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The Sims 3 (PC/Mac DVD) |  | From: Electronic Arts
List Price: £39.99 Buy New: £24.70 as of 17/3/2010 23:14 PDT details You Save: £15.29 (38%)
Seller: Amazon.co.uk Rating: 335 reviews
Platforms: Windows XP, Mac OS X Genre: life-simulation-games Media: CD-ROM Operating System: Mac OS X Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: SIMS3PC EAN: 5030930060879
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Product Description
The game that first opened up the world of video games to a wider audience is back, going beyond being just a virtual dollhouse to a complete interactive neighbourhood. The basic concept is still the same though, as you create your own computerised family and help (or hinder) them in achieving their lifetime dreams. Instead of just dealing with one house at a time though, your whole sims town is part of one continuous map, with neighbours going about their business independently. Likewise your own family can explore at will and interact with any and all buildings and people. Once fully grown a sim can have up to 60 personality traits - from loner to flirt - all of which you can influence via their environment and the people they interact with. However you want to play and whatever you want to do it's easier than ever to create your own virtual soap opera. - New Seamless, Open Neighbourhood - Explore the Neighbourhood Freely: See the sights with your Sims! The new seamless neighbourhood architecture allows your Sims to roam freely around the neighbourhood and visit their loved one and friends or foes. Discovering other Sims homes and families, traveling around to new locations like City Hall or the local park will create a whole new way of life for your Sims.
- New Create A Sim - Create Any Sim You Can Imagine: In addition to the open, living neighbourhood, the all-new Create-a-Sim interface will feature easy-to-use design tools that allow you to make truly detailed Sims that are more realistic than ever. Create-a-Sim gives you the incredible freedom to customise just about any Sim you can imagine.
- New Realistic Personalities - Every Sim Is A Unique Person, With A Distinct Personality: With the innovative and proprietary Realistic Personality System in The Sims 3, you can attribute each character with five distinct personality traits, helping shape yo
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 335
Disappointed March 17, 2010 AvidShopperholic (UK) I am very disappointed in this game - met all the specifications except the graphics card - so upgraded my graphics card to a compatible one - things worked fine at first but started having problems with the game exiting to the desktop after 5/10 minutes. Applied patches and can now play for approximately 1 hour before it crashes to the desktop! On checking the Sims 3 website it appears that there are others having this same problem. Some are reporting problems after applying patches, others are having problems before and after applying patches. I have not been able to play The Sims 3 for longer than an hour so can't give a very good review of the game. I enjoyed The Sims 2 and had no problems with that and I was looking forward to The Sims 3 but as I say I am disappointed because I can't play the game.
Great Game and Long Playing Life March 17, 2010 V. Ago (CA) You'll be playing this for years, if you allow yourself to become part of the Sims Universe. It's got brilliantly "cool" music which is an improvement over its predecessor. The two things that I really like is the "Sims Creation" and the "House Building;" these present endless possibilities for your imaginations and dare I say it - fantasy. We'll worth a purchase if you're sick of blood and guts nightmarish Doom incarnations. Its also surprisingly demanding on the Graphics card; make sure you have some powerful GTX or Radion inside your case.
Very good game, but not great on iMacs.. March 6, 2010 K. Jobes (England, UK) I originally brought 'The Sims 3' to run on my Apple iMac (2.4GHz, 2GB RAM) and although I could play the game, it was slow even with the settings not on max. It was playable, but not great. I have now built my own Windows PC (3.2GHz quad core, 4GB RAM, 1GB of ATI Radeon graphics) and it runs beautifully. It may run better on a Mac Pro or a newer higher spec iMac.
The game is much bigger than The Sims 2, you can view your sims down town, visit neighbours, send your sims to hospital.. the possibilities are endless. When they go to work, they actually go to their place of work, unlike in The Sims 2. There are lots more interactions between the sims and more flexibility with the way they live.
They come across 'Opportunities' during their lives which set them a challenge to earn extra money or rewards. They also have 'Lifetime Reward' points that they can spend on things like an iron bladder, fertility treatment, or other bits to make their lives easier. The sims settings are different too, you can now set their attributes such as 'excitable, good, evil, neat, clumsy, loves the outdoors, friendly, slob' etc. You also get to choose their favourite food, colour, music.. And in the create a sim you get to customize their clothes down to the colour of the stripes on their jumper or the colour of their socks. It's all a lot more detailed, so you're not forced to choose a set outfit with horrid shoes.
The graphics are amazing, very realistic and good quality. The only problem I find is that you can only control one family in a neighbourhood.. This is quite limiting, because you then need to build a whole new neighbourhood to play as another family. I find this annoying as in the old sims, you could have several families living alongside each other all in your control. Apart from this slight niggle, its a great game and I'm really looking forward to expanding the game with expansion packs!
Frustrating March 4, 2010 J. P. Lowe There are positive elements to this game: you can place furniture at an angle, and you can give everything a pattern and a colour and make it match other things. You Sim now has little 'moodlets', that tell you what s/he is particularly responding to (to what end I am not ever entirely sure, as they never seem to influence anything, but they are sort of cool and bring you in to the charcater a little bit).
BUT - it has been said before, and it must be said again. The game is sold on a the premise of a living, seamless neighbourhood, your Sim able to interact with the world outside his or her cutaway floorplan and explore. Then several things hit you: 1) They have almost no time to do anything properly; 2) They have to get into taxis to go anywhere worthwhile, which is *just like* Sims 2; and 3)you can't follow them into buildings. It's so STUPID, insulting and immersion-breaking it's breathtaking. What game would you put up with that, straight out of the box, would not allow you to interact with key world elements? As though in Fallout 3 you could stick to the roads and the wasteland, but once your character moved inside a building s/he would disappear and a little timer bar would come on in the top of your screen and another meter would tell you how much fun they were having. This would be spectacularly awful enough in any game, but ths iteration of the Sims is *premised* on the immersiveness of the world. That is - should be - unacceptable.
I hate it. Utterly hate it. My Sim stays in his house, because there is no fun to be had sending him out only to watch his little taxi blob float across a map to disgorge him at the other end so that he can partake of some sort of putative, faceless 'entertainment'. He went on a date once. To the theatre. He meets his friend outside the theatre, they chat a bit, then it's time to go in. Only his date doesn't follow him. No. she stays outside, sitting at a bus stop, chatting to strangers in that weird Sim way as though everyone is always up for a flirt and a good joke. Eventually the little timer bar fills up and my Sim reappears, resuming the 'date' on the pavement until it's late enough to go home.
How immersive is that?
And the 'seamless world' nonsense is not the only false claim. They sell the game on the premise that you can create anybody in your imagination, then ship the game with about six outfits and ten hairstyles. Oh yes, we have to wait for 'fan-created content' or spend yet more money at the EA store. But why should we? Customisability is meant to be a core feature of the game. Does Fallout 3 ship with one gun? Why should we have to pay extra and wait longer to get the basic game working properly? I tried to make David Bowie, Ziggy Stardust era, to test the claims. I ended up with a hopeless-looking twit with a hideous mullet and a tank top. It was, quite honestly, the nearest I could get.
Then there are the timining issues. The timer is actually worse in this game than in either of the other two editions. You seem to spend half your time watching your Sim sleep. They still can't managed to get washed, dressed and fed before work. The day is still gone too quickly, partly because there is so much more to do. The frustrating thing is that the new options for activities are actually great - you can write a novel, paint, play music. But where Sims 2 encouraged you to go out. Sims 3 makes it more rewarding to stay in. Most damning of all, from my perspective, is that your Sim ages too quickly - I am by no means an addict (as you might imagine), but I seemed to be celebrating my Sims transition to 'elder'-hood incredibly quickly.
Why haven't they sorted these timer issues out? Why is there so little time to handle all the new options for your Sims, and why do you spend so much time watching them sleep? It's no fun. It's tedious. You never feel as though your are getting anywhere. You are frustratedly forcing your Sims through the endless rigmarole of feeding, bathing and sleeping, like shepherding children through the daily grind. I liked Sims 2, and this seems like a step back from that. Despite the innovations, it makes the whole experience clunkier and less memorable.
You can angle the sofa, though.
Wow... March 1, 2010 Adele Pringle (UK) After reading the negative reviews about this game I wasn't sure whether to buy it for not. But I went ahead and I'm really glad I did. First off I got free super saver delivery which is supposed to take 3-5 days. It was shipped saturday the 27th of Feb and arrived Monday 1st of March.
Secondly the game comes with an auto updater so any bugs people have complained about were patched before I even opened the game. So I have had no faults with the game. I love the new create a sim mode. The controls are a bit strange after playing the sims2 for years, but it's nothing I can't adjust to.
The only thing is that the loding and saving take a tiny bit longer than the sims2. But it's nothing major.
Overall it is an excellent game and well worth buying!
Showing reviews 1-5 of 335
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