Buckle up Simmers, we're (hopefully) on the cusp of some meaty fixes for The Sims 4. As EA continues to pile expansions and kits on top of a game that's nearing the big 1-0, crashes and buggy gameplay have become part and parcel of The Sims 4 experience. It's become a mighty frustrating time—one that's recently led me to go crawling back into the loving arms of The Sims 2 in retaliation—and it seems like EA is finally realising the problem is too big to ignore.
Ina tweet on the official Sims account, the developer admitted things have gotten a little out of control. «We know that technical issues with The Sims 4 have interrupted your gameplay over time and we recognize that this has caused you much frustration,» the statement read. «Today, we can share that we have assembled a team to invest in the core game experience, including tackling your reported concerns.»
I mean, to me that sounds like something that the developer should have already been doing, but I digress. The tweet continues: «This newly formed and focused team means we'll be able to increase both the number of fixes and the frequency with which we ship these batched updates.» The first one should arrive sometime before the end of May, with following updates maintaining a cadence of around two months.
It's nice to see EA directly addressing the problem and promising a larger effort to rectify it, but I can't help but agree with the sentiment of «I'll believe it when I see it» being expressed in the tweet's replies. It's been a good few years since a survey around fixing buggy packs went around, and the only thing that ever seems to have manifested out of that was a big update for the Spa Day game pack. Packs like Dine Out—which released a whole-ass eight years ago—still have major bugs which impact their core gameplay mechanics.
Taking a look at the developer's laundry list of fixes, it does seem like Dine Out's core issues are on the to-do, along with a host of other problems that are plaguing the
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