In addition to ample new building and Create-a-Sim items, this expansion pack is spearheading a new game feature called “Lot Challenges,” which will also be available to base game players. Oh, and who can forget the new cross-stitching skill? The pack also has several new recipes, as well as the ability to can your produce. Cottage Living introduces several new garden plants, including eggplants, lettuce, pumpkins, and watermelon, and you can grow oversized crops to enter at the Finchwick Fair. Plus, you’ll also see wild animals like bunnies and birds, which you can befriend, if you’re so inclined, as well as foxes, who will cause mischief around your lot. Cows offer fresh milk while chickens lay eggs in their coop, and you can gather llama wool for crafts. Your Sims can now start their own homesteads, complete with cows, llamas, and chickens. Perhaps the biggest new gameplay feature introduced in Cottage Living is the addition of farm animals. Avid Simmers will also be happy to find that Agnes Crumplebottom, the bitter, purse-wielding icon from previous versions of the game, resides in Henford-on-Bagley, running a garden produce stall in the village. The England-inspired world features three neighborhoods and 12 lots, and every week, there’s a farm festival in town that your Sims can attend. What's included in The Sims 4: Cottage Living?Īs you’d expect from a Sims 4 expansion pack, Cottage Living features a new world called Henford-on-Bagley. If all the new features weren’t sweet enough, you’ll score several bonus items if you purchase the pack before September 2, including a Scenic Commuting Bicycle, Bramblewood’s DeLIGHTful Tree, and “Onward” The Adventurous Gnome, who’s riding on a chicken.
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