![]() ![]() You're still cursed with having a potential neighbor waiting patiently in the black space for you to autofill a plot. So, if you don't have it online then your move-in queue is not safe and empty. The game just throws a random villager in there at some point. It turns out, some of them are fresh villagers not from any other island. Originally, all the villagers in your move-in queue were from friends' islands. You must get them to move in for that villager to disappear from the queue. There is a quick math equation you can do to figure out the chances of finding a specific villager on a mystery island. You can either let all four villagers move in automatically or go villager hunting and find every other villager in the game except those four. How do you find out who is in your move-in queue? It was nice of them to let us invite the villagers we paid money for. You can't scan a KK amiibo and get KK to move in. Nintendo has patched this out and now allows you to invite any neighbor, well ones available in the game of course. In the past, scanning their amiibo would present you with an away message making said villager unable to move in unless by auto-filling. They are stuck in your queue until you let them in by auto-filling or scanning their amiibo. Any animals that are chilling in your move-in queue cannot be found on a mysterious island when villagers hunting. It's also a fun way to get some of your friends' neighbors to bounce around and enjoy that random bug or glasses that someone had previously gifted them and seem to be stuck in their house forever. If you decide to not go villager hunting or steal one of your friend's "inboxes" villagers, then the game will throw a house down for you. The move-in queue was created for the game to have a way to fill in empty villager plots. It's an invisible process that can only be found out through some trial and error and extensive research by you in your game. You won't know if you take or leave a villager. ![]() These potential neighbors are ones you pick up from other people's islands that are in their move-out queue. Your move-in queue can hold up to 4 villagers. This one we know a little bit more about. The move-in queue is a slightly different beast. Knowing the basics is the most important part. We'll probably never know what exactly happens in the confusion that is the move-out queue. ![]() They can only be acquired by those who visit your island. Villagers in your move-out queue can be picked up by your friends. The only time a villager that moves off your island will remember you is if they move from your island to a friend's island. If you let Raymond leave your island and find another Raymond chilling on a mystery island during your next hunt, consider him a completely different Raymond. The one you find on the island will not remember you. So, it seems like even if they find their way to your move-out queue, you can still find another version of them. A villager you let leave your island can still be found on a mystery island tour when villager hunting. Which villagers get thrown in, how long they stay, or if anyone replaces them is unknown. This is a list of up to 10 villagers that have moved off your island. With that out of the way, let's start with the move-out queue. After you allow the first campsite villager to move in, the other plots you place will follow the rules of the move-in and move-out queues. Everything we're about to tell you is true after you have let your first campsite villager move in. For the sake of clarity and to limit confusion, we’re going to use the terms move-in queue and move-out queue rather than void. The move-in and move-out queues have been changed up. So, if you have any prior knowledge from voids of the past, throw it out. The move-in queue works a bit differently than it did in New Leaf. How does move-in queue & move-out queue work? What exactly is the move-in queue? How does it work and is there any way to control it? Those are very good questions. It can be a damper if the dreamie you're hunting for turns out to be in a queue of villagers that the game has decided to hide from you. One of the most fun, yet painful mechanics in New Horizons, especially if villager hunting is on your list of fun activities to do in the game. ![]()
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