedroom… if this supported cross save and allowed me to progress my character while chilling out horizontally… this would become my new sleepy time jam.

Ships Passing in the Night

Star Wars Galaxies – Legends Server – PC
In the months since January I have been on a bit of a MMORPG Emulator server binge. The first of these was Star Wars Galaxies because my good friend Tam got into the game heavily, as it was one of his nostalgia jams from the past. For him this was a great experience about space combat in the Star Wars universe. Since I do not really like flight simulators, it was less enjoyable, but I did greatly appreciate the first few levels that felt similar to a WoW or an Everquest 2. Unfortunately once you have finished the first ten levels and the game opens up… this helpful scaffolding falls away and the “real” game was far less enjoyable for me. What was there instead was slow progression and the unpredictable difficulty curves that I remember from Everquest. I was happy that Tam was having so much fun, but I was a bit saddened that I really was not.
City of Heroes – Homecoming Server – PC
This lead me down a path towards one of my nostalgic remembrances… and the game I was likely playing while Tam was playing SWG… City of Heroes. I had so much fun with this game and for the full nostalgia trip, I opted to play a Katana/Regeneration Scrapper. The game itself was way different than I remember it being, but not in a bad way. The homecoming server effectively is picking up where the game left off when it was shuttered, meaning it is several years worth of patches past the point at which I actually left off playing. For the most part the game holds up well unlike SWG or Everquest, and I could see myself maybe returning to it at some point in the future when I am not deluged with other games I want to be playing.
Everquest – EZ Server – PC
Eventually this path of madness lead me back to the progenitor of MMORPG gaming (for me at least), Everquest. I tried a few different server options and eventually landed on EZ Server, which is a super fast progression and super low difficulty Everquest experience that lets me play tourist and revisit areas I loved in the game without having to deal with finding a group. I realize this largely defeats the purpose of Everquest, but I also don’t have the time or patience that I did when I first played this game, and as a result I am down for cheat mode. It was a lot of fun for about a week and then I wandered away like a bored toddler. I might return the next time I get nostalgic about Norrath, given how hard I have found it to ease back into Everquest II.
Mars: War Logs – PC
This is the third game by Spiders that I have played and it suffers from a lot of the same problems. However still like Greedfall and Technomancer there is something about the gameplay that I find compelling. They all sorta play like low rent Bioware titles, but they are doing a thing that Bioware no longer seems to be doing which makes me interested in them nonetheless. Mars: War Logs was the first game in a series that continued with Technomancer, and I could definitely see some merit in playing this game first because it does introduce parts of the Mars setting that never get explored fully in the sequel. That said it is a much more primitive gaming experience, and while I enjoyed it I could see a lot of the awkwardness turning others off. If you want to experience a spiders game and have never done so… probably start with Greedfall and see if it leaves you wanting more before diving in deeper.
The Touryst – Switch
This game was in heavy rotation for me for about a week and then once again as is my usual I wandered away like a bored toddler. It is really charming and interesting, and I liked the pace of feeling like I accomplished something each day. What I did not love about it were how many precision jumps that were required to complete some of the puzzles. The basics of the game is that you are visiting an archipelago and each island has a different them, as well as a central puzzle to solve in how to unlock its shrine. There is no real combat, and if you fail something you start over immediately at the beginning of the room that you are in so it allows you to fail fast and rapidly iterate through ideas. The voxel theme is a lot of what makes the game charming, and the engine that is running it is among the more impressive ones available on the switch. The lighting, the animations, the subtle details all add to the feel of it being a living and breathing world.
Doom (2016) – PC
It only took me four years… but I finally buckled down and finished my play through of Doom 2016 in anticipation of the release of Doom Eternal. It was a fun if nonsensical ride through a world of exploding demon corpses. I had an awful lot of fun pushing through the final bits of the game and would definitely suggest it to anyone who loved the earlier era and arcade shooters. I’ve not really had a chance to dig into Doom Eternal but it also seems to be a similar style of enjoyment. Right now I am buried under a bunch of games and I need to dig out before I really tackle anything else.
World of Warcraft – Retail – PC
During the crisis we currently find ourselves in… I’ve struggled to allow myself to sink into the warm embrace of a video game. I’ve had trouble disconnecting mentally enough to really allow myself to engage fully with another universe. As a result I have been in desperate need of something that I could more or less play while at the same time shutting off my brain and just giving it time to rest. World of Warcraft fits that bill perfectly because all of the patterns of engagement are more or less muscle memory at this point. I’ve been taking advantage of the experience bonus currently going on in game and the speed of leveling is pure nonsense. I took my Horde Paladin from 110-120 in a few days and hit 118 before I had finished the first zone I chose to go through, Zuldazar. Now that I have that character at 120 I am swapping over to pushing up my Warlock, while at the same time dipping my head in periodically to gobble up any upgrades from World Quests. I’ve also leveled my Paladin on Alliance side as well, since it was the closest to the level cap… and am in the process of working my way towards unlocking the allied races.

Summary

When I allow myself to go more than one month without an update it ends up being this mammoth post as I have a bunch of things that I feel like I need to talk about. My hope is that I can get back in the swing of doing these early in each month. I find it helpful to sorta clear the slate each month and talk about what is and is not seeing play time. There are a lot of games that I might play, but ultimately don’t feel like dedicating one of my daily posts to, and this gives me the space to address those.

Regularly Playing: April 2020 Edition

Okay folks, this is Topic Brainstorming week for Blapril 2020, and I thought I would use that as an opportunity to talk about one of the things that I have traditionally done where I update you all on what I have been regularly playing. I use this opportunity as a time to update the sidebar of the blog and talk about my feelings about some of the games that are in heavy rotation. I have been exceptionally bad at keeping this updated over the last few months, but that isn’t really a new thing either because I have gone through serious lapses before. The idea is that you have a dialog with your readers and talk about what has been going on in your gaming life. This topic could be adopted to pretty much any subject, talk about movies you have been watching, music you have been listening to or any number of other hobbies. Since this is mostly a gaming blog I have simply chosen to call that aspect of my life out, and as such I talk about the games that are new to the list, the games that are still in regular rotation and the games that are departing the list. Last edition of this feature I also included the “ships passing in the night” feature where I talk about games that I have been enjoying but that won’t really have much staying power.

To Those Remaining

Destiny 2 – PC
Destiny sweet Destiny… I am not sure what is going on between us. You right now are hanging by a thread and are just barely making the list. I am not sure what it is about the seasonal format but it actually disincentives me from playing, because deep down I know I won’t have the staying power to unlock everything and squeeze every last drop of good from the season before it expires. I think mostly I just have a problem with expiring content. If the seasonal content allowed me toe work through it at my own pace like something along the lines of Elder Scrolls Online, I would feel significantly better about playing Destiny on a regular basis because it doesn’t feel quite so much like wasted effort. I hope they re-evaluate the seasonal formula and make the additions to the game stick around a little longer. If they maybe give you three seasons to complete the content before it expires that might go a long way towards making this feel like a better experience.
Diablo 3 – PC and Switch
I had an awful lot of fun at the beginning of the season hanging out with Grace and Byx and have since then sorta faded away. Diablo 3 is never really far from my mind however and I am sure at some point I will finish building a reasonable set and push toward the end goal. I did at least get the 4 chapters of the seasonal journey knocked out, but Set Dungeon Mastery right now is what is holding me up because it is the one step I hate doing each season. I end up delaying it until I finally can’t anymore and now it is holding up two separate seasons journey ranks. I just really don’t like being on a timer when I am gaming.

To The New and Returning

Animal Crossing New Horizons – Switch
This is effectively my very first Animal Crossing game, and as a result there has been a mountain of knowledge that I needed to climb in very short order in order to figure out what the hell was going on behind the various mechanics. This is a game that is exceptionally bad at explaining itself, and really this should have been their “Monster Hunter World” moment, because given that the Switch is an extremely popular console makes it attractive to a whole new generation of players. This should have been the title that they added a bit more scaffolding to the game in order to hand hold you through the process of engagement. There are so many things that I have had to take to external sources to figure out, and I feel like maybe some hand holding would have been nice at least to have an option to say “Hey I am a First Timer, Explain to me like I am 5 Years Old”. All of that said it is adorable and while I am not playing with the length I was in those first few days I am at least logging in each day to move the bar forward a bit.
Atom RPG – PC
This one is making this part of the list because I feel like there is a lot more here to explore. I have not finished the game, and I want to spend time once other things calm down a bit getting back in and roaming around. Essentially this poorly named game is “What if Fallout 1 and 2 were Russian themed and came out recently”. It is a re-imagining of the Fallout genre and plays like you remember those games playing, which is to say it plays much better than they do if you were to buy a copy from GOG and play it today. It can be brutally hard, and I seem to have more issue with ammunition than I remember having back in the day, but it did serve for several fun nights of gaming and I want to return to it.
Wolcen – PC
While I have not been playing this a lot recently, there is still a lot of meat on these bones and I want to return to it. Wolcen has released a bunch of patches and tweaks since I last played and it will be interesting to see if my tanky spin to win build is still functional. Wolcen is the best Diablo game we have gotten in recent memory and does a great job of sorta cherry picking the best features of both Diablo 3 and Path of Exile… in a formula that feels closer to D3. Essentially it is a recipe for what I like in an ARPG, but I realize for the folks that hold Diablo 2 up in high esteem it might not be their jam. I wish this was available on the Switch because as much as I like playing D3 from the bedroom… if this supported cross save and allowed me to progress my character while chilling out horizontally… this would become my new sleepy time jam.

Ships Passing in the Night

Star Wars Galaxies – Legends Server – PC
In the months since January I have been on a bit of a MMORPG Emulator server binge. The first of these was Star Wars Galaxies because my good friend Tam got into the game heavily, as it was one of his nostalgia jams from the past. For him this was a great experience about space combat in the Star Wars universe. Since I do not really like flight simulators, it was less enjoyable, but I did greatly appreciate the first few levels that felt similar to a WoW or an Everquest 2. Unfortunately once you have finished the first ten levels and the game opens up… this helpful scaffolding falls away and the “real” game was far less enjoyable for me. What was there instead was slow progression and the unpredictable difficulty curves that I remember from Everquest. I was happy that Tam was having so much fun, but I was a bit saddened that I really was not.
City of Heroes – Homecoming Server – PC
This lead me down a path towards one of my nostalgic remembrances… and the game I was likely playing while Tam was playing SWG… City of Heroes. I had so much fun with this game and for the full nostalgia trip, I opted to play a Katana/Regeneration Scrapper. The game itself was way different than I remember it being, but not in a bad way. The homecoming server effectively is picking up where the game left off when it was shuttered, meaning it is several years worth of patches past the point at which I actually left off playing. For the most part the game holds up well unlike SWG or Everquest, and I could see myself maybe returning to it at some point in the future when I am not deluged with other games I want to be playing.
Everquest – EZ Server – PC
Eventually this path of madness lead me back to the progenitor of MMORPG gaming (for me at least), Everquest. I tried a few different server options and eventually landed on EZ Server, which is a super fast progression and super low difficulty Everquest experience that lets me play tourist and revisit areas I loved in the game without having to deal with finding a group. I realize this largely defeats the purpose of Everquest, but I also don’t have the time or patience that I did when I first played this game, and as a result I am down for cheat mode. It was a lot of fun for about a week and then I wandered away like a bored toddler. I might return the next time I get nostalgic about Norrath, given how hard I have found it to ease back into Everquest II.
Mars: War Logs – PC
This is the third game by Spiders that I have played and it suffers from a lot of the same problems. However still like Greedfall and Technomancer there is something about the gameplay that I find compelling. They all sorta play like low rent Bioware titles, but they are doing a thing that Bioware no longer seems to be doing which makes me interested in them nonetheless. Mars: War Logs was the first game in a series that continued with Technomancer, and I could definitely see some merit in playing this game first because it does introduce parts of the Mars setting that never get explored fully in the sequel. That said it is a much more primitive gaming experience, and while I enjoyed it I could see a lot of the awkwardness turning others off. If you want to experience a spiders game and have never done so… probably start with Greedfall and see if it leaves you wanting more before diving in deeper.
The Touryst – Switch
This game was in heavy rotation for me for about a week and then once again as is my usual I wandered away like a bored toddler. It is really charming and interesting, and I liked the pace of feeling like I accomplished something each day. What I did not love about it were how many precision jumps that were required to complete some of the puzzles. The basics of the game is that you are visiting an archipelago and each island has a different them, as well as a central puzzle to solve in how to unlock its shrine. There is no real combat, and if you fail something you start over immediately at the beginning of the room that you are in so it allows you to fail fast and rapidly iterate through ideas. The voxel theme is a lot of what makes the game charming, and the engine that is running it is among the more impressive ones available on the switch. The lighting, the animations, the subtle details all add to the feel of it being a living and breathing world.
Doom (2016) – PC
It only took me four years… but I finally buckled down and finished my play through of Doom 2016 in anticipation of the release of Doom Eternal. It was a fun if nonsensical ride through a world of exploding demon corpses. I had an awful lot of fun pushing through the final bits of the game and would definitely suggest it to anyone who loved the earlier era and arcade shooters. I’ve not really had a chance to dig into Doom Eternal but it also seems to be a similar style of enjoyment. Right now I am buried under a bunch of games and I need to dig out before I really tackle anything else.
World of Warcraft – Retail – PC
During the crisis we currently find ourselves in… I’ve struggled to allow myself to sink into the warm embrace of a video game. I’ve had trouble disconnecting mentally enough to really allow myself to engage fully with another universe. As a result I have been in desperate need of something that I could more or less play while at the same time shutting off my brain and just giving it time to rest. World of Warcraft fits that bill perfectly because all of the patterns of engagement are more or less muscle memory at this point. I’ve been taking advantage of the experience bonus currently going on in game and the speed of leveling is pure nonsense. I took my Horde Paladin from 110-120 in a few days and hit 118 before I had finished the first zone I chose to go through, Zuldazar. Now that I have that character at 120 I am swapping over to pushing up my Warlock, while at the same time dipping my head in periodically to gobble up any upgrades from World Quests. I’ve also leveled my Paladin on Alliance side as well, since it was the closest to the level cap… and am in the process of working my way towards unlocking the allied races.

Summary

When I allow myself to go more than one month without an update it ends up being this mammoth post as I have a bunch of things that I feel like I need to talk about. My hope is that I can get back in the swing of doing these early in each month. I find it helpful to sorta clear the slate each month and talk about what is and is not seeing play time. There are a lot of games that I might play, but ultimately don’t feel like dedicating one of my daily posts to, and this gives me the space to address those.

Substitute Amiibo Cards

On Friday I talked about the process of summoning an Amiibo Figure or an Amiibo Card to your Island. Over the years Nintendo has released a large number of limited edition Amiibo products associated with Animal Crossing. The products compatible with New Horizons are numerous but as far as I can tell you have the following to choose from.
  • Animal Crossing Amiibo Series – Cannot be invited to Campground
  • Villager SSB Amiibo – Cannot be invited to Campground
  • Isabelle SSB Amiibo – Cannot be invited to Campground
  • Animal Crossing Amiibo Cards (4 series of 100 cards) – Most animals can be invited with some exceptions
  • Animal Crossing Welcome Amiibo Cards (50 Cards) – I believe all can be invited to Campground.
  • Animal Crossing Welcome Sanrio Amiibo Cards (6 cards) – None of these are compatible
So for the purpose of inviting Villagers you have 450 cards and of those a number are characters like Isabelle, Tom Nook and the Nooklings that are not available for inviting to the Campground. The general animals like the ones shown above however can be. Side note… there is overlap between the Welcome and the 400 card series so for the sake of our purposes I am generally going to focus on the four series of cards that came out in 2015-2016 and are now exceptionally hard to find except for on the after market.
The problem with Nintendo and Amiibo products is there is a built in rarity to them. Generally speaking they have only one print run and when that is sold out they are gone other than purchasing from collectors or folks looking to flip product. Were they simply a collectible this would be perfectly fine, but the problem I personally have with them is that they also serve interesting in game functionality with specific titles. The challenge is that a lot of these cards are rather pricey in third party markets like Ebay. For example here are some prices for Cherry the dog, one of the Amiibos that I wanted to invite to my island. The prices vary wildly for authentic cards, and even more if you are hunting for a card that has never been scanned or associated with a system already. So if you were to say you could pick up the cards for an average price of $20 per animal… and say there are only 350 usable animals in the 400 card set. It would be rather expensive to pick up a full series run if that was what you are after.
If you were wanting to pick up the original packs of cards from the various 4 release series, they seem to be going for around $20 for each pack of 6 cards. As a result of these prices you will see replica cards available on grey markets like Etsy that look and function exactly like the real thing. They still are not exceptionally cheap and if you want to pick up a full series run you are still likely going to be paying a minimum of $2 per card with the cheapest I have seen a full set being around $600. For some reason Etsy seems to think I want prices in Euros, but you can do the conversion math yourself. At this point you might be asking yourself… how exactly can they replicate an amiibo card and get it to work perfectly with Nintendo games? Now we get into the meat of why I am posting today.
Amiibos operate on a technology called NFC or Near Field Communication. This operates in two varieties.. active NFC like that of your smart phone or passive NFC like that of a tap to pay credit card. Amiibos operate on the later of these two and as such require no power and also never stop working because they are relying on the reader device to supply an electromagnetic current which causes the device to spring to life and respond. This is also why when you hold an Amiibo to scan it, it takes a second or two before it gets a read. Amiibos more specifically work on a format known as NTAG215 which is an open standard, and as a result you can effectively take ANY NTAG215 compliant NFC card and write an Amiibo’s image to it. The above is a picture of some various form factors available on AliExpress the most common being the “Proximity Card” similar to your Employee ID card that lets you into buildings, and the sticker which can be adhered to anything giving you NFC functionality. Generally speaking it is around $15 for 50 NFC Proximity Cards and the price goes down significantly as you buy in bulk.
There is a piece of software called TagMo available on Android phones that allows you to use the built in NFC functionality of your device and use it to scan Amiibos, save off the information from them, and then write all of that information to a new blank NFC NTAG215 card or sticker. I took a few screenshots of the app after launching, the app searching for a tag to load and then the app with Al’s card image loaded in. From there I could very easily take a blank card and write Al’s data to it, effectively creating my own Amiibo Card that works as any other Amiibo Card in Animal Crossing New Horizons. Effectively this is what all of those sellers on Ebay or Etsy do to create their “replica” cards. In fact the Legend of Zelda series of Amiibos were so popular that Chinese factories were churning out really professional looking mini-cards that allowed you to carry the entire series run of figures in a form factor roughly as large as a pack of chewing gum. If Animal Crossing New Horizon maintains its popularity, I figure in the future something like that will probably be available here as well. In the meantime however I have crafted a few cards for the Villagers I am interested in inviting. There are archives online that have dumps of the data from the Amiibo cards. TagMo is readily available through the GitHub archive, but in order to get it to work you need a few bits of data in order to successfully write the cards. There is a reddit thread out there with information on how to get that set up, and where to find the important bits of data. All of these things combined and an Android 5.0 or higher device with NFC functionality… and you can write your own Amiibo Cards. Generally speaking the NFC cards can be written to once and then are effectively read only after that point. However there are a few third party devices out there like the Amiiqo which serve as an NFC tag emulator, allowing you to swap between Amiibo Images on the fly. These however generally run around $100 for the Amiiqo itself and the reader capable of writing data to it.
Of course none of this would be needed if there were not the built in scarcity of Amiibo products. If you could reasonably go purchase a brand new Amiibo at the normal $10-15 price you can find them for new in the store or on online retailers, it is unlikely that faking amiibos would have become quite so rampant. Once a series run is no longer available on the open market, you are effectively forced to pay collectors prices for them. I personally don’t care about the collectibility aspect, I just want the in game functionality. Essentially in the games that support them, Amiibos are like having DLC that only a handful of people can realistically acquire. So for the time being I will continue to fake out Amiibos, and now you have all of the knowledge needed to do it as well. Unfortunately iPhone users, to the best of my knowledge there is no equivalent of TagMo since iOS only allows reading tags not writing them.