I'm currently sitting at 30 fucking bells. Bought at 99 last Sunday... 
Fish in the ocean. Today I made 30k. Granted, at one point it was raining and I took the opportunity to nab a coelacanth.
This pertains to something I wanted to write earlier but forgot as I do spring cleaning.
I really want to compliment New Horizons on its resource management. In NH, acquiring Bells is a challenge. By this time in New Leaf, all of us managed to learn how to easily - and I mean, easily - acquire over 100k worth of bugs in a single night. Tortimer Island in New Leaf gave the player far too many avenues for money. In hindsight, it broke the game. New Horizons has brought back the bell scavenging, do anything it takes mentality that Wild World had (and by extension the original AC which I haven't played but have heard about). Fishing (at this point) isn't a guarantee. Red snappers bring in the bells, but they're not too frequent. Because it's March, there's not much rain so Coelacanths aren't a common sight either. This is compounded by that, when it
does rain, it's usually a very brief shower. It's not a full days worth, just a few minutes worth of opportunity.

Foreign fruit doesn't bring in the bells it had in past either, to my knowledge, without investing by planting a lot (A LOT) of them. And even then, it seems that growing back fruit takes an age in this, so it's not a reliable, regular money maker. This uphill battle for bells makes the scrounge for resources all the more immersive - even if it can push people's patience.
New Horizons is undoubtedly far more slower than past Animal Crossing games. But at the same time, the mechanisms behind it feel all the more balanced as well. Right now turnips are the biggest money maker, and they appear more expensive than they were in the past (in my experience).
I have to pay my compliments to the chef.
