Halloween Costume Guide
Rover meets new players on the train, asks them a series of questions, and then locks in their answers permanently, including the name of their town. He is a blue and white cat with red eyes, despite a name that sounds like it belongs to a dog, and his red sweater with the black diamond pattern is the single item that makes the costume identifiable. The bodysuit and white paint establish his coloring, but the sweater is doing the recognition work. Rover appeared in the original Animal Crossing and New Leaf as the character who set up new players, and was added to New Horizons later via the May Day event after the game’s initial launch (Wikipedia). Recognition depends a lot on which games someone has played.
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The sweater is what people read first, and it needs to be the right pattern: red with black diamonds and yellow trim, not just any red sweater. A plain red sweater on a blue and white cat costume reads as “blue cat wearing a red top” rather than as Rover specifically. The bodysuit color also matters more than people expect. A blue that leans too dark or too green shifts the whole costume toward a different character, and at that point the sweater is doing all the work alone, which is asking a lot of one garment.
Rover sits down across from you on the train, asks if today’s date looks right, then starts asking questions about your name and where you are headed. Whatever you answer becomes permanent. There is no edit option. An entire generation of players is currently living in towns called things they typed as children, because a friendly blue cat asked them a question and they answered honestly.
Choose between the mask and face paint before the party, not at it
The mask and the white face paint solve the same problem in different ways, and trying to combine them usually looks worse than picking one. If you go with face paint, plan for touch-ups: white paint on a blue bodysuit collar will show every smudge by hour three. If you go with the mask, check that you can hear and breathe comfortably in it before committing to wearing it for several hours, because realizing it is uncomfortable at the party is too late to do anything about it.
The action figure works better as an icebreaker than a display piece
If someone does not recognize the costume, holding up the action figure next to your face is a faster explanation than describing the character verbally. It also gives you something to do with your hands at a party, which is a small thing but a real one. If you are not bringing it for the recognition value, it is genuinely skippable.
Couples Idea
Strong pairing built around the idea of “the two friendly faces of Animal Crossing,” and there is a real basis for it. Rover greeted players in the older games, and Isabelle took over greeting duties starting with New Leaf, so the two represent the same role at different points in the series’ history. Isabelle has no dedicated CostumeRealm page yet, so that costume is a build-from-scratch situation. For longtime players, the pairing reads as a passing of the torch, which is a nicer concept than most couples costumes manage.
Duo Idea
Strong duo, and arguably the most foundational pairing in the entire series. Rover sets up your character, then talks to his friend Tom Nook to arrange your house, and from that point on Tom Nook runs your entire financial life. The two characters are linked from the very first scene of the older games. Visually they are different enough, blue cat versus brown raccoon in business casual, that the pair reads clearly even to people who only know Tom Nook and have never met Rover.
Group Idea: Animal Crossing Villager Gang
Strong group for a gaming crowd. T-Bone, Gulliver, and Harvey all have dedicated CostumeRealm pages, and Tom Nook appears here as plain text since his URL is already used in the duo card. The group spans several different roles in the Animal Crossing world: a welcoming committee, a shopkeeper, a grumpy neighbor, a stranded sailor, and a flea market organizer. That variety is what keeps the group visually interesting rather than five similar animal costumes standing in a row.
Group Idea: Iconic Video Game Animal Characters
Might work, but six people from four different franchises is a lot to hold together, and Rover is the least recognizable name on this list by a wide margin. Sonic and Knuckles are Sega. Diddy Kong is Nintendo but a different series entirely. Judy Hopps is a film character. The loose theme of “animal characters from games and animation” is broad enough to make sense at a glance, but Rover specifically risks becoming “the blue cat nobody can place” in a group full of characters that have their own movies and theme parks. If you are committed to Rover, this group is not where he gets the most attention.
The sweater is the item to spend on. Everything else can be sourced cheaply or substituted without the costume losing its identity, but the sweater is doing most of the recognition work and is worth getting right.
Rover is talkative, friendly, and asks a lot of questions in a short amount of time. He also seems to genuinely enjoy other people’s business, which he has openly admitted to despite, notably, not having a nose to stick into anything.
The royal blue bodysuit and white face and body paint are the foundation, since Rover is a blue and white cat. Add the cat tail and ears, layer the red and black sweater vest on top, and finish with the blue superhero mask if you want full face coverage. The Rover action figure works as a prop for anyone who wants something to hold.
Recognition depends heavily on which Animal Crossing games someone played. Rover was the character who greeted players in the original games and New Leaf, so longtime players will know him instantly. He was absent from New Horizons until the May Day event was added, so newer players may not place him at all.
Two quotes capture him well. The first, from the original Animal Crossing: “Hi! It’s-a ME! Mya ha! Good impression, right?” The second, from New Leaf: “Haven’t done this much traveling by train since 2002 or so… Man, that’s weird.” That second line is a joke about the real-world release date of the original game, which is a strange thing for a cat to know.
His name comes from roving, meaning to travel without a fixed destination, which fits his role as the character players meet on trains, buses, and planes throughout the series. The name being typically associated with dogs while he is a cat is most likely intentional. The games do not explain it, and Rover does not seem bothered by it.
Yes, but not from launch. He was added in the April 2020 free update alongside the May Day event, where he appears at the end of a maze and gives the player a prize (Nintendo). Outside of that yearly event, he is mostly absent from New Horizons compared to his role in earlier games.
He met new players on the train and asked questions to set up their character: name, gender, appearance, and the name of their town. Whatever answers a player gave, often something silly typed in by a kid, became permanent. The game would not let you change it. Rover was, in effect, responsible for a generation of regrettable town names.
No. His character card even jokes about this directly, noting he is happy about sticking his nose in other people’s business despite not having one. It is a small detail, but it is the kind of thing fans of the series will notice if you mention it.
What animal is Rover, despite his dog-sounding name?
When was Rover added to Animal Crossing: New Horizons?
In the original Animal Crossing, what would Rover ask the player on the train?