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Review: Sims 2 Nightlife

Hardcore gaming gets a lot of press attention for the intense graphics and the meaningless violence. Despite this, there are millions of gamers who enjoy their entertainment in a more casual vein. One of the champs of the casual PC market is Maxis behemoth The Sims 2. The sequel to the original, much expanded, Sims is now working its way through a series of content additions of its own. The most recent expansion for Sims 2 is "Nightlife". This out-and-about addition incorporates much of the "Hot Date" material from the original game, with a generous helping of extras. Read on for my impressions of the latest attempt by Maxis to improve your virtual person's social life.
  • Title: The Sims 2: Nightlife
  • Developer: Maxis
  • Publisher: EA Games
  • System: PC
  • Reviewer: Zonk
  • Score: 7/10

The microcosm world of The Sims 2 allows players to vicariously live out the lives of the rich, popular, or phenomenally stupid. The ability for the game player to project their own hopes and neurosis onto their virtual marionettes involves a lot of set dressing. Furniture, art, electronics, wallpaper, and swimming pools are just some of the tools Sims 2 players use to tell their stories. The set pieces that players seem to enjoy manipulating the most, though, are the Sims themselves. "Nightlife" is a generous package of objects, interactions, and locations designed to make lubricating Simlish society more convenient.

Like all Sims expansions, at its core "Nightlife" is a system add-on for the basic game. The first Sims 2 expansion, "University", added on a college campus to the neighborhood as well as a young adult development stage to the life cycle of the Simlish species. "Nightlife" incorporates the highly successful dating system used in the "Hot Date" expansion for the original Sims title. Dating allows Sims to improve their relationship by attempting a 'dream date' at romantic locations like parks, restaurants, and bowling alleys. The date mechanic is extremely useful, allowing two Sims that you'd like to get together the opportunity to improve their social connection in a hurry.

Besides actual dates, you can arrange group gatherings that pull together more than two Sims into an outing. These group gatherings are even more useful for raising social standings between Sims, but can be a mixed bag. Dates and gatherings are evaluated based on how good a time the participants have. While dates, with only two participants, are fairly easy to run group gatherings can be very challenging because of the number of Sims involved. Unattended Sims have a tendency to lose track of what they're doing, and if your gathering depends on everyone being on the same page even one wayward Sim can ruin the event for everyone. While the date mechanic is lots of fun, gatherings could have used a little more polishing.

Social gatherings need interesting backdrops to be fully appreciated, and the new downtown area very much fulfills that need. Downtown is chock full of different places, each themed to a different type of get-together. Rocking out with a group of musicians can be accomplished in the park, while a date might find the candle-lit restaurant more agreeable. Each of the default areas packaged with the expansion is a well thought-out venue for socializing, and they're usually handsome looking as well.

Some more subtle system additions also allow for easier socializing. Sims now have romantic preferences, which result from turn-ons (dark hair, formal ware), turn-offs (stench, workout uniforms), astrological signs and life goals. Sims that have chemistry with each other have little lightning bolts near their names. Likewise, Sims can now have antipathy towards each other just based on their personal makeup. Sims with x'd out lightning bolts will have a harder time than normal having a successful relationship. In practice, the chemistry is just another addition that makes it easier to max out relationships between two Sims.

These like/dislike values play a large role in the life of the Pleasure Seeker Sim, a new life aspiration you can create Sims with. Pleasure Seekers want parties, fast cars, steamy dates, and expensive toys. The Pleasure Seeker Sim I made ("Hef") was a pain in the butt to keep happy. Most of the things that give him happiness are either expensive or require a lot of work to accomplish. As a counterpoint, the Pleasure Seeker isn't very good at living in the normal world. They have a hard time with jobs and chores, making them terrible room-mates. Pleasure Seeker Sims might be an interesting addition to a well developed neighborhood, full of rich families, but for a starter Sim they're just not practical.

A mainstay of Sims expansions are the objects. Adding new objects to your purchasing repertoire is always a goal for a Sims player, and "Nightlife" fulfills that goal admirably. The downtown areas come with a plethora of new objects specifically for dates and group gatherings, like the bowling alley or the restaurant host stand. There are many handsome new objects that are used in the new venues that can be purchased for home use as well. My personal favorite is the karaoke machine, which is a great group activity and painful to watch to boot. "Nightlife" even introduces a new type of object for Simlish consumption: the car. Sims can now have garages and vehicles, adding yet another layer of realism to the game and making traveling to out-of-the-house locations quicker. All aspects of car culture are there in car ownership: listening to music, tooling around for fun, and more amorous activities as well. While every Sim, it seems, ends up wanting to own a car as a life goal at some point they're not absolutely critical. For the most part they're simply convenient for the player who wants to wring every minute out of the SimCity day.

Practical additions, like vehicles, aren't the only features "Nightlife" offers. One completely useless feature the expansion adds is a vampire Sim-type. Vampires can now be found prowling around SimCity, and if you go looking for them you can get your own Sims turned into the restless undead. Unfortunately, it sounds cooler than it really is. Aside from turning other Sims into vampires and transforming into a bat, the amusement factor is sort of limited. Vampire Sims become quite nocturnal, making it difficult to participate in normal jobs and raising family members. The new "type" of Sim idea is interesting, but as far as this expansion goes doesn't see a lot of real use.

There isn't anything here that will shock a current owner, and likely doesn't have any features that might convince a non-player to purchase the game. That said, "Nightlife" is another solid expansion for the now venerable series. It adds on extremely useful systems to the game, opens up new possibilities for gameplay, and incorporates the ever-important new object sets into the title. "Nightlife" gameplay adds a lot of potential to the already entertaining Sims 2. Folks who don't already own the game would probably be best advised just to buy the basic game to make sure they enjoy the gameplay before dropping another $30 for this expansion. For a veteran Sims 2 player who has already tired of college life, though, a night on the town may be just what you need.

10 of 115 comments (clear)

  1. Wow by FortKnox · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Is this really a review of an addon for a game that is waay over exposed and played by millions of people?

    Is it really worthy of a review??

    If its a paid review, I'd understand, but, really, there are much better new (and full) games to review.

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    Good quote, too many chars. Seriously, the slashdot 120 char limit sucks!
    1. Re:Wow by FortKnox · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That was part of my point. Its obviously good, because even though it is overhyped and overexposed, people are still buying it.

      Where reviews are great are for silent releases of really good games that no one has had a chance to see. That's what really makes a review golden.

      That game hidden in the corner of your local EB? Its really good or really bad. Don't tell me about something thats been out forever, or just an expansion of an already ultra successful franchise (unless its a preview, not a review)... tell me about the games that people don't hear about every day already...

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      Good quote, too many chars. Seriously, the slashdot 120 char limit sucks!
  2. Why so prominent a review? by XretsiMisterX · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Does this review of yet-another-game-in-a-franchise really belong on the main page of slashdot? I mean, I like gaming news, I'm an avid gamer, but this isn't a new or innovative title. How is this frontline news-for-nerds?

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    Glenn Loos-Austin
    UI Designer at Epic
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/junkchest/
  3. What people really want by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I wish they would stop beating around the bush and just give the people what they damn well know what they want online, hardcore simulated sex!!!

  4. I don't like it. by ChrisF79 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I recently visited a friend and while he and his wife were at work during a rainy day, I stayed at home and played The Sims 2 on his PC. I have to tell you, I couldn't get into it. I played it for a couple of hours, waiting for the fun to start and it never happened. This isn't meant to be a troll post, just my $0.02. The thing is, the game felt like work to me. Managing the lives of these characters was really a pain, and it just felt like it was just keeping me busy instead of actually entertaining me. I used to love to play Sim City ironically, but this one I just couldn't get into. Anybody else agree with me on this one?

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    Finance tutorials and more! Understandfinance
  5. Not so sure about that by Red+Flayer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "All aspects of car culture are there in car ownership: listening to music, tooling around for fun, and more amorous activities as well."

    What about license and registration renewals, car inspections, insurance payments, getting ripped off by mechanics, spiraling fuel costs, and getting into accidents?

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    "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
  6. If its not a game YOU play.... by Frastolator · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It seems that if people dont like the game/expansion its not worth the review.

  7. Not at all like Hot Coffee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Big difference here is that Rockstar shipped the "Hot Coffee" content with retail product as I understand it. As shipped, no Sims product has ever had realistic nudity available, with or without third party hacks applied to it.

    The third party hack to remove the censor effect/pixelation that appears over nude sims reveals Barbie/Ken doll nudity with no female nipples/pubic hair/genitalia whatsoever.... There are third party mesh/texture packs that will add the above features to the naked sims Maxis actually shipped but all of this is entirely third party and outside of Maxis/EA Games sphere of control (or responsibility, IMO) unless they decide to take out the ability to import custom content entirely. Even if they made attempts to restrict third party content, it would only be a matter of time before third party hacks were perfected to allow the inclusion of third party content.

    This pediphillia claim is complete BS as well, being that no sexual interaction or even flirting between adults and babies/toddlers/children/teenagers is available. One could theoretically produce a hack that would include these types of interactions, but it would be almost as involved as producing the same type of hack for any other game on the market today.

    This Jackass Thompson needs to get half a clue before starting his next puritanical crusade designed to maintain his flagging media exposure.

  8. Violence Meaningless? by Adam+Avangelist · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They don't put violence in video games because its meaningless, it obviously attracts an audience and increases sales.

  9. Re:Ah, slashdot by swb · · Score: 2, Insightful

    But it IS insightful.

    Whether anyone wants to admit it or not, sex IS the outcome of all successful dating situations (even for religious zealots who wait until they've confirmed their dating status with a state called "marriage").

    There's a ton of simulation that could be put into encounters that involve sexuality -- aggression, passivity, willingness to be adventurous, the level of emotional commitment required/desired, and that's just scratching the surface.

    The depiction doesn't even have to be super hard core.

    And it would probably be a learning experience for a lot of people "WHY DO I LOSE MY SIM DATE WHEN I STICK MY FINGER IN HER ASS ON THE FIRST DATE?!?!"