Especially seeing as The Sims 4’s free-to-play successor – currently being referred to as Project: Rene – still seems some way off.
And that’s something EA has finally acknowledged, confirming it’s now assembled a team specifically to tackle the ‘frustrating’ technical issues amassed over time.
The Sims 4 is getting on a bit these days, and, as regular players will know, the whole thing – which includes over 70 bits of DLC piled onto the base game over the last 10 years – is starting to feel a bit creaky.
Some of the fixes in May’s patch are detailed on EA’s Sims 4 “laundry list” page and cover the base game and various expansions.