>>11706825It's definitely very busy, but it tends to be in short bursts. You can even clean the house in the thing, for extra distress. There's a few house interiors you can buy, the spiral staircase being the most expensive. Eventually, the tamagezi becomes an adult and must get married on top of having a job. I haven't got that far yet, but they have to go on dates first before finding someone suitable for marriage. Once married, they will have an offspring before "leaving." The child will inherit the wealth of the parents, including passive income streams, etc. The manual says it can live for 255 days, and I have only had it for about 17.
I have another, similar, tamagezi device made by what seems like a different brand. I haven't put batteries in it yet, bet it seems similar to the current one I'm running.
The contrast between this tamagezi and my tamagotchi paradise is hilarious. The gotchi lounges around idylly on the planet, maybe hauling a cart to catch eggs once a day. While the other toils endlessly from 7 am to 11 pm. I do give the tamagezi breaks from work and school often, and try to give it weekends off. Unfortunately the school teacher chastises you for not attending school if you miss it, even on weekends.