Escapist - Perhaps the highest praise I can give Visceral's console port of The Sims 3 is that it it's remarkably like the original PC version. That's no backhanded compliment, either: Visceral has taken a series that has been a staple of casual PC gaming for a decade now and faithfully adapted it to feel right at home in your living room.
A voice actor for The Sims spoke about his experiences doing voice work for the game's fictional Simlish language, and how there was no dictionary for them
The Sims franchise has been a part of my life ever since the first game came out. It was one of two games I camped outside of a store for, the other one being Black & White.
Maybe you've got a favorite game from the olden days you never get rid of. Maybe you're a scrupulous uninstaller and you don't have anything from before 2013 on your pristine PC. Maybe you've got something from the 1990s taking up several whole megabytes you completely forgot about.
Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis.
I did have Loom but I didn't like it.
I've been replaying a bunch of old adventure games, lately. I had been playing a bunch of text adventures, but those are uninstalled now. At the moment, the oldest thing I have installed is Sierra's Police Quest Collection. When I'm done with that, I'll be moving on to Space Quest, Quest for Glory, and finishing with the best: King's Quest.
telling your sim to take a shit, take a shower, cook a meal, watch tv, read a book, go to work.... yey... superfun gameplay....