We’re excited to announce that SimsVIP’s Sims 4 City Living PDF Guide is now available for download! While you’re there, be sure to pick up our other Sims 4 Guides as well! See the product page for more info.

Sims 4 News and Game Guides
We’re excited to announce that SimsVIP’s Sims 4 City Living PDF Guide is now available for download! While you’re there, be sure to pick up our other Sims 4 Guides as well! See the product page for more info.

If you’re looking to save money on The Sims 4 City Living Expansion Pack, Amazon.com has dropped the price of the digital game to $20! Click here to buy the game!

Building in the City can sometimes feel a little limiting. Festivals, Careers and Karaoke are all well and good but if you don’t spend the majority of your time in Live Mode you might feel like most of the new and exciting features don’t actually match your play style. With a bit of exploration and innovation, however, this Expansion’s Build Mode can be shown to be just as exciting as its predecessors.
Penthouses are probably one of the biggest selling points in terms of Build Mode. Liberated from the bounds of the immovable walls and windows of apartments themselves, Penthouses allow complete freedom. Fancy sticking a floating pirate ship on top of the Uptown High Rise? Sure! Go ahead!
While adding something crazy to the top of skyscrapers definitely qualifies as making the most of this Expansion’s Build Mode, staying true to the building’s design aesthetic can also be enjoyable.
Trying to seamlessly match your creation to the rest of the building is a challenge in itself and is something I’ve really loved playing around with in this Expansion Pack. Creating that faultless blend between your own innovation and San Myshuno’s architecture often forces you to experiment in styles that you might not normally opt for. Sure it’s fun to add an infinity pool to the 20th story but making that infinity pool look like it really belongs on the 20th story adds a level of difficultly to the building process.
Resigning yourself to sticking to the building’s theme doesn’t mean you have to resign yourself to staying away from something interesting, unusual or even a little crazy either. Some of the most fun I’ve had in the game is turning the Arts Quarter’s Penthouse into a sleek and stylish park. Trying to make a park look like it should be on the top of a super modern apartment building is not an easy task and it’s a challenge I never would have had without City Living.
One of the great things about the Sims 4 in general is the ability to truly combine multiple Expansions and Game Packs. Although upon first entering the game the City’s Penthouses take the form of Karaoke Bars and Residential Lots they don’t have to stay that way. If you own the content, there’s nothing stopping you from building a rooftop restaurant, a spa with a view or even an exclusive sky-high retail store. Making the most of one expansion pack often means combining it with another!
There’s often a tendency amongst simmers to try and make builds look as impressive as possible. As much as I enjoy creating beautiful mansions and utilising the infinite budget of Build Mode, it can be just as fun to strip things back and challenge yourself to making something look a little bit less than perfect.
The addition of several dingy and dishevelled versions of kitchen counters, beds, fridges and even a rug that makes your floor look as if it is covered in old food, allow for a completely new style in the Sims 4. Forget Bohemian or High End, it’s all about building something imperfect. Setting yourself the challenge of building an apartment that is designed to look disgusting is also a great way to utilise some of the Live Mode features of City Living. Typing bb.ignoregameplayunlocksentitlement into the cheat bar will release a slew of objects ordinarily not available without gameplay. With this you can make use of the grimy couches and graffiti-covered lamps of the Flea Market without ever clicking out of Build Mode. Start building on a lot that Needs TLC, is Filthy or is harbouring Gremlins and you can utilise the new Lot Traits to create the perfect vibe for your screenshots!
These items are not just useful in your grotty San Myshuno apartments either. One of the things I look for in an Expansion Pack is if the objects can be used outside of the Pack they came with. The grimy style that came with City Living is definitely exportable and is something I’ll be using time and time again. These objects (and lot traits) are perfect for creating a realistic abandoned building, making a haunted mansion just that bit more sinister or even just for adding a little filth to the Willow Creek starter homes!
Alongside the grunge of the Flea Market’s wares, there are loads of objects that allow builders to do something innovative and different in their games. With garage doors that work just as well on a suburban house in Newcrest as they do in the Spice Market, basketball courts to fill up all that empty space in your Sim’s gardens, and a whole host of objects that make it easier than ever to move beyond the suburban American aesthetic of the game, City Living definitely came with some great new items.
If you’re feeling stuck for ideas I wholly recommend exploring the massive amounts of artwork, wall decorations and rugs this expansion has to offer. I’ve really enjoyed picking out one of City Living’s statement art pieces and basing an entire room off of the colours and style of the piece. With most objects boasting multiple recolours and many different styles, there’s loads of inspiration to be found!
EA has released an “Inside Look” blog about building the talking toilet
In developing The Sims, we sometimes make weird decisions that lead us on strange and wondrous journeys. For The Sims 4 City Living, that weird decision was a talking toilet. Yes, you heard us correctly. A Talking Toilet.
Initially, we were very fascinated by the notion of culture in the city. This is reflected aesthetically in the styles of the city, the fashion of the Sims, the wide variety of ethnicities shown in the city, the food, and the festivals.
But, for a while there, we were trying to look to objects and activities we associated with different cultures around the world. One such culture upon which we were focused was Japan, for obvious reasons. Tokyo is an amazing, inspirational city from which we drew many ideas, and the people of Japan are just amazing.
The thing is, it’s difficult to abstract something as complex as culture into something in The Sims. Ideas don’t always translate well into in game content. There are very high tech gadgets in Japan, including toilets that are effectively plumbing fused with a smart phone, and we thought it would be fun to create a high-tech robot toilet ourselves. It’s really that simple.
We knew a robot toilet would need to do a few things. Firstly, Sims needed to be able to form a relationship with it, positively or negatively. This is not only funny, and fictionally strange, but provides a strong in game benefit for the expense of the toilet. Sims who don’t have time (or interest) in leaving the home or calling over friends to socialize can do so with their toilet. And, our early testers latched onto this. During a beta external playtest one of our testers said my favorite test feedback ever, which was: “The toilet was my best friend.”
Next, we knew the toilet needed to provide benefits beyond your standard porcelain throne. Hygiene bonuses? Sure! Entertainment value? How about mid-poo movies? Can we gussy up the place? How about a bidet show? Some of these things are obvious – who hasn’t wanted to watch a movie in the bathroom? – and some of these were less expected. Then again, if the Bellagio could spruce up their toilets with a fountain show, I’m fairly certain they would. We’re ahead of our time here.
We also wanted high tech upgrades to allow for rich progression and gameplay. If you’re building a relationship with a robot, well, you should be able to show your affection and appreciation for them. Nobody wants to communicate with last year’s model. That’s just shameful.
Upon reflection, the robot toilet is definitely one of our strangest contributions to the Sims landscape. It started from a noble place, became something bizarre, and evolved into a rich, aspirational object for lonely Sims, or merely Sims who want the latest gadget (and a clean behind).
If you’re looking to save money on The Sims 4 Base Game or City Living Expansion Pack, Amazon.com has dropped the price of these games to $25! Click here to buy the game!

If you’re looking to save money on The Sims 4 City Living Expansion Pack, Amazon.com has dropped the price of the game to $20! Click here to buy the game!

If you’re looking to save money on The Sims 4 City Living, Target is currently discounting the game by 50%! Red Card users save an additional 5%

The Sims team has released a Sims 4 City Living Talking Toilet Trailer
If you were hoping to get your hands on the digital version of The Sims 4 City Living, you’ll be happy to know that Amazon.com has added Online Game Codes to the selection.

If you’re looking to purchase The Sims 4 City Living Expansion and save some money doing so, gaming retailer CD Keys has listed the game for $25.69! Once you purchase the game they will send you a code to redeem via Origin. Click here to purchase!
