Can you scan an amiibo card more than once?

thisistian

Senior Member
Joined
Nov 9, 2016
Posts
877
Bells
294
Pear (Fruit)
White Rose
So, if I scanned an amiibo card and have the villager moved in for a while, then decide to rebuild my town, can I still use that amiibo card for my new town?

Thanks
 
I do it all the time since I only own 2 amiibo cards xD
 
Yep, you can scan them endlessly.

Technically, the little chips in the cards/amiibos only have 10,000-15,000 scans, so it is limited. However, if you scanned it twice a day every day, it would be 13 years before the chip quit working, lol.
 
Technically, the little chips in the cards/amiibos only have 10,000-15,000 scans, so it is limited. However, if you scanned it twice a day every day, it would be 13 years before the chip quit working, lol.

How do you know this?
 
Technically, the little chips in the cards/amiibos only have 10,000-15,000 scans, so it is limited. However, if you scanned it twice a day every day, it would be 13 years before the chip quit working, lol.

Oh, really? The more you know xD
 
How do you know this?

It's just knowing how NFC chips work.

In general, consumer standard NFC chips, which are the chips Nintendo puts in their Amiibos, have a lifespan of 10,000-15,000 reads/writes; YMMV. Industry standard NFC chips have 100,000 read/writes. Chips with a longer lifespan are very expensive, and I doubt Nintendo included ~$40 USD NFC chips in their ~$13 USD Amiibo products.

Your NFC Reader will undoubtedly die before your NFC chips do.

Here is a link to a typically used, Chinese-made, consumer standard NFC chip. It's easily assumed these (or something similar to these) are the chips Nintendo uses for their Amiibos. They have a read/write cycle of 10,000 and will store data for 10 years.
 
Last edited:
It's just knowing how NFC chips work.

In general, consumer standard NFC chips, which are the chips Nintendo puts in their Amiibos, have a lifespan of 10,000-15,000 reads/writes; YMMV. Industry standard NFC chips have 100,000 read/writes. Chips with a longer lifespan are very expensive, and I doubt Nintendo included ~$40 USD NFC chips in their ~$13 USD Amiibo products.

Your NFC Reader will undoubtedly die before your NFC chips do.

Here is a link to a typically used, Chinese-made, consumer standard NFC chip. It's easily assumed these (or something similar to these) are the chips Nintendo uses for their Amiibos. They have a read/write cycle of 10,000 and will store data for 10 years.
Ohhh! c: that's so cool! Thank you so much! :D
 
Back
Top