There is also a wheelchair Crossing the Animals: New Horizons. It's not. It does not move. The powerful wheelchair we use in real life would crush it like a giant truck. But there it is, in this game, and it makes me very happy.
I was paralyzed from the chest down to two years. Part of my life is spent in my wheelchair. I don't like it. I don't hate it. That's just the way things are. I'm a person in a wheelchair. Now, thanks to Nintendo no the coolest internet friend
I hear some of you walking around wondering why I would want to be a wheelchair-bound person with a running video game. In New Horizons, I can run, walk, and ride. I would climb on a plane to visit friends, a difficult thing for a person bound to a wheelchair my size. I can do all those things, and it's great. I would feel included.
It's not something that disabled people can easily do in video games. Video games are often a form of fantasy fulfillment, and no single human vision can carry a gun, drive a car, or move without the help of a process. For most players, though, that is, and it's nice to see that acknowledgment in a small way.
The New Horizons a wheelchair means a lot to me. I think it means a lot to many people. It might not be as good as a wheelchair B.J. rides when it opens Wolfenstein: The New Colossus, but it's also very stupid.
And yes, being able to get out is also great.
Animal Crossing Will Continue