

Years later, however, I still haven’t gotten into The Sims 4. So eventually I moved on and by then enough time had passed that my enthusiasm for the new material far outranked any misgivings about “missing” features.

Fortunately, most of the stuff I enjoyed about The Sims 2 eventually made it into The Sims 3 and the expansions, with gems like World Adventures and Supernatural, tipped the scales in the new game’s favor. At the time, I’d paid too much money for all the expansions to downgrade to a skimpy base game, and I wanted to see and do everything The Sims 2 had to offer. The Sims games are too expensive, and too expansive, to leave behind easily.Ĭase in point, it took me years to feel comfortable transitioning to The Sims 3 from The Sims 2. With the absence of key strategic features or the little details that make the game such mischievous fun, it can take years before a core Sims game has enough additional content to make the switch “worth it”-especially if you paid full price. One thing I’ve noticed is that it’s always a tough, drawn-out process moving onto the next game, mostly because the content packs become such an integral part of the experience. While I never got to play the expansions of the original, I’ve otherwise sampled almost everything The Sims has to offer over the years, observing how the additional expansions took shape as the series evolved. I’ve been playing The Sims literally half my life, since the first game came out when I was in high school. If I hadn’t just checked the date myself, it would be hard to believe that The Sims 4 came out in late 2014.
