If you're talking about console games, then no, patches can't be delivered to most games on consoles. PC versions, yes, but not console versions. Unless I'm completely wrong, but it really just depends on what console you mean. Stuff doesn't just fix itself on a gaming console. Besides, most patches are useless anyway.
Oh, and you guys left out the biggest and most flexible cheat of all. Open the cheat box and type testingcheatsenabled true This cheat allows you to shift click on the mailbox, the ground, Sims, and any object to do whatever you want really. Move non-movable things, add random people to your family, max or decline all needs, set relationships, change seasons and weather and much much more. It can supposedly cause some problems though if you leave it activated all the time so be careful with it. To turn it off type into the cheat box testingcheatsenabled false
So basically everything just needs to be more in depth and realistic. Keep in mind though, many things such as the monetary system were changed from real life perfectly to make the gameplay experience better, there are things in real life that just wouldn't fit well into a video game meant for entertainment. Make it as tedious as real life can sometimes be and you start to suck out the joy of creativity in The Sims.
Well I've never heard of that specific challenge but to be honest finding shortcuts and quick ways to cheat your way through a challenge defeats the entire object of challenges, considering they're entirely optional and just there to make your game interesting.
None of the things mentioned above are absolutely necessary, it could just happen randomly. But yes, getting the Sim the fertility treatment LR, having them read pregnancy books, watch kids TV and listen to kids music will all help increase chances. I'm sure there are also mods and hacks, but I wouldn't recommend that path.
I don't tend to watch TV, mostly due to how terrible everything is. TVs going down in popularity anyway, especially when you can watch most episodes of anything with the app or the internet.
Honesty is admirable, but considering this could really offend many people, maybe it would have been best to keep it to himself? I mean it's just an opinion, right? He's not legally allowed to just ban all fat people.
Yeah, I mean if short people were enslaved in the past then that would probably be really offensive, but they weren't, so it's not. Skin color is also more directly tied to ethnicity. We can always identify someone'd general race by skin color, and then easily form stereotyped about them which could be offensive.
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