While the trees don’t naturally exist in-game, all the hackers are doing is tricking the tree into growing one kind of item (in this case, star fragments) instead of another kind of item, like apples or bell bags. The enticing thing about star fragment trees is that you, personally, do not have to hack your Nintendo Switch in order to own one. Sellers are using Twitter, Facebook, and black market Discord servers to sling their unauthorized flora, and as one might imagine, such unregulated transactions are potential hotbeds for deceit and thievery. ![]() Others are selling their star fragment trees for real-world cash, for as much (or as little, depending on your perspective) as $3.00 per tree, or as a bundle of 40 trees for $50, as can be seen in this listing first unearthed by Polygon. Some people are selling star fragment trees for Nook Miles tickets, which are the currency of custom for (more reputable) unofficial Animal Crossing: New Horizons marketplaces like Nookazon. ![]() Normally they can only be acquired on rare nights when shooting stars are visible, but Animal Crossing hackers have figured out how to make them grow on trees, and are now selling those trees to innocent, well-meaning players who just want pretty things for their islands.Īnd by “selling,” I mean that in whatever way you’d inferred. Star fragments, for those who’ve yet to sign for Tom Nook’s generous relocation package, are glowing bits of shooting stars that crash on player islands in New Horizons. It may surprise innocent, law-abiding villagers to learn this, but the world is full of people with modified Nintendo Switch consoles whomst, with little regard for themselves or others, fill their Animal Crossing: New Horizons islands with illegal and illicit goods, including (but not limited to) such dreamlike impossibilities as the star fragment tree, seen above.
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