Review: 'Sims 4' Aspires to Greatness and Fails

“The Sims 4.” — The virtual dollhouse series gets a new version with more emotionally driven Sims characters, more in-game options to download and share user-generated items and a more powerful Create-A-Sim toolset. Rated T for Teen. $60-$80 for 

EA did not provide early review code for The Sims 4, so we are currently playing the game and are hoping to have a review later this week – but here are some early impressions.

“The Sims 4.” — The virtual dollhouse series gets a new version with more emotionally driven Sims characters, more in-game options to download and share user-generated items and a more powerful Create-A-Sim toolset. Rated T for Teen. $60-$80 for 

Day one patches are nothing new. Things turn up in games that shouldn't be there, or developers were still busy adding and changing things even after the game discs were shipped. However, The Sims 4 is promising weirder 

You see, when you have a baby in The Sims 4, sometimes the little tykes don't always lookhuman. Some people are experiencing a weird glitch where babies come out deformed, with strange limbs and messed-up bodies, as this image by simbula-rasa