Tamagotchi Paradise trades stressful virtual pet parenting for nature and tranquility
Briefly

Tamagotchi Paradise trades stressful virtual pet parenting for nature and tranquility
"Whereas previous Tamagotchi devices felt like they bestowed a personal challenge on players to keep individual characters alive and in their care as long as possible, Tamagotchi Paradise places more of an emphasis on populating, rewarding you for nurturing a revolving door of new characters that you will ultimately release to the peaceful wild. In a sense, Tamagotchi Paradise completely reimagines the classic toy not as a pet-keeping experience, but something more akin to wildlife conservation. It's really cool."
"Tamagotchi Paradise also introduces a new egg design, with a dial sticking out that has a stopwatch-like button. It's another hefty device and brings back AAA batteries instead of charging via USB-C. The top of the plastic shell flips open to reveal a docking port (a throwback to design from the '90s), where you can physically connect another Tamagotchi Paradise. And the updates don't stop there, since the whole UI has been overhauled."
Tamagotchi Paradise launches a planet-building Tamagotchi where eggs hatch into planets and creatures inhabit multiple virtual habitats. Players raise successive creatures across habitats, populating planets and ultimately releasing characters into the wild rather than maintaining single long-lived pets. The device hardware includes a new egg casing with a dial and stopwatch-like button, AAA battery power, and a flip-top docking port for physical connectivity with other units. The user interface has been overhauled. Gameplay emphasis shifts toward population management and conservation-style nurturing, producing substantial change that may polarize longtime fans while appealing to new playstyles.
Read at Engadget
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