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- Clingy and Angelic. Toddlers with these traits always seem to be crying about something.
I love Wild...when they take off their clothes and start running around naked its honestly adorable. - Least fave is Independent, especially when I'm trying to grind for skills.
For clingy I always have a parent around the toddler anyway cause they can't do anything without them taking care of them in some manner. - Idk, me, personally, I only like the traits that help the learning speed. If it don't help them learn SOMETHING faster, I don't like it and doesn't appear (to me) to be all that do.
I'm SO simple :P - Charmer (its a really cute trait, but some times when they age up they get glitched and are left constantly sad from no socialization even if they socialize all the time).
But if I ignore glitches, then my least favorite is independent cause they seem to deny their parent's hugs more often (which is saddening). - Fussy is the only trait I don't use since it was such a hassle
Inquisitive so far is my most used trait :D it's just VERY useful especially I have around 2-4 sims in a household at a time. and Leveling the thinking skill as a priority has yielded great results with raising them better. - I'd have to go with Wild purely because of the glitches where toddler traits don't disappear as sims age up. Wild toddlers age up and still have the wild trait. It is annoying as the sim glitches out and keeps shrinking/climbing stairs (from teen to elder) due to the "run, run, run" moodlet... It doesn't cause as much of a problem with other traits but this one was annoying!
- Fussy and Independent.... and everything else besides Angelic
- EmmaVane9 years agoSeasoned AceI randomise toddler traits. Worst I've had so far is Fussy. Independent don't like the adult initialising things, but are fine when asking for attention/help themselves.
- I probably pick angelic the least.....not sure I'd call it my "least favorite" though....but I generally pick fussy or wild because the others are too easy to play.
"Falynios;c-15883008" wrote:
Independent. There's no purpose to it. It has only bad effects. Being able to improve skill faster alone as opposed to with an adult is useless. Then every time you try to take care of the toddler, they get angry.
You just described it's purpose and usefulness....the toddler can learn faster alone....so the adult sims can do their own thing without having to spend as much time teaching skills to the toddler, which is particularly useful in large households or when both parents work."pepperjax1230;c-15885326" wrote:
Wow really all the traits for me seem to be all the same throw tantrums have terrible meltdowns and then be a huge pain. :joy:
They all start out somewhat fussy. You have to level up their Thinking skill. All toddlers, even the fussy and wild ones, have less meltdowns, stop throwing food, stop splashing in the toilet, have less nightmares, etc. as you level up the Thinking skill....at level 4-5 Thinking, they all become pretty easy to manage. A maxed skill toddler, with any toddler trait, only needs to be bathed every so often and set some food out for the toddler when hungry, but otherwise just takes care of themselves."megiare;c-15883093" wrote:
I'd say clingy because of the carry over to child. In my current save, the toddler I had with that trait aged up and anyone who he talks to that isn't a caretaker makes him tense.
Are you sure they just aren't in the "clingy" phase that children can get in the game? All children can get that phase from time to time, regardless of their toddler trait. - I've been using Silly a lot lately. It seems they tend to behave more to me and it easier to keep them happy IMO
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