EA/Maxis today announced three major free updates for its life simulation game, "The Sims 4," the first of which is available to download right now. Thanks to SimsVIP for the tip.
The October update (which is the update available at this moment) adds ghosts to "The Sims 4." What this means is that if your Sim dies, it can rejoin the world. Your ghost Sim maintains all of the attributes it had when it was alive, and also has special behaviors that are based on how it died.
Also introduced in the October update are "Star Wars" costumes for your Sim-world, allowing players to outfit their Sims with Luke Skywalker's X-wing pilot suit or Leia's classic white robes and astro-puff hairdo. You can even dress yourself as Darth Vader or Yoda. In addition, the update brings new eye colors for your Sims, and fixes "a few minor bugs."
Coming in November's update for "The Sims 4," will be swimming pools. It was revealed earlier this year that pools, which were featured in past games in the series, did not make the cut for "The Sims 4" due to EA/Maxis prioritizing improving the game's tech. Another missing feature from past games are toddlers, though Maxis didn't say anything today about adding tykes to the game.
"The Sims 4's" December update, meanwhile, will bring new career paths and rewards for your Sims. No further details about this update were provided, though EA/Maxis said it plans to share more information about these updates, and new features and expansion packs, at a later date.
"We've designed 'The Sims 4' to be a live service, so we can continually evolve the experience, add new content, and incorporate as much of your feedback as possible," The Sims executive producer Rachel Franklin wrote in a blog post. "We've said from the beginning that The Sims 4 is all about endless play possibilities, and we hope each of these updates add fun new dimensions to your experience."
"The Sims 4" is still only available for the PC right now, though Franklin said, "We know our players on Mac are looking to hear more. We are working on it."