Mizu_Yukionna The first crash is probably unrelated. The second is what we typically see on Intel systems with an unstable overclock, although that's not the only cause. The third is a crash of the AMD graphics driver. The fourth points to a component of DirectX 11. The last is too generic to be useful: it says Sims 4 crashed because it crashed, because it did something not allowed.
So what I would suggest here, as a test, is to remove your graphics card and try playing only on the integrated graphics chip. To be clear, this is not a fix; I would just like to know whether the system is stable when running the game on the iGPU.
You'll need to shut down the computer and physically remove the card. If you've never done this, look for a YouTube guide that makes sense to you; one that walks someone through upgrading the graphics card would work here too. But instead of replacing the GPU, you'll simply plug the monitor into the correct motherboard slot. When you reboot, the computer should automatically use the iGPU, and it already has the correct driver installed.
If you don't see anything on the monitor after rebooting, it's possible the iGPU is disabled in BIOS. In that case, reverse the process and let me know.