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Sims 2 vs Sims 1

VershnerVershner Posts: 59 Member
edited September 2018 in The Sims 2
There's a few topics here comparing the various Sims versions, but I didn't see one comparing Sims 2 with its predecessor.

I played Sims 1 back in 2000 and loved it. It was constantly producing funny moments and it was probably the first game to really produce genuinely moving moments too. I remember being distraught when my first family's daughter got taken off to military school.
I recently started playing Sims 2 after my brother's old room was cleared out and I came across the CD. I like it, but I'm not sure yet that it beats the original.

A few pluses and minuses.

Plus - It's basically the same game with better graphics. They didn't mess with the basic formula that made it a great game.

Minus - They did remove a few funny things that always made me chuckle - Parents no longer boo their children while they practice the piano, Sims no longer open conversations with "Wet lemon!".

Plus - The community lots and travelling round the neighbourhood are great additions.

Minus - Obviously the Sims is made by a US company and models US life, but that wasn't an issue in the first game. The Sims 2 is even more US-centric though, and is littered with phrases that mean nothing to me (eg. "Gussy up"). The house and clothing styles don't really include anything that looks like it could be from outside north America.

Minus - Sims 1 had a number of game-breaking bugs in the initial release, but these were quickly patched. Sims 2 seems to be quite buggy and fragile even after patching.

Minus - A number of annoying issues from Sims 1 are still present in Sims 2.
- Sims still cancel a task to complain that they want to do that task. (eg. most commonly: you tell a sim to go to bed and they cancel the task to tell you how tired they are!)
- Sims autonomously make dinner rather than serve dinner and there's no way to convert them to serve, or put the food away if you cancel it.
- Some tasks still take ridiculously long: greeting people, collecting plates, stopping reading/studying.

Plus - The phone options are much better.

Plus - The aspirations system is a good addition.

Minus - Custom content in Sims 1 just worked. In Sims 2, about 50% of stuff I've tried either doesn't appear in game at all, or appears in the menus but cannot be placed. I assume this is because of dependencies (I only have the base game at the moment) but there doesn't seem to be any way to find out what those dependencies are.
Post edited by Vershner on

Comments

  • CinebarCinebar Posts: 33,618 Member
    edited September 2018
    I'm not going to actually knock The Sims original game. It was the best selling PC game of all time. But when I got TS2 (after playing TS1) I was so excited to see better terrain tools, and for the first time ability to build undeground basements with windows. And porches...I don't know, decks and porches was like omg, I can't believe I can build this! lol

    And I was super excited to play and find out how TS2 worked. I played the tutorial and couldn't wait to build my own Sims and my own buildings and for the first time ever, buildings built within a mountain, and or on cliffs. Super cool.

    It wasn't the same Sims with just better graphics, TS2 added Aspirations and Aspiration failure if we didn't fill some of those wants, and or fill their LTW, and added fears and a true memory system (not a scrapbook). That was huge to me.

    For the first time ever, our Sims could travel alone without having to take the whole family along. True, there were a few community type lots we could build in TS2 base without Nightlife but having to go buy groceries was huge deal to me. And being able to go alone, was like the invention of the radio compared to the TV. :D

    Babies weren't tied to the crib, and toddlers were a new life stage, which were little terrors to tend to, and very hard to play for the first few times etc.

    For the first time ever I could queue up eight (8) things for a Sim to do, that really made playing easier and much more interesting as I played the other Sims on the lot.

    Kids could play the piano. Maybe it didn't mean much to some but kids in TS2 had many more games they could play together and could actually use many more objects they couldn't use in The Sims. They had really spent a lot of time on kids, babies, toddlers. Teens were added which their antics and sizes made it all believable that yes, these weren't just mini me adults.

    I could write chapters, but those were just some of the strong reasons to buy The Sims 2. And for the first time ever I could set the table in the game and call household members and guests to dinner and know what the Sim had cooked. And sometimes, if hungry they go sit and wait for their food at the table. That was so much better than quick meal or cook dinner and everyone having to grab a plate from the counter in TS1. Which came back in TS3....why, why, why.

    Custom content was easy with Home Crafter for my walls and floors and bodyshop was a huge plus giving the community a tool to create their own custom CAS assets.

    The base was patched right away and I can't see any reason to actually buy newer games after The Sims 2, but I like to try them all.

    ETA: My Sims no matter their size get booed if they play badly. And The Sims were always very American centric. Portraying the ups and downs of American life. And that's not a bad thing. The assets in the game were yes, much more modern than in TS1's European medieval content or things from other time periods than the base was in TS2.

    I can't forget TS2 for the first time ever, allowed us to change neighborhood decorations in base game, and to build our own hoods from scratch with the templates provided. And for first time ever, bulldoze and move vacant lots and not required to put them back in the same place....huge. Special event camera, special memories, and new life state. I don't know, I think it was worth the price and the adventure to play it.






    "Games Are Not The Place To Tell Stories, Games Are Meant To Let People Tell Their Own Stories"...Will Wright.
  • OldeseadoggeOldeseadogge Posts: 4,973 Member
    1. Everything Cinebar said. It's one of those games where we could write pages and pages on what's in it, and have in various forum topics. 2. I don't find TS2 buggy. Any that are present are more like a stray ant that got lost and is walking through your kitchen looking for the way out, while TS4 is like a Florida swamp. Not to say there were never issues, but the devs were very quick to fix things, both directly and in updates included in following packs. I have no problems with CC, but then I have all packs installed. Mod/CC makers were usually very careful to state what the pack requirements were, so check before getting/installing. 3. TS2 is the best of the whole series, in every way. If you have any problems, there are still lots of veterans who will gladly help you. Like having family, the good kind.
  • VershnerVershner Posts: 59 Member
    Currently I'm playing the base game, patched, but with no expansions; so it may be (hopefully) that some of the bugs I'm experiencing are fixed in the expansions. I've ordered University, Nightlife, and Open for Business, so I'll see in a day or two when they arrive. I haven't played TS3 or 4 so I can't compare it to them.

    My point about TS2 being TS1 with better graphics was intended as positive comment. I don't mean that they didn't add much, I mean that they didn't break the basic gameplay that made the first game so good. Unlike, for example, some of the SimCity games after SC4, which are very different and don't retain the same core gameplay.
  • CinebarCinebar Posts: 33,618 Member
    Vershner wrote: »
    Currently I'm playing the base game, patched, but with no expansions; so it may be (hopefully) that some of the bugs I'm experiencing are fixed in the expansions. I've ordered University, Nightlife, and Open for Business, so I'll see in a day or two when they arrive. I haven't played TS3 or 4 so I can't compare it to them.

    My point about TS2 being TS1 with better graphics was intended as positive comment. I don't mean that they didn't add much, I mean that they didn't break the basic gameplay that made the first game so good. Unlike, for example, some of the SimCity games after SC4, which are very different and don't retain the same core gameplay.

    Yeah, I'm not a fan of moodlet and buff systems. I like the system of The Sims and The Sims 2. It's why I enjoyed them so much more than moodlet motivators.
    "Games Are Not The Place To Tell Stories, Games Are Meant To Let People Tell Their Own Stories"...Will Wright.
  • JULES1111JULES1111 Posts: 4,489 Member
    While I enjoyed Sims 2 much more then 1 with all the improvements, there were certain things in 1 I wished carried over. Like those crank calls your sims used to get. Cake dancers, Superstar and making magic expansions, I feel those were done better in 1.
  • EricasFreePlayEricasFreePlay Posts: 849 Member
    Not going to knock the original game either, but in comparison TS2 was MUCH better in every way. I enjoyed all the improvements and new features. The replay value of the game was also much better which is why I miss it right now.
  • rileyandjacobrileyandjacob Posts: 42 Member
    I absolutely adore the original Sims. However, I prefer Sims 2 because of the improvements.
  • OldeseadoggeOldeseadogge Posts: 4,973 Member
    A huge improvement was the camera with its ability to freely rotate, adjust angle of view, and zoom in. I got TS1 going again on an older machine (still fighting with W 10 machine) but don't play it as much as I thought I would because of the constant frustration with the camera. Try to zoom in on a great scene, only to hit the 3 click limit, or the 45 degree rotation increments.

    Some other things I wish TS2 had brought over in addition to those mentioned are the chemistry table, the little hut with pond for either sailing boats on or feeding fish, the separate counters/carts for things like pastries, ice cream, and hot/cold sandwiches; the two types of restaurant podiums that determined whether you got a fancy place or a 50s diner, the old town with its New Orleans feel and traveling street performer, each clothing type had its own unique rack so you could have a specialty boutique if you wanted, picnic baskets that worked, dates that focused more on the relationship than beat the clock button pushing. TS1 may be crude by today's standards, but it blew the doors off everything else out there. Like TS2, that game would suck me in for hours at a stretch.
  • Sorak4Sorak4 Posts: 3,934 Member
    Sims 2 witches are fun, and I like robes they get...

    But Magic Town was also fun, shame it was hard to live in unless you spent long time there.
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  • Rflong7Rflong7 Posts: 36,584 Member
    There is still So much in TS1 I haven't done and want to do... if only I could get used to the camera controls again. :sniff:

    I loved the bread oven (do I remember that right?)- it was so cool to have more than 1 meal option. Besides the fruitcake- which I always hoped Sims would bring. :lol:
  • Sorak4Sorak4 Posts: 3,934 Member
    Just wanted to add on as well.

    But the biggest flaw that makes a lot of the game content hard to really play with is the motive decay.

    The decay speed made a lot of it honestly painful to play after we play TS2-4 for so long.
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  • VershnerVershner Posts: 59 Member
    Another difference I noticed last week - TS1 music is much better, in my opinion than TS2 music. So much so I've actually replaced a lot of it with the TS1 music. I think, in general, the sound was better in TS1. The men in TS2 are very whiny when they complain about something. The TV channels are quite annoying as well. And at least one of my lots seems to have a permanent dripping top noise I can't locate.
  • HejixHejix Posts: 1,056 Member
    There was a magical feeling in sims 1 that will never be replaced. However, Sims 2 made the game evolve quite a lot!
    I want to play ALL the premade families! One day...
  • SimsILikeSimsSimsILikeSims Posts: 1,634 Member
    Hejix wrote: »
    There was a magical feeling in sims 1 that will never be replaced. However, Sims 2 made the game evolve quite a lot!

    I totally agree.
    CAS in Sims 2 vs Sims 1: Sims 2 is the winner, no contest. But the memory of the Sims themselves in both games and the way they interacted with everything will always be a fond memory.
    Build Mode in Sims 2 vs Sims 1: Sims 2 introduced basements and foundations, and expanded building above the 2nd floor. Community lot building was in Sims 2 from the start. Sims 1 had different build modes with different build music for different locations, and community lot building was only introduced with Hot Date. I still miss Makin Magic build mode.
    EPs in Sims 2 vs Sims 1: Hard to say who is the winner: they were so different from each other. Sims 2 Seasons achieved what Sims 1 could only mimic in the Vacation EP in terms of snow and snow activities. In terms of comparing vacation EPs to each other, Sims 1 Vacation had the silly but annoying mascot, and introduced carnival-type games that you would see in a fair like whack-a-mole that didn't return in Bon Voyage. Bon Voyage had the silly but annoying pickpocket Charlatan, and custom dances, and gestures for each destination. Vacation technically had about 9 vacation destinations with 3 types of weather between them, while Bon Voyage came with only 3 but had hidden lots that were unlockable. Sims 1 vacation had interactable objects that never returned in any future games: beach volleyball, rentable toy boats, snow fight forts, and snowboard half-pipes. Bon Voyage introduced chance cards.
    Music in Sims 2 vs Sims 1: Very subjective, but overall I enjoyed Sims 1's music better most of the time. As Sims 1 EPs came out, different EPs even had different startup music.
    I have been playing The Sims since 2001, when Livin Large came out. My avatar deliberately looks like Chris Roomies from TS1.
  • sabby33sabby33 Posts: 17 Member
    ive been playing the sims since 2000 also!
  • CABALCABAL Posts: 56 Member
    Aside from many thing people mentioned, the one thing I really missed and miss to this day is Command & Conquer references, really loved those GDI and Nod outfits in CAS in the first game, a shame that they didn't make them in sequels where CAS was improved. Also, the most annoying thing about the first game was lack of weekend though, had to spend almost all the time on work and dealing with needs only unless you use cheats to get money.
  • DevalaousDevalaous Posts: 1,286 Member
    I played Sims 1 after 2 and 3, and its kind of shocking how little there is to do in the game that actually matters; theres so little progress to be made aside from basic skills, careers dont matter as you just get booted into a new career, and theres very little to really do. Not to mention all needs decay so fast the game is too much frustration, and you quickly get trapped with a sim too depressed to take care of himself. THere are some cool touches all over the place, but I never feel any progress is made, largely due to motive decay (I buy a meal on a lot to fill hunger by a smidge, which decays more than is recovered by the time its eaten, good balance there Maxis)

    I ended up just downloading a recreation of Sims 1 inside Sims 2, and I have far more fun there.
    CABAL wrote: »
    Aside from many thing people mentioned, the one thing I really missed and miss to this day is Command & Conquer references, really loved those GDI and Nod outfits in CAS in the first game, a shame that they didn't make them in sequels where CAS was improved. Also, the most annoying thing about the first game was lack of weekend though, had to spend almost all the time on work and dealing with needs only unless you use cheats to get money.

    Sims 2 has C&C3 Tiberium Wars as a game you can play on the computer or console in a later expansion, and 3 has actual Tiberium you can collect, that makes you sick if you keep it in your inventory :D Im pretty sure I spotted a Nod symbol on the criminal career's level 10 uniform too. Pretty sure theres more than this, but this is off my memory.

    Sims 4 is where the references stop, not suprising, given by the point TS4 came out, EA had already ruined C&C and pretty much buried its remains.
    Rebuilding Sims 2 inside Sims 3 one lot and sim at a time.

    See my Sims 3 studio for latest progress.
  • knuckledusterknuckleduster Posts: 1,268 Member
    Sims 1 has so much more to interact with throughout the game - the fact that it is challenging to keep your sims needs up, while trying to build a career (ie., Superstar Pack), and the little spontaneous touches throughout that have already been mentioned above (celebrity stalker, raccoons, claire the bear, drew carey showing up, etc.) - the feeling that it was a true simulator.

    Sims 2 definitely was a step up in so many ways - but, like others also mentioned - it was the quirkiness of Sims 1 that I wished they had carried over.

    Sims 1 & 2 are both fully immersible games, to this day and I'm glad we can still play them.
  • damselstonedamselstone Posts: 21 Member
    Don't get me wrong, I absolutely loved TS1, but TS2 gave the opportunity for so many more meaningful moments. Having an actual life cycle, family trees, aspirations, and the university expansion were all killer additions that made TS2 so amazing.
  • WarGreymon77WarGreymon77 Posts: 127 Member
    A couple of things, among others, always bothered me about The Sims 1. Kids never grow up, and there is no Elder life state.
  • PrinceSarahPrinceSarah Posts: 18 Member
    I loved Makin Magic and I will forever be sad about the fact that there was no pack like that for TS2
  • AnmirlaAnmirla Posts: 3,835 Member
    I always think of the original Sims as the blueprints/experimental stage and TS2 as the built game. TS2 added so many core elements to the game that would continue to carry over to future versions - such as aging, natural death and genetics.

    Both of these versions had my attention from the beginning and held that attention with each pack added. Many times, I didn't know I needed something in game until we got it - they were that good.
    Yes, there were items that I would have loved to have seen what more they could have done with them in TS2, but that didn't deter my enjoyment of TS2.

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  • AleksandraAleksiaAleksandraAleksia Posts: 20 Member
    I don't consider Sims 1 as a Sims game, because it actually isn't a game at all. It was a program used for house buyers. In no way was it supposed to be a video game, but when Maxis saw that their users actually had fun in it they figured they could make some money off it. And obviously they made A LOT. But the fact still remains that it was not a game, no matter the expansions they gave to it. At its very core, it's not built good enough to be a proper game. So many other games during its day were far better programmed and had more depth to them than the Sims 1 ever did. The only reason why it became big in the first place was that it was the only life simulation out at the time. There wasn't anything else like it, and people flocked to it for that reason. It wasn't a good game at all. It was terrible at its very core. But it was one of a kind, and people fell for that.

    The Sims 2 was the first Sims game. It was an actual game, purposefully made to be a game in every way. The amount of depth and gameplay it had, just in the base game alone, beat every single expansion Sims 1 had by a long shot. They put effort into it more than the original Sims, because the original Sims was a happy accident.

    I still have and play Sims 1 from time to time, because nostalgia. Out of all the Sims games, Sims 1 has my favorite graphics. When I play a game, I want it to look like a game. I don't want too much realism in my graphics, because that takes away from the game for me. Sims 1 fits that very well. Its gameplay was terrible, but the graphics are amazing. Sims 2 is a very good middle ground between realism and old school, for me. It still had the 'bad' graphics, but a bit more smoothed around the edges.
  • Felicity1169Felicity1169 Posts: 592 Member
    While I like the Sims 2, I always found it restricting in a way compared to the Sims 1. Mostly my issue with the game is tied to the aspiration system which I always felt limited me with what I could do with my sims as they would have break downs if you did not constantly work towards the aapiration goal. It did not help that there were only 6 options available. I also never really played with the premade Sims in 2 either for the same reason, the back stories and preprogrammed events got in the way with I wanted to do with the sim. For example, I always bring Bella back from the dead when I play now. The Sims 1 also had this quirkiness to it that was never fully replicated in any of the sequel games.
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