House Flipper 2 Sakura DLC Adds Akamatsu Valley, 600+ Items
Sakura DLC for House Flipper 2 adds Akamatsu Valley, more than 600 Japan-themed items, five new buyers and jobs, paper walls, expanded garden pieces and three buildable plots.
House Flipper 2’s Sakura DLC is available now and listed at $14.99. The expansion adds the new Akamatsu Valley region, over 600 Japan-themed items, five new buyers and jobs, garden pieces and three empty plots for building.
The developer released the DLC alongside an update to the game’s buyer system. The update changes how buyers evaluate flipped properties, with new feedback on individual room sizes and natural light. The Sakura pack includes five buyers whose preferences reflect Akamatsu Valley and traditional Japanese architecture.
New items include traditional pieces such as futons, kotatsu tables, tatami mats, paper walls and new rooftops, along with modern minimal and Japandi-style furniture. The item list also covers ceramics, paintings, bathroom fixtures and a range of decorations intended for Japanese interior design.
Akamatsu Valley is a fictional springtime countryside region created for the DLC and inspired by multiple real locations. The in-game environment includes a distant view of Mt. Fuji and perpetual cherry blossoms. Garden options added with the pack include bonsai, moss-covered stone lamps, wooden bridges and bamboo stalks for constructing garden layouts.
The DLC offers five jobs that range from a tearoom to an abandoned primary school, and five characteristic Japanese houses for renovation. Additional abandoned properties include a ramen shop and a large mansion. Three empty plots with scenic views allow players to build houses from scratch in the game’s story mode.
Additional content includes new collectibles, three wooden assembly objects and new achievements. The developer wrote that the studio planned to expand the game with furniture and architectural styles from different countries and chose Japan as the first country due to team interest in its design traditions.
The developer stated the DLC’s spring setting and year-round sakura presence were chosen to match the game’s atmosphere and to provide garden-focused options for players.
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