7 Most Essential Sims 4 Packs for New FTP Players

1 year 5 months ago

The Sims 4 base game went free-to-play a couple of weeks ago, bringing tons of new Simmers to the Sims community. Over the years, EA has added new features from Expansion Packs, Game Packs, and Stuff Packs to the base game. As a result, free-to-play Sims players have way more to do in the base game than old-school Simmers (like me) had from the beginning.

But as with any live service game, players can add a lot to their experience with DLC. There are currently 47 (soon to be 49) different Expansions, Game Packs, Stuff Packs, and Kits to enhance your Sims 4 stories. So which Packs are the best buys for free-to-play Simmers? Keep reading to find out.

Get to Work EP

With the Sims 4 Get to Work EP, you can follow your Sims to their jobs.
Image Source: EA via Twinfinite

The Get to Work EP brought three new careers to the Sims 4 – Doctor, Scientist, and Detective. But what makes the Get to Work EP so unique is that it debuted a whole new form of gameplay to the Sims 4.

Without the Get to Work EP, all Sims careers worked pretty much the same – get the skills required for promotion, go to work a couple of times to get your performance up, and voila! You’ve got a promotion!

But in Get to Work, when you send your doctor, scientist, or detective to work, you have the option of following them to their workplace – a hospital, science lab, or police station. There, you guide your Sim to complete tasks throughout their workday. The more tasks they complete, the better their performance, and the faster they get a promotion.

Plus, you earn skills and build relationships for your Sim while helping them at work, so it makes their work hours more valuable.

Tiny Living Stuff Pack

The Sims 4 Tiny Living Stuff Pack added special perks for Sims in tiny houses.
Image Source: EA via Twinfinite

The user-created Sims 4 Tiny Home Challenge has been a part of the Sims community for a long time. But the Tiny Living Stuff Pack adds Build Mode objects to make tiny homes more functional and accessible and a few big perks for Simmers who are willing to keep things small.

In Build Mode, you can choose to build a small home, tiny home, or micro home. The smaller your home, the more benefits you get, like improved moods, faster skill gain, better relationship building, enhanced plant growth, and reduced household bills.

And we’re not talking small gains here, either. Plants grow crazy fast, skills level up like lightning, and everyone’s your new BFF almost as soon as you invite them over. If you enjoy any of those things, you’ll love the Tiny Living Stuff Pack.

One thing I don’t love – your Sims can randomly get killed by a Murphy Bed. It ruined my whole save, but it was pretty funny.

Cottage Living EP

The Sims 4 Cottage Living EP introduced a whole new neighborhood and the farming lifestyle.
Image Source: EA via Twinfinite

The Sims 4 Cottage Living EP introduced a cozy historic village, Henford-on-Bagley. This neighborhood is full of rustic charm, cute new NPCs, and loads of new collectibles.

But the coolest part of the Cottage Living EP is the farming. While your Sims have always been able to garden, this EP takes that to another level with special fertilizers, oversized crops, and village fairs to show off your skills. And with Cottage Living, you can raise chickens, cows, and llamas to collect eggs, milk, and wool to use in cross-stitch patterns.

Where other EPs have urbanized the Sims, this one takes us back to a cozier time. It’s a great EP if you want to have your Sims live their best life at home with their plants.

Parenthood Game Pack

The Sims 4 Parenthood EP gave families new ways of interacting and influencing each other.
Image Source: EA via Twinfinite

Most of the time, I prefer to play single Sims living it up on their own, but the Parenthood Game Pack changed all that for me. This EP gave families whole new ways of interacting with each other and the world around them, which makes raising Sim kids a lot more interesting.

Adults can now earn Parenting Skill, which allows them to influence Child and Teen Sims’ choices by encouraging, punishing, or restricting them. Young Sims will occasionally ask Adults in their household for advice, and the higher that Adult’s Parenting Skill, the more options they have to give.

Author
Juniper Finch

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