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Animal Crossing: New Horizons trading

Maghanap ng live na Animal Crossing: New Horizons na manlalaro-sa-manlalaro na listings ayon sa value (in Bells/NMT), demand and rarity — bawat trade ay item-for-item kasama ang mga verified na trader, walang tunay na pera at walang presyong itinatakda ng platform.

Ang TradingKeep ay isang fan-made na marketplace na manlalaro-sa-manlalaro — walang kaugnayan sa o pagkakaendorso ng Animal Crossing: New Horizons o ng publisher nito. Ang mga pangalan at larawan ng laro at ng mga item ay pag-aari ng kani-kanilang may-ari.

Trading rules

Animal Crossing: New Horizons trading is hand-to-hand between players — the host opens their island with a Dodo Code, you fly over, and you exchange items for Bells or Nook Miles Tickets (NMT) face-to-face. There's no in-game marketplace or official value meter, so the values here — quoted in Bells, with NMT noted — are community reference points (from the Traderie/Nookazon community), never a real-money price. Agree the items and Bells/NMT before you meet, and only trade with players you can verify.

Niloload ang mga listing…

Animal Crossing: New Horizons is our first Nintendo Switch game, and its trading scene works nothing like the Roblox economies next door: there is no in-game marketplace, no auction house, and no official value meter anywhere in the game. Everything that changes hands does so face-to-face on someone's island. The catalog is enormous — roughly 6,495 items spanning furniture, clothing, villagers, photos, posters, K.K. Slider songs, art, flowers, plants, food, materials, tools, fossils, and services — so on any given day you'll see everything from a single DIY material to a chase villager crossing a trade. The community sizes deals up in two shared reference units: Bells, the in-game currency, and Nook Miles Tickets (NMT), a tradeable item people quote almost like a second currency. Neither is real money and neither is a price — they're just the yardsticks traders use to keep a swap roughly even.

What lifts one item above another comes down to scarcity and demand. Villagers are the headline chase: adoptable residents like Raymond, Marshal, and Judy sit at the top of almost every want-list, because a specific villager is only up for grabs when they happen to be in boxes and moving out, and sheer popularity does the rest — the most-wanted names trade far above residents nobody is hunting. Sought-after sets carry their own weight when supply is capped: the Sanrio collaboration furniture and clothing, seasonal and event items, and anything tied to a limited release stay in demand because no new copies keep entering the game. Many furniture pieces also come in color and style variants, and a specific variant can be much harder to track down than the base item, so "same name" does not always mean "same trade." Art is its own corner of the market, prized by collectors filling out the museum, but it comes with a catch worth knowing before you ever accept a piece.

The actual trade is hand-to-hand. The host opens their island with a Dodo Code, you fly in through the airport, and you exchange items in person — dropping them on the ground or handing them over directly. That physical hand-off is exactly where the scams live. The most common is item-drop theft: you drop your side first, the other player grabs it and bolts for the airport before handing over theirs. Never drop your half until theirs is confirmed on the ground too, and split big deals into one item at a time so nothing is ever left dangling. Fake art is the other classic — Redd's Treasure Trawler mixes forgeries in with genuine pieces, so a painting or statue passed to you may be a counterfeit; learn the tells or verify the real version before you trade for one. Be careful with villager adoptions as well, where a rushed hand-off lets someone collect your side before the villager is actually secured on your island. Treat any community value in Bells or NMT as a reference point for negotiating a fair, mutually agreed swap — never a fixed number you're owed.

Animal Crossing: New Horizons trading FAQ

May sinisingil bang bayad ang TradingKeep?

Hindi — ang TradingKeep ay ganap na libre. Walang anumang bayarin at hindi kami kailanman kumukuha ng kahit anong parte sa iyong mga palitan.

Paano gumagana ang pag-trade ng Animal Crossing: New Horizons items?

Ito ay item-for-item, manlalaro-sa-manlalaro na trading. Ipo-post mo ang item na meron ka — at ang mga rolls na kasama nito — plus kung ano ang tatanggapin mo para dito. Mag-o-offer ang ibang mga manlalaro, tatanggapin mo ang gusto mo, at tatapusin ninyo ang trade in-game. Walang middlemen, walang pera.

May tunay na pera bang sangkot?

Hindi. Ang TradingKeep ay item-for-item lang. Ang real-money at gift-card offers ay labag sa game rules at bawal dito — i-report ang sinumang sumubok.

Paano pinipigilan ng TradingKeep ang mga scam?

Sa maraming paraan nang sabay-sabay: trade-verified reviews para tunay ang history ng isang trader, chat na nagpapakita ng bawat link bilang plain text para hindi tumalab ang phishing, dual-confirm step sa bawat trade, at report system na nakatali sa nakikitang resulta.

Ano ang "trade-verified" review?

Isang review na mapagkakatiwalaan mo: bumubukas lang ito pagkatapos ng kumpletong trade na kinumpirma ng parehong panig. Walang drive-by ratings at walang review-bombing.

Nag-e-expire ba ang mga listing ko?

Mananatiling live ang mga listing ng 30 araw at pwedeng i-bump kada 6 na oras para manatili sa itaas. Tapos na sa trading? Pwedeng kanselahin ang listing anumang oras.