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GalacticGal
8 years agoLegend
You know, I've never really stopped to consider the whole 'settling in' thing. Interesting question you pose, OP. I would venture to suggest, your Sims are 'settled' when you, the player are satisfied with how the house is. For me, I've got one family in a save who won't be moving out of their mansion. Ever. (Well, the children will move out on their own, but the parents will remain.) The other save I've got going is of my ancestors. While my seventh great-grandfather lived in the area, he didn't appear to move around all that much, unlike his son, my sixth great-grandfather, who moved around a lot. I think he had a very bad case of the Wander Lust! Well, once the rest of the family removed (and that's the 18th century term for it) to the Southwest Settlements in 1773, from the Shenandoah Valley, he bought land hand over fist. Eventually the man owned 57,000 acres. The law was, you had three years to improve a piece of land. That explains why he moved from the north bank of the Holston River after three years, to the south bank of the Watauga River, to the Nolichucky River, and then to the south bank of the Nolichucky to Little Limestone Creek, (which is a subsidiary of the Nolichucky River). Keeping that in mind, I have moved this family a few times. I build the next house and have, in the past anyway, used the same items to furnish the home, and then just sell their stuff upon purchasing the next place. It's crazy-insane, but it is what it is. I found it slightly amusing when someone who was helping me find information on my third great-grandparents, said, you're family sure moved around a lot. Yeah, they did.
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