has a plethora of features to try to make the game feel as accurate a life-sim as possible. When combined with the many, many expansion packs, and it's more than ten-year tenure, there are many mechanics that the casual player would not know about. Even more confusingly, there are a bunch of features that players are convinced are part of the game, but are actually little more than urban myths and misconceptions.
Some of these misconceptions have come up because, in a real-life setting, one would logically expect something to work a certain way that it doesn't in the. Others occur because of the age of the game, where updates have changed mechanics over time. Strangely, some happen because of the addition of new expansions and a general misunderstanding from the fan base about how the added content actually works.
Though The Sims 4 still has several missing or lackluster features almost a decade into its lifespan, there's one I'm tired of hearing fans ask for.
has a healthy and expansive modding community where the game's custom content is easy to find and implement into the game. For the most part, this custom content tends to be free, although some are locked behind Patreon paywalls or require specific expansions to use. Still, anything from cosmetics to gameplay can be augmented with mods, and they come in two categories: script mods and non-script mods.
The Sims Catalog is one of the best websites to find mods of all kinds.
Script mods add to or change the pre-existing script of 's code, so players can be forgiven for thinking that these are the only type of mods that can break the game. Unfortunately, any kind of custom content added to the game could possibly break it, including non-script mods. Mods can conflict, new content could clash with the most recent updates, or the content could be a little behind the times and not have received an update to keep up with the game's new features.
Logically, one could argue that mermaids would get offended by
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