The Sims Deluxe Edition | 
enlarge
| From: Electronic Arts Category: Video Games
List Price: $19.99 Buy Used: $8.19 You Save: $11.80 (59%)
New (6) Used (37) from $8.19
Rating: 231 reviews Sales Rank: 1530
Platforms: Windows 98, Windows Xp, Windows 95 Genre: Simulation Games ESRB: Teen Media: CD-ROM Edition: Deluxe Batteries Included: No Age: 12 - 20 years Operating System: Windows 95 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 1.1
MPN: 302 UPC: 014633145762 EAN: 0014633145762 ASIN: B00006CRUN
Release Date: December 16, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: NEXT DAY FIRST CLASS SHIPPING! Box has some wear, but contents look great! Guaranteed to play perfectly or your money back!
| |
| Features:
| • | Start out with the original Sims -- a hilarious game where you actually have to control a person's life from start to finish! | | • | Give them a look, find them a job, keep them happy and get them a nice place to live -- if you do, you'll be rewarded with some of the comical game scenes around! | | • | Once you've done that try out the great expansion pack, Livin' Large. where you have to give your Sims the high life, and help them keep it | | • | There's also new objects, all-new skins, new designs for walls and floors, and two new themes - Roman and Science Fiction | | • | You can even create the perfect Sim for yourself using the amazing new Creator tool! |
|
| Accessories:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description The Sims Deluxe brings you the fun of the Sims in an all-new game pack for the beginner or the hardcore fan!
Amazon.com Review The Sims: Deluxe Edition combines The Sims, the most popular PC game of all time, and the top-selling Livin' Large expansion pack in one box with a host of all-new exclusive features and content. In this box you'll find: - The Sims: Create an entire neighborhood of Sims and run or ruin their lives with the full version of the bestselling PC game of all time. Help your Sims pursue careers, make friends, and find romance--or make a complete mess of things! Open-ended gameplay gives you the freedom to set your own goals as you chart your Sims' destiny.
- The Sims: Livin' Large: With over 125 additional items, five additional career tracks with 50 additional jobs, and a cast of wild characters like the Grim Reaper and the Genie, this bestselling expansion pack puts your Sims into outrageous situations and settings.
- The Sims Creator: Create any Sim you can imagine with this powerful new tool that allows even novice users to customize every detail of how their Sims look. Choose their clothing or create your own. Select from a variety of details like ties, jewelry, and tattoos. Players can even put their own face in The Sims with this easy-to-use tool.
- 25+ Exclusive Objects: Furnish your Sims' homes with two completely new design sets with over 25 objects exclusive to The Sims: Deluxe Edition.
- 50+ New Clothing Choices: A selection of modern and extreme fashion choices await your Sims.
The ultimate goal of life is to achieve happiness, and the way to achieve happiness is to buy stuff. So says The Sims, a game that lets you create, direct, and manage the lives of SimCity's residents. The game begins with the creation of your simulated people: pick a name and a gender, decide on personality/astrological sign, and then choose a look from a variety of heads, bodies, and skin tones. Name, gender, and appearance don't affect gameplay much, but personality determines how your Sim plays with others. A serious, neat Sim might go crazy living with a sloppy party animal--or opposites might attract, and the two could end up falling in love. After creation, the next step is to find a place to live. Again, the player can choose from among the empty houses in the neighborhood or decide to buy some land and design a dream house. Building houses is a blast, and the easy-to-use house design interface could almost be its own game: players design the floor plan, put up walls, pick carpet, wallpaper, and siding, and fill the house with furniture, decorations, fixtures, and appliances. You're limited only by your imagination--and your Sims' pocketbook. But the choices you make in designing and decorating your Sims' house are vital. A good general rule is that the more expensive the object, the better its ability to satisfy Sim needs. Each little Sim person has needs (Hunger, Comfort, Hygiene, Bladder, Energy, Fun, Social, and Room) which can be satisfied by interaction with other Sims or purchased objects: throw a party with the help of a rockin' stereo system, and watch your Sims' Social and Fun ratings improve. Have one of your Sims whip up some food from the refrigerator, and you'll satisfy the Hunger needs of your guests. Or have your Sim engage another Sim in a game of chess: not only will their Fun and Social moods improve, both Sims will gain some points in their Logic skill rating--which might help on the job. One gameplay goal is to improve your Sim so he or she can climb a career ladder, which nets him or her more money, which allows the purchase of higher quality stuff, which lets you improve your Sim even more. With proper care, your Sim can have a mate, kids, and a mansion with an indoor pool. Mismanage your new, simulated family, and you'll be faced with the worst of MTV's The Real World: jealousies will ignite, fights will break out, jobs will be lost, and the house will fall apart. Bringing about such a calamity is almost as much fun as guiding your Sims to material paradise, and takes considerably less time. Triumph or tragedy, each significant event in a Sim's life is captured in a snapshot and saved in a photo album for later viewing. Players can also take photos any time they wish. The photo album feature is cool by itself, but the best part is that you can upload the album to www.thesims.com and share your Sims' sagas with the world. Entire families can also be uploaded and downloaded, as can houses. Want to re-create and manage your own version of Friends? Download the free face and body editor and make Sim clones of the Ross, Rachel, and the rest. Want to perfectly re-create the set? Snag the free wall and floor texture editor. Feeling a little silly? Add Darth Vader to the family and see what happens. With The Sims, you can create whatever--and whomever--you desire. Toying with the lives, successes, and emotional states of dozens of little Sims is undeniably fun. In the same way that SimCity players develop a condescending attitude toward real-world city planners, The Sims players will begin to see life as a series of needs-satisfying challenges; the game gets in your head. But that's OK: limitless gameplay, endless variety, imaginative Internet features, and the ability to play matchmaker/landlord/counselor/God makes The Sims a great way to increase your own Fun score. --Mike Fehlauer Pros: - Unique, addictive, fun gameplay
- Included photo album feature records triumphs and tragedies
- Free uploads and downloads expand the game and allow swapping with other players
- Sims are smart--it's sometimes best to just let them act on their own
Cons: - Addictive gameplay may cause loss of sleep, job
- Complex behavioral modeling program--requires serious computing power
- No pets other than fish
Sex and aliens. That's really all that was missing from the amazing original edition of The Sims, and the expansion Livin' Large delivers these new treats to liven up your beloved Sims existence. New characters (including a gladiator and Xena-like warriors), and, more impressively, new decorations are the reasons to buy this game. The furnishings are mostly grouped by theme, with the medieval dungeon option the most authoritative of the bunch. (Little Cassandra Goth has been longing to read by torch light all along.) Our personal favorite is the futuristic theme, with an optional, but expensive, maid/gardener robot to take care of the fabulous modern furnishings. Clearly the Sims team has been doing its research over at Herman Miller, and you'll have a bright red, flowing-foam sofa to show for it. But it wouldn't be The Sims if only good taste prevailed. Bring on the mai tais with a tiki-heavy islander theme. There's also a startling collection of carpeting and objects best grouped under the design ideal we call "demented clown." The attention-getting rarities include: a lame fortune-telling ball (our advice mostly centered around hiring a maid), a voodoo doll for hexing roommates, and a genie who delivers as much bad as good (dead plants, anyone?). And, yes, there's a vibrating bed to give your Sims the spice they've been missing. While the expansion didn't blow us away, it did provide more of the humor and novelty true Sims die-hards will appreciate. With even more attention to detail than the original offering, EA deserves Sims-like applause for this edition. --Jennifer Buckendorff
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 226 more reviews...
The Sims December 28, 2008 Rebecca L. Bartels (USA) A fairly decent game. It can get a little boring but thats why you buy the expansion packs to go along. WIth the expansions it seems the sims don't get along with each other quite as well. More bickering and such. To me its easy to keep the sim happy.
The Sims Deluxe Edition September 15, 2008 N. D. angler (Pacific Northwest, USA) It's a fun game and a great way to waste time if that's what you're looking for. :)
Umm....Get a life....a REAL one June 14, 2008 Brian J. Lamb (NJ, USA) 1 out of 6 found this review helpful
This is corny. People...go get some excercise. Talk to REAL people. Visit REAL places. Throw a REAL party. Dont buy this game and then sit around letting the whole REAL world go by. Seriously, if you arent twelve years old with a 7 pm curfew, there is no reason to sit around doing this nonsense all day.
Entertaining and absorbing, but marred by a few flaws April 27, 2008 Jed (UK) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Given that most of the people who are actually going to buy the original Sims game are probably nomads in Outer Mongolia who have just gotten a Celeron 500 MHz system, actually reviewing such an old game seems all a bit superfluous. Oh well...anyway... If you are unaware of The Sims (whu?) then you should be aware that there is no real objective to the game. It's open ended- you alone determine goals. It might be to advance your Sims(s) up the career ladder, it may be to make as much money as possible, it may even to make as (ahem) "romantically fulfilled" as possible. You might want to design a cool looking house, nice landscape- it's all up to you. The Sims is not really a "simulation" as such. Although your sims have 8 attributes that could find analogy in the real life (Hunger, Hygiene, Comfort, Social interaction, Fun, Energy, "Bladder" (ahem), and Room (how much they like their surroundings) there can be little doubt that when you play The Sims you're playing a *game*. Every second of game time is the same as one minute of game time, giving the absurd situation where greeting someone at the door from your dinner table can take as long as twenty game minutes. The characters although well animated ironically lurch around like Frankensteins monsters, following very obviously a hidden grid system. You can tell that they're moving like chess pieces along rows, columns and diagonals and this rigid movement can be quite annoying and distracting. However in my view there are two main problems with the original game. Firstly your Sims seem to be plagued by consistently low energy levels. Even with a high activity attribute, and strong espresso machines handy, the best beds and a good nights sleep, your Sim wil return from work with maybe a third of their energy level remaining. Considering that success in the game often depends on inviting other Sims over to your house your Sims have a habit of falling asleep on your feet when talking to someone else. It can be extremely annoying. Secondly there is what I might call "the toilet problem". Although your Sims normally can take care of their bodily functions reasonably well, whenever you invite guests over, they -without fail- will use your toilet. And seeing as the toilet is normally a fairly small room, you often get into the absurd situation where you and your guests spend time in the toilet talking about holidays. And with no ability to squeeze past a guest who's blocking the toilet door your Sim will often spend time stuck in the toilet while your guest chats away with another person. This is what may be referred to as "the toilet trap" No, there are many things in the game that are not very realistic, but they do make the game, if not a true simulation then at least a strategy game of resource management at it's core. Above all the Sims is very addictive. Even as a thirty something male with little interest in playing computerised dolls houses I found myself trying my best to look after the welfare of my Sims. In fact I actually disliked the game at first; I found it fiddly, kind of silly, buit within a week had ordered two expansion sets. It does beg the question though; is it *too* addictive? Why spend so much time on something that's not real? Well, that's one for the psychology experts I think. However the orignal Sims is a rather limited game on it's own. After about week or so of regular play you'll probably have done all the game has to offer, as much as that might be. You can only furnish your virtual Sim home with so many different items, only choose a handful of careers, interact in only so many ways. Thankfully the expansion pack adds more variety to your sims life. Some are largely superficial things like new wallpaper or tiles, but things like the woodwork table, chemistry set and genies lamp give your Sims more things to do. And the electric guitar can be hilarious. But it will be more fun if you experiemted around and discovered what the expansion set has to offer. Overall, an entertaining if slightly flawed start to a successful franchise.
Tonz of Fun March 30, 2008 Debra Ann Chapman (Lansing, MI) This is the second Sims I have bought, and it is as much fun to play as the original. You can do alot with it and have a blast. But be warned, you will be hooked and spend most of your time on the computer! Well worth the money.
|
|
|