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What belongs in a Tomodachi Life Mii gallery
A useful gallery is not just a wall of images. Players searching for Tomodachi Life Miis want to know what each entry is, where it came from, and whether it can be scanned, rebuilt, or only used as inspiration. That is why this first Tomodachi Share gallery uses clear labels such as "Notes only," "No QR yet," and "Sample." The labels keep expectations honest until real, credited community entries are ready.
The keyword research shows that users search "tomodachi life miis," "tomodachi miis," and "miis tomodachi life" when they want a browsable collection. They are not always ready to read a long technical guide. A clean gallery should let them filter quickly, then move to the QR guide or planner when they need details. This page is built for that path: discover first, verify second, organize third.
Popular character searches
Some searches are tied to specific fandoms. "Sans Mii Tomodachi Life" is a strong example because players enjoy seeing a recognizable meme or game character behave unpredictably on an island. Anime and game character Miis serve the same purpose. They make an island feel personal, funny, and shareable. Celebrity-inspired Miis and original characters add variety, especially when a player wants something beyond a single fandom theme.
Hatsune Miku is another useful example of a popular character search, but the wording matters. This site should treat Hatsune Miku as a community Mii idea, not as an official Living the Dream collaboration. That distinction protects the page from making claims that the research did not confirm. Search engines and users both benefit when the content is specific without being careless.
Why the sample entries are intentionally cautious
The current cards use original avatar-style illustrations rather than copied images from another website. This is a deliberate SEO and trust decision. Scraping a competitor's Mii images or reposting a creator's QR code without permission could create copyright, moderation, and trust problems. A stronger long-term gallery will add real assets only when the source is clear and the page can credit the creator properly.
When a real entry is added later, it should include the Mii name, category, platform, status, tags, source URL, creator credit, and a short note explaining how to use it. If the entry is a QR code, the page should say which system it is intended for. If it is a features image or manual recreation note, the page should say so directly. That structure gives Google crawlable context and gives users practical information.
How the gallery connects to the rest of the site
The gallery should not work in isolation. A user who finds a promising Mii can open the Mii QR codes guide to understand compatibility. A user building a full island can move the idea into the Tomodachi Life planner and record source notes. A user researching the newer game can read the Living the Dream guide to avoid confusing local wireless exchange with online importing.
That internal linking is deliberate. It tells crawlers that this is a connected Tomodachi Share resource, and it gives users a clean path from discovery to action. The result is more useful than a gallery that simply repeats "download Miis" without explaining what can actually be done with each entry.