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ChampandGirlie
8 years agoNew Spectator
I've played with all of them except for silly so far. I've yet to try a silly toddler. I actually like independent toddlers and have had a good experience with them. Some of my parents are probably a little bit more hands off than those of other players and those tend to be the ones that match well with the independent trait. I'll make a nice nursery, set the kid up and let them handle themselves. Greta Munch, the daughter of Gunther Munch and a disinterested social climber, is an independent sim. That means that she's quite resilient and internally-driven. Her parents' weaknesses don't deeply phase her.
The least favorite trait for me is definitely fussy. I've only tried it once and the kid was pretty much a brat. I've fit it into her personality though by making her somewhat assertive as she gets older. Basically, she's growing into a positive and functional adult. Don't try to mess with her though. I may use that trait again in the right context but its definitely my least favorite.
I can work with all of the others, more or less. Clingy is a trait that I tend to pair with a child who has a stay-at-home parent. Even my dual income working households tend to trade off leave in order to have someone be home every day with a toddler, but the one clingy toddler I can think of had a full-time stay-at-home mom. She was also family-oriented so she could comfort him easily and if he got upset, she'd give him juice in the high chair.
I guess I usually try to match a toddler trait with a household that will work well with it. I have a wild toddler who lives in Rindle Rose where he can easily run outside and get wild on the porch. I guess that I have not done too much deviant matching of toddler traits with households that won't work well with them (ie: clingy toddler and working parents, wild toddler in a one room nursery all day, inquisitive child with slacker parents, etc). I'm too nice to enjoy that, I guess. Lol.
The least favorite trait for me is definitely fussy. I've only tried it once and the kid was pretty much a brat. I've fit it into her personality though by making her somewhat assertive as she gets older. Basically, she's growing into a positive and functional adult. Don't try to mess with her though. I may use that trait again in the right context but its definitely my least favorite.
I can work with all of the others, more or less. Clingy is a trait that I tend to pair with a child who has a stay-at-home parent. Even my dual income working households tend to trade off leave in order to have someone be home every day with a toddler, but the one clingy toddler I can think of had a full-time stay-at-home mom. She was also family-oriented so she could comfort him easily and if he got upset, she'd give him juice in the high chair.
I guess I usually try to match a toddler trait with a household that will work well with it. I have a wild toddler who lives in Rindle Rose where he can easily run outside and get wild on the porch. I guess that I have not done too much deviant matching of toddler traits with households that won't work well with them (ie: clingy toddler and working parents, wild toddler in a one room nursery all day, inquisitive child with slacker parents, etc). I'm too nice to enjoy that, I guess. Lol.
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