The Sims 4 is Disappointing, Play These Instead

The Sims 4 is Disappointing, Play These Instead

The Sims 4 was released nearly 11 years ago and received mixed reviews from fans and players due to its limited content compared to previous releases. While various updates have filled some of those gaps, the game can still be disappointing for long-term Sims fans or players looking for more.

Fortunately, there are several other games within the same life simulation genre that can deliver gameplay experiences that The Sims 4 doesn’t currently offer. Here are a few you should check out if the game isn’t giving you what you need.

1

Paralives

Paras in Paralives in action.

Paralives

Paralives is an upcoming simulation game that offers players the chance to create their characters—known as “Paras”—and live out their lives like you can in The Sims 4. However, aside from the artistic style of the game differing between the two, Paralives promises more than what The Sims 4 can currently do.

The game is still in development, with early access scheduled for December 2025. Yet, from what has been shown so far, the game looks to go well beyond the scope of The Sims 4.

When I first saw the game roughly five years ago, the first feature that really intrigued me was the way you could customize your house. Yes, you can do that in The Sims 4, but with Paralives, you have more control over each individual aspect of nearly anything.

For example, in The Sims 4, you can generally only change an object’s color, but if you want to adjust physical details—like the position of a drawer or the design of a counter—you’ll need to find a different object that closely fits your needs. In Paralives, that’s not the case—you can customize the details of individual objects without needing to search for a replacement.

Toilet paper positioned differently in Parallives.

Paralives

Let’s say that you have a desk, and you want the drawers to be on the right side, not the left. You can change that with a click. Let’s say you want your toilet paper to be positioned under itself rather than over. You can alter that as well. Paralives allows you to change the size and width of objects as well. You can make a loveseat into a four-person couch by just dragging it, like you can with walls in The Sims 4 to make the room bigger.

Another area where Paralives promises to have an edge over The Sims 4 is its approach to content, which is no paid DLC—just free expansion packs. This gives Paralives a significant advantage, as many players feel The Sims 4 lacks essential content in the base game and requires buying expansion packs, game packs, or stuff packs to access features that arguably should have been included from the start.

Boxes and a guitar in the beginning of playing Paralives.

Paralives

Paralives developers have said that their game will launch with bugs and missing features, which is typical for early access versions of games. Yet knowing that missing features might be added later—and for free, without a paywall—offers reassurance to players.

There’s still some time before Paralives is released, but based on what’s been shown so far, it’s shaping up to be a strong alternative to The Sims 4. For creators who want more control over how they decorate their builds, this game may be a better fit once it launches.

2

inZOI

inzoi-screenshot-game-rant-3.jpg

inzoi-screenshot-game-rant-3.jpg

When The Sims 3 was revealed, it added a more realistic look to the game than The Sims 2 did. However, when The Sims 4 was shown off, the creators opted for a more cartoon-style approach for the Sims. This approach suited the new Create-a-Sim, which felt like sculpting clay—but in terms of realism, the Sims ended up looking more like clay figures than actual people. Yes, the fine details are still present if you zoom in—such as the realism in the eyes and lips—but then you look at the hair and realize it resembles a single slab of molded clay. In contrast, the two previous generations featured visible strands of hair, something The Sims 4 noticeably lacks.

If you’re looking for more realism in a modern game, then you should check out inZOI. While it’s still in early access, the game has been promising for many players who want a more whole and realistic gameplay experience than what The Sims 4 currently offers. Right from the get-go, you’ll see the game offers super-realistic virtual characters, named “Zois”, for you to customize. You can alter their looks just like you can in The Sims 4, by clicking and dragging.

Unlike The Sims 4, but like The Sims 3, inZOI gives you a color wheel to use to pick the color of your Zoi’s hair, clothes, and anything in between. This experience truly feels like a mashup of the best of what The Sims 4 and Sims 3 Create-a-Sim have to offer.

Color wheel in the Zoi creation of inZOI.

inZOI | Krafton

Furthermore, a unique feature inZOI offers is the ability to alter the appearance of clothing, such as changing the sleeves or neckline of a top. It’s like how you can add or change specific elements on furniture in Paralives, but this is when creating characters. Supporting and encouraging creativity is another area where inZOI shines, though one of the ways it does so may be seen as controversial.

Creating a custom texture and style with AI feature and describing it in the text field in inZOI.

inZOI | Krafton

While playing inZOI, you can tap into various artificial intelligence features to help you create different textures and styles. This happens by describing what you want in a text field, and then it will be generated in-game. You can also take real-world objects and make them into 3D models within the game. To do so, you just upload a photo of it from your computer, and the game will generate a custom item based on it.

Being able to change the look and vibe of the city you’re Zoi is in from the settings.

inZOI | Krafton

Unlike The Sims 4, where you need to purchase an additional pack to access different town styles—such as a dystopia or a dirtier environment—inZOI lets you adjust the weather, cleanliness, and overall vibe of a town directly from the settings menu, with no extra DLC required.

The game is still in its early access stage, with updates rolling out regularly, but based on what’s been shown so far, it looks like a promising alternative to The Sims 4. If you’re craving more realism and want control over various aspects of the town your character lives in—without having to pay extra for added content—inZOI is worth considering during early access or watching closely ahead of its final release.

3

The Sims 3

The Sims 3 two sims near each other at a dinner, one a nerd and the other a jock-2

EA

Typically, the previous generation of a game feels lackluster compared to the current one, but for many Sims players who’ve experienced both, the opposite may be true. The Sims 3 offers a level of freedom and customization that The Sims 4 still doesn’t provide to this day.

The Sims 3 offers extensive in-game customization through a feature called “Create-a-Style.” It allows you to change the design, pattern, and color of nearly anything—furniture, clothing, and even your Sim’s hair color.

Color wheek being shown in game to customize different aspects of the Plumbot.

The Sims Studio | Electronic Arts

Create-A-Style was partnered with a color wheel, giving you access to virtually any color you could imagine. This is in contrast to the swatches The Sims 4 offers for customization for clothes, furniture, and hair color. While new swatches have been added over the years, they are still limited compared to having a fully functional color wheel.

Additionally, The Sims 3 also offered an open world, making loading screens little to non-existent in the game. This meant that no matter where your Sims were going, whether it was to the park, to work, or just next door to greet the neighbors, you didn’t have to deal with a loading screen in between.

Sunset Valley is an open world in The Sims 3.

The Sims Studio | Electronic Arts

I love creating roommate households with two or more Sims because it allows me to tell different stories within a single save file. With The Sims 3, I was able to have more freedom when it came to controlling each character simultaneously, like I could have one Sim at the park greeting their neighbors while the other is at the library leveling up a specific skill.

Being able to jump back and forth between each kept me invested in the game, and while I can still do that in The Sims 4, my options are limited when controlling another sim that’s on a different lot. If you’re looking for deeper customization and more freedom to control various aspects of the game—regardless of where your Sims are—then The Sims 3 is worth checking out. Although it was released in 2009, the game still upholds its status as one of, if not the, best in the series’ history.

4

The Sims 2

A promotional screenshot from the game "The Sims™ 2 Legacy Collection."

Maxis / Electronic Arts

Although released in 2004, The Sims 2 still offers substantial and intriguing gameplay to this day. Interest in the game remained relevant, prompting EA to release an updated version of it, alongside the original Sims game, to run on modern computers.

Where The Sims 2 shines and where The Sims 4 is dull, is in maturity and lore. While both are rated the same, T-for-Teens, they do offer different play styles. While The Sims 4 does include all aspects that make it that rating—crude humor, sexual themes, and violence—it doesn’t seem to hold the same strength as The Sims 2 did. For example, The Sims 2 offers visually realistic reactions when Sims fight, kiss, and flirt. The options are more on the adult-themed side, and the animations are not subtle in what’s happening.

the-sims-2-legacy-collection-press-image-5.jpg

EA

On the other hand, while The Sims 4 does offer the same interactions between Sims, they feel watered down. Additionally, various options in the game put a more childish tone to the game’s image, like when your Sim is angry and can take an “angry poop.” Another area where The Sims 2 excels is in its lore. Some of the most iconic storylines in the franchise originated in this generation and have been carried over into later installments of the game.

Story image when loading Strangetown in The Sims 2.

The Sims Studio | Electronic Arts

This drives the experience, whether you’re playing as a pre-made family or creating your own. The Sims 4 has its own backstories and lore in the game, but it’s not as compelling as The Sims 2 for me. Additionally, the famous storylines from The Sims 2 are not connected within that generation of the game, since it has been noted that the game is in an alternate timeline from previous generations. If you’re looking for a game that pushes the T-for-Teen rating to its limit, offers rich, layered lore, and delivers that 2000s nostalgia, give The Sims 2 a try.


Life simulation games typically attract three types of players: creators, builders, and storytellers, though many people fall into multiple categories. The type you are may influence which alternative game is the best fit for you. The Sims 4 isn’t a bad game—it just doesn’t quite meet the expectations of a fourth-generation title in a series that’s more than 25 years old, especially considering the game itself is now over a decade old.

With more competition emerging than ever before, I hope these games will spark the developers to adopt features that competitors are already offering and that The Sims 4 continues to lack.

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