The shopkeepers in 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Animal Crossing: New Horizons are polite, but th𓃲ey definitely ar🐼en't pushovers when it comes to enforcing their business hours.
Considering Nook's Cranny is open fourteen hours a day, and Able Sisters twelve, this is completely understandable on their part. We all need to sleep at some point, right? Players are particularly buzzing abou꧑t the fact that Tommy and Timmy kick you out if you happe✱n to be in the shop right at 10 PM when it's time to close. Many claim it would never happen in real life, yet some say it happens all the time in most countries.
Is this mixed response🌠 due to a high consumerism culture in some places that forces the literal definition of "the customer is right"?
A very divided thread on Reddit begins with the headline "I KNOW AC is fake because no employee would ever say this to a customer" and shows a picture of a player being told by Timmy and Tommy that it's past their closing hours. If you experience this feature in game, you'll find yourself automatically going outside. People on that thread said this is standard Japanese retail culture, and considering Animal Crossing is a Japan🐬ese game, it would very much make se♋nse for the series to take on some of its societal norms.
Players from ot🐷her countries chimed in on t♊his as well. "In Germany they will literally shoo you out of the store five seconds past closing time and turn the lights off," said r/anon1984. "When I was in Portugal they made an announcement in a little local market that if you weren’t at checkout by 8:59 you have to put back the stuff and leave," says another user.
Clearly, being cast out of Nook's Cranny just mirrors real life common cultural norms. Except, of course, for Americans. No one has to be from the USA to know about their famous "customer servic🏅e above all" policy in most places. The internet is a fantastic tool for people to witness videos of angry consumers screaming at cashiers and airport staff. Most retail employees there will tell you that by their company policy, they cannot🎀 ask a customer to leave. If a woman and her child walk in two minutes before closing, they have to let them shop even if they stay there browsing for fifteen minutes.
"I h📖ad so many people telling me I was violating their rights to shop by asking them to leave," says r/jackieisnotmyname, a former pharmacy chain employee. This is solid evidence of a societal norm difference in most placeౠs when it comes to customers.
Fortunately, most of the non-furniture things Nooks Cranny sells you can make on your own. Therefore, if you need something when they close, all you have to do is take a quick look at your DIY recipe list. There's even one fꦏor medicine when you find a villager who's feeling under the weather. All in all, Tommy and Timmy's Lights Out policy reflects a mutual respect between you as the consumer and they as the merchant. Sorry, you'll just have to wait until eight A.M. to browse for that new living room couch.
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