@MaertaPet The 4700U is not a downgrade at all from a 1165G7, at least not as far as Sims games are concerned. Certain types of professional work would run faster on the Intel processor, but then other types would run faster on the Ryzen, and they'd both be able to handle the loads regardless. While Intel processors have been better for gaming recently, that's changing, and regardless, the limiting factor for Sims 4 will be the graphics card or chip, not the CPU.
If you want a slightly nerdy comparison, this is a good overview:
https://cpu.userbenchmark.com/Compare/Intel-Core-i7-1165G7-vs-AMD-Ryzen-7-4700U/m1195374vsm1105478
Sims 4 can use up to four CPU cores, so the 2 and 4 core speeds are what matter.
However, if this is the laptop you're looking at:
https://www.webhallen.com/se/product/321776-ASUS-Zenbook-14-UM433IQ-PURE2X-14-FHD-R7-4700U-16GB-512GB-Radeon-RX-Vega-10-Win-10
its performance in gaming isn't as good overall as would be suggested by the hardware. The reasons can get a bit complicated, but the overall idea is that the Zenbook's design doesn't allow for efficient cooling, so the system throttles performance somewhat to compensate. Additionally, the MX350 in this model is the low-power variant, so its performance will be slower than ideal as well. The first issue can be mitigated somewhat by using a cooling pad or fan while you play; the second would require messing around with some basic settings.
If you want the details, here's a very thorough review:
https://www.ultrabookreview.com/37505-asus-zenbook-um433iq-review/
Search for "fire strike" to jump to the graphics performance section.
To be clear, this laptop should still run Sims 4 a little better than one with only a 4700U or 1165G7, but the gap is smaller than it could be. So if you really like another laptop without a dedicated graphics card, or you'd prefer to pay significantly less, the smaller drop in performance might be a worthwhile tradeoff.