Why a food and gift tracker becomes essential after 20 Miis
Up to about 15-20 residents, most players can hold every Mii's preferences in their head — Rosie loves fruit parfait, Mr. Pep hates spicy curry, your sibling Mii is on a strawberry kick this week. Past that point, memory starts to fail in two specific ways: you give the wrong gift to the right Mii, and you give the right gift to the wrong Mii. Both eat into the small amount of attention each resident gets in a session.
Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream shows reactions clearly in the moment, but it doesn't keep a per-resident food log you can scroll through later. The tracker on this page fills that gap with a tiny per-Mii memory layer: name, personality, loves, dislikes, and a free-form notes field. Everything stays in this browser via local storage — there is no account and nothing to sign in to.
The five reaction tiers in Tomodachi Life — and what to log
Most gift and food interactions in Living the Dream fall into one of five reactions. Knowing which tier you're aiming for tells you what to write down.
- Favourite — full animation, hearts, brings the relationship meter up the most. Worth logging by name; this is your go-to gift.
- Loves it — strong positive reaction, but not the top tier. Worth logging only if it's a category ("loves anything sweet") rather than a one-off.
- Likes it — neutral-positive, polite acknowledgement. Don't log these; they're noise.
- Doesn't really like it — visible disappointment but no lasting harm. Log only if you keep accidentally repeating it.
- Hates it — strong negative reaction, can dent a relationship. Always log dislikes by name — these are the most expensive mistakes to repeat.
Building a safe fallback gift list
Even with a tracker, you'll regularly need to gift a Mii whose preferences you haven't catalogued yet. The fastest fix is to keep a short shortlist of universally safe items — things that almost no personality reacts negatively to. The exact list varies by save, but most players settle on a handful of food items and one or two clothing pieces.
Use the tracker's notes field to flag your shortlist with a tag like "safe" or "default," then sort by that tag when you're shopping. After a few weeks of play, you'll naturally migrate toward two or three reliable defaults that work for ~80% of your island.
What local storage means in practice
Because the tracker stores everything in your browser's local storage, the data is private and works offline — but it's also fragile in three specific ways. Knowing the failure modes prevents painful surprises:
- Clearing site data wipes the tracker. If you clear cookies + site data for islebuddies.com, the tracker resets to empty. Export a JSON backup first.
- Private/incognito windows don't persist. Anything you log in a private tab disappears when the tab closes. Use a normal window for real records.
- Different browsers, different data. Tracker entries don't sync between Chrome and Safari on the same machine, or between desktop and phone. The export/import buttons exist for exactly this — back up, then re-import.
Frequently asked questions
Does this tracker connect to my Switch?
No. There is no API for Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream save data, so the tracker is a manual notebook — you observe an in-game reaction and type it in. The upside: the tracker works for save files Nintendo wouldn't expose anyway, including saves you've copied between Switch consoles.
How much should I log per Mii?
Less than feels natural. The tracker is a memory aid, not an encyclopedia. Two or three loves, one or two strong dislikes, and a one-line note is usually enough. Players who try to log every interaction usually abandon the habit within a week.
Can I share my tracker with another player?
Yes — export the JSON file and send it. The other player imports it through the same UI. This is especially useful if two people share an island save and want to keep the same gift memory.
Will the tracker work on a phone browser?
Yes. The UI is responsive and the local-storage layer works on mobile Safari and Chrome. Just remember the data is per-browser, so a phone-tracked save won't appear on your laptop without an export/import.