2002 GameCube classic Animal Crossing is now playable natively on your personal computer, thanks to the hard work of modders and fan developers. You’ll need to jump through a few hoops to get this unofficial port of the original cozy game running, but the end result is the best way to experience the very first Animal Crossing.

As spotted by PC Gamer, Github user FlyingMeta has released a (mostly) stable and working PC port of Animal Crossing on the GameCube that will let anyone with an original copy of the game or the OG Animal Crossing ROM (don’t tell me how you got that…) play the full game at a higher resolution, with mod support and the ability to use either a keyboard or a controller. It even supports the pre-existing HD texture pack for Animal Crossing, created by fans for the Dolphin emulator.

There are still some issues which the creator of the Animal Crossing PC port has said will be fixed in a future update. These includes some audio problems, a few random memory issues, and some texture bugs. Nothing too major, though. This is still a great way to play the classic Animal Crossing game in 2026, and it’ll only get better with future updates.

This new unofficial port doesn’t contain any game files, hence why you need to provide your own ROM or copy of the game, and it was built off the work done by the Animal Crossing Decompilation fan project. Like other decomp projects, the idea behind ACDecomp is to pull apart the code of the original game and get it running on modern PC hardware. This isn’t easy. It takes a lot of work. Decompliling Animal Crossing took over two years and isn’t even completely finished yet.

Once a game has been decompiled, it can then be ported to other platforms. We’ve seen this with other Nintendo games like Super Mario 64, Mario Kart 64, and Ocarina of Time. And because no game files, code, or assets are being shared online, Nintendo has been mostly unable to do anything to stop these decompiles from spreading. For example, we covered the Mario Kart 64 port nearly a year ago and it’s still available to download, and the creators haven’t been sent a nasty message from a lawyer.

Decompiling (and recompiling) old games provides, in theory, a better experience than emulation and can greatly expand what people can do with retro games. It also preserves them, making them more accessible for the future.

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