Not surprisingly, it is exceedingly difficult to expunge all real-life aspects from a life-simulation game, and still have anything left worth playing. The mark of censorship in order to attempt to avoid any and all possibility of any and all persons objecting, is what makes modern kid-literature so unbearably dull, crass, and trivial. The Sims is a life simulation, so by nature has to be relatable to as many people as possible. If you don't like a hijab, don't buy or wear one, is my take. Calling it a headscarf to hope to avoid admitting it is Muslim attire invites ambiguity, because there are other ways to wear a scarf on one's head, in other cultures and parts of the world, that are nothing like it in style. Whether it has religious or just cultural significance is up to each individual. I have no problem with someone expressing their culture and/or their religion even if I don't share it, so long as I am also free to express or not to express mine, too. My choices don't entitle me to silence others or force them to suppress their identity.