EA has launched another of its Behind the Sims showcases at the internet, this one bringing confirmation that The Sims 5 — or codename Project Rene as it's officially known at present — will indeed be a free-to-play game, as previously leaked, and will coexist alongside The Sims 4. Oh, and there was also some news on The Sims 4's first Stuff Pack in over two-and-a-half years.
First, though, Project Rene and the news it'll definitely be free-to-play — or as EA is more insistently phrasing it, «free-to-download». Either way, the important thing here is that no core game purchase will be required, and EA is also insisting there'll be no subscription and no «energy mechanics» — so that's at least one predatory mobile monetisation tactic off the table.
As to what a Sims game designed from the ground-up to be free-to-play might look like, a Project Rene job listing hastily removed from EA's website earlier this year pointed to an in-game marketplace featuring official and user-generated content (both free and paid) — something else EA has now more or less confirmed.
According to EA, Project Rene «definitely won't start with everything you have in The Sims 4», but it will «add new experiences and content over time». The idea here is that foundational features, such as weather, will be free to everyone in the base game, and then those will be built upon with paid content packs. The hypothetical given during Behind the Sims was a Winter Sports Pack, featuring activities themed around snow — think ice dancing and snowman building — leaving room for similar packs themed around rain or wind or clouds in the future.
«It's a little early to know exactly where we'll draw the lines,» EA explained, «but it's important for us to lower
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