Forum Discussion
evilpoptart85
3 years agoNew Spectator
"Sindocat;c-18012895" wrote:
Start modestly. Like, a couple of chickens, just for eggs. Maybe a vegetable patch. Farm stuff is a lot of work.
Even with a dedicated Sim to do JUST THAT, it's a LOT, especially if you are doing poultry AND dairy or wool. Befriending wild bunnies, and placing the Burrow on your lot, and befriending your bunnies to get them to help garden helps (they'll do the weeding - birds help, too, and will eat bugs). But that's also a time investment. Doing all the things takes a number of Sims, and is in fact challenging.
I tend to pick & choose just a few. Added a Toddler to my poultry-and-garden household, because both my sims wanted a baby, and my one sim is already sad from missing socialization with his furry friends. It's definitely a balancing act.
My advice, learn one thing at a time - how to keep a cow happy & productive, for example, and learn JUST THAT first, and you'll have time for other interests. If you try to do it all, there will be no time at all for anything else.
Thank you so much for your response @Sindocat! Learning one thing at a time does take a lot of stress out of learning about the EP. I always tend to overwhelm myself by thinking I need to do everything at once, LOL. I am glad Maxis took the time to add so many features to this EP and do a really thorough job, but wow, it is a lot of stuff! Very helpful!
About The Sims 4 General Discussion
Join lively discussions, share tips, and exchange experiences on Sims 4 Expansion Packs, Game Packs, Stuff Packs & Kits.33,080 PostsLatest Activity: 5 days ago
Related Posts
Recent Discussions
- 3 hours ago
- 4 hours ago