Unofficial fan-made food preference tracker

Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream Mii Food Finder

A simple tool for finding foods your Mii may enjoy.

Log food reactions, spot possible preference patterns, and choose useful foods to test next. Use each result to narrow down promising options and build a clearer picture of your Mii's tastes.

Stored in your browserNo server uploadPortable JSON backups

Mii Food Finder

Enable JavaScript to use the interactive tracker. The guide and FAQ remain available below.

Food Catalog Search

Use the Food Catalog Search to search foods by name, category, taste, region, temperature, restaurant availability, and other catalog details.

Unofficial fan-made tool: Your tracker records stay in this browser and can be exported as a JSON backup. Suggestions are based on information you enter manually, not guaranteed predictions. Reaction choices use standardized tracker labels and may not exactly match every regional version of the game. This tool does not read or modify Tomodachi Life game saves.

How to Use the Mii Food Finder

  1. Create or select a Mii. Keep each Mii's food reactions in a separate profile.
  2. Find a food in the catalog. Search by food name or use the available catalog filters.
  3. Record the in-game reaction. Choose the closest tracker label for what you observed in the game.
  4. Review patterns and test another food. Compare foods across categories and use the recommendations as next-test ideas.
  5. Back up your tracker data. Changes are saved locally in this browser. Use Export Backup to download a readable JSON copy, then Import Backup to restore or transfer it later.

How Suggestions Work

The finder gives the greatest importance to reactions you enter directly. Food categories, tags, temperature, taste, and catalog details are supporting signals that help organize what to test next.

A single positive result should not create a confident preference, and contradictory results should reduce how much you trust a pattern. Similar foods do not always receive similar reactions, so every suggestion should be treated as a hypothesis.

Read recommendations as: "This food may provide a useful next test."
Do not read them as: "This is the Mii's hidden favorite food."

What Can and Cannot Help Narrow Down a Mii's Favorite Food?

The reactions you record in the game are always the strongest evidence. Food categories may provide useful testing clues, personality has not shown a reliable connection, and the Big Eater quirk helps you test more efficiently without improving prediction accuracy.

COMMUNITY OBSERVATION

Can Food Categories Help Predict a Mii's Favorite Food?

Possibly, but only as a weak clue.

Players have reported possible preference patterns involving drinks, fruit, sweets, seafood, meat, fried or street-style foods, soups, grains, noodles, and cheese-heavy dishes. Players have also reported that a Mii requesting a particular kind of food, such as noodles, may suggest a useful category to investigate.

DrinksFruitSweetsSeafoodMeatFried / Street FoodSoupsGrainsNoodlesCheese-heavy

These are community observations, not confirmed internal game categories. Foods may overlap several groups, and Miis can react very differently to foods that appear similar. A Mii might enjoy one fruit but dislike its juice, or like one chocolate dessert while rejecting another.

Some current guides take an even more conservative view and report that food preferences differ by Mii, with no dependable rule connecting one flavor or category to another. For that reason, this finder treats category similarity as a supporting signal only. Direct reactions entered by the player always carry more weight.

How the finder uses categories: A category match can make a food useful to test next. It does not make that food a confirmed or guaranteed favorite.

LIMITED PLAYER TEST

Are Mii Food Preferences Based on Personality?

There is no reliable public evidence that personality can calculate a Mii's favorite food.

In one small community experiment, a player created eight Miis across the four broad personality groups and gave them the same selection of foods. The results did not show a clear relationship between personality and food reactions.

That experiment was too small to prove that personality never has an effect, but it does not support deterministic claims about sweets, spicy food, birthday, name, or appearance.

Not used as preference signals: PersonalityBirthdayNameAppearance

GAMEPLAY TIP

Does the Big Eater Quirk Help Find Favorite Foods?

Yes, for testing efficiency, not prediction accuracy.

The Big Eater Little Quirk allows a Mii to eat more before becoming full. This can let you test additional foods during the same feeding period and collect reactions more quickly.

Big Eater does not make a particular food more likely to be the favorite, turn a category pattern into a confirmed result, increase recommendation accuracy, or change the importance of reactions already recorded.

A Simple Way to Narrow Down Food Preferences

At the beginning, test foods that are meaningfully different from one another. A fruit, drink, dessert, soup, noodle dish, seafood dish, and meat dish will usually tell you more than several nearly identical desserts.

When a Mii reacts positively to several related foods, try a few variations within that group. For example, positive reactions to an apple and an apple pie could suggest fruit, baked sweets, general sweetness, or two unrelated results. A useful next test would compare another plain fruit, a baked dessert without fruit, and a sweet food that is not baked.

The categories used by this tool are working labels for organizing tests. They are not confirmed internal game categories, and only the Mii's in-game reaction can confirm the result.

Sources and Methodology

This is an unofficial fan-made project based on manually recorded in-game reactions, public game information, community observations, and practical testing strategies.

Community category theories and small player experiments are treated as hypotheses rather than confirmed mechanics. Direct reactions observed by the player always take priority over inferred patterns.

Your Data Stays on Your Device

Your Mii Food Finder records are saved locally in this browser. You can export a human-readable JSON backup at any time and import it later to restore your records or move them to another browser or device.

The tool does not upload your tracker data to our server, and it never reads or modifies your Tomodachi Life game save. Browser-stored data may be lost if you clear this site's data or reset your browser, so export a backup before clearing browser data or moving devices.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this a Mii favorite food predictor?

It is better described as a private, local-first reaction tracker and test planner. It can help narrow down candidates, but it cannot guarantee an exact favorite before the food is tested in the game.

Does liking one sweet mean the Mii will like every sweet?

No. Similar ingredients or flavors can be useful testing clues, but they do not guarantee similar reactions.

Does this tool access my Tomodachi Life save file?

No. The Mii Food Finder does not read, upload, or modify Nintendo Switch or Tomodachi Life save data. All food reactions are entered manually by the player.

Where is my tracker data stored?

Tracker data is stored locally in your browser and is not uploaded to our server. It remains associated with that browser and site storage until you remove it or clear the browser's site data.

Can I move or restore my tracker data?

Yes. Select Export Backup to download your records as a readable JSON file. You can later select Import Backup to restore the records or transfer them to another supported browser or device.

Will clearing my browser data delete my tracker?

It may. Export a JSON backup before clearing site data, resetting your browser, or changing devices.

Why did a suggested food receive a negative reaction?

Suggestions are based on incomplete observations and broad working categories. Unexpected reactions are normal. Record the new result and use it to adjust the next test.

Are the reaction labels official for every English version?

No. This page is written for American English. Tracker labels are standardized for planning and may not exactly match British English or other regional in-game wording.