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14 Feb 2002 - 22:50

You not only get to pick the look of your date, you can create the perfect attitude, guaranteeing the best possible outcome while playing footsie under the table. Don't delay and download today. That perfect match is only a click away.

Download The Hot Date Make-A-Date Tool (2.74 Mb)


Just in time for Valentine's, a chance to make your own date! You not only get to pick the look of your date, you can create the perfect attitude, guaranteeing the best possible outcome while playing footsie under the table. Don't delay and download today. That perfect match is only a click away.

Here’s how you can personalize your dates:

  • Name and biography
  • Gender, body type (thin, fit, fat) and skin tone. Date Maker will see what skins you have in your game and you can pick from that list (head and body).
  • Personality/Astrological Sign. Just like it is in Create-A-Sim.
  • Interests
  • Career field and career level.

After you are done creating your date, the Make-A-Date tool will send you to the appropriate folder for your new townie (C:\ProgramFiles\Maxis \TheSims\Template NPC). This is where you should save your new Townie.

Next you will need to make some room for your new Townie. The Hot Date tool will let you 'activate' your new townie with the Townie Manager feature.

  • Here’s how it works: Select the Neighborhood you want your new Townie to be in.
  • Select the Townie you want to replace.
  • Select the new Townie you want to move in.
  • Confirm and voila!

When that is complete, it will be time to look downtown for your new date!

If you have downloaded a previous version of the Make-A-Date tool, this latest version will un-install any previous versions for you. Just double-click the executable to un-install and to install.

  • This version includes fixes for the following issues: Support for UK users (no more townies names Randy).
  • Interests are now showing up correctly.
  • Personality traits are now accurate.
  • Re-write file bug now fixed.

NOTE: Make sure your desktop resolution is set to High Color 16-bit color or higher or your pictures might look very strange!

Good luck!

14 Feb 2002 - 22:40

GameSpot has the first world-wide exclusive preview of TheSims Vacation! Screenshots included for your viewing pleasure.

Go To GameSpot.com


The Sims: Vacation Preview

By Amer Ajami

Isn't it about time your sims had a break? Read our preview of Vacation and learn all about this exciting add-on.

There's no doubt about The Sims' worldwide popularity. The numbers don't lie--since the release of the first game in May 2000, Maxis' Sims franchise has sold well over 2.6 million units in North America alone, and significantly more if you consider Europe and Australia. Obviously, the notion of having to manage all aspects of a family, from building a dream house to finding the ideal career, has struck a chord among gamers from all walks of life. And as we've stated before, because The Sims emulates common, everyday life, it has an infinite amount of content from which to draw upon for add-ons and expansion packs. And in fact, there have been three expansion packs for the game already--Livin' Large, House Party, and Hot Date--each of which adds more objects to decorate your house with and expands the basic gameplay structure of the original The Sims a little bit.

The Sims Vacation

The wildest tangent (and the best-selling, incidentally) of these expansion packs was Hot Date, as it was the first time that the game let your sims initiate and maintain a social life outside of the house--something fans of the series have been craving for a long time. The designers at Maxis are proud of what they accomplished with Hot Date. The ability to take your sims to a neutral downtown area that you could construct from the ground up, if you so wished, was a new direction for the Sims franchise. But admittedly, the designers wanted to do more--they wanted sims to have a more fulfilling life outside of their homes. Hot Date let you explore a downtown area of shops, restaurants, and boutiques, yes, but you could only take one sim and a date with you. And there was a clear separation between the downtown area and your sims' house, in that time stood still while you were out on your date and nothing that you did in downtown really affected your normal life back home.

This desire to improve upon the concepts introduced by Hot Date led to the creation of The Sims' fourth expansion pack, Vacation. Of course, like the other add-ons, Vacation will add hundreds of new household objects, including furniture and appliances, as well as new décor themes and new construction tools that make adding new floors to your existing house easier than before. But the expansion pack will focus on several new gameplay elements that will be truly unique to The Sims universe, the most important of which are new familial relationships between sims parents and their sims children and an entirely new resort area called Vacation Island. It's this latter addition that will be the biggest draw for fans of The Sims.

The Sims Vacation

The Vacation Island area is a lot like Downtown from Hot Date. It's a separate area that your Sims will be able to go to for a little R&R by simply calling a cab, and like Downtown, Vacation Island is completely customizable. This destination resort--it's actually three resorts in one--has it all, including camping grounds, fishing spots, sandy beaches, and powdery snow, and you can build it and expand upon it as you see fit. You'll have an unlimited budget with which to build hotel resorts, erect equipment rental shacks, and even set up an entire carnival--complete with carnies--in order to keep your sims entertained.

Let's take a closer look at what's involved in taking a vacation.

Not Exactly the Griswalds

The Sims Vacation

Perhaps Chevy Chase put it best when he said that getting there was half the fun of a vacation. Thankfully, getting to Vacation Island won't exactly be as disaster-ridden as the Griswalds' road trip in National Lampoon's Vacation. In fact, getting your sims to take a vacation will be a cinch. Simply pick up the phone, call a cab, and your sims will be whisked away to an island resort. When you get to Vacation Island, time back home will stand still, much like it did when you left the house in Hot Date, but with a few changes. The designers at Maxis didn't want your sims to go on vacation forever, so they've added some gameplay mechanics that'll keep a constant level of pressure on you while away from home. The first, and most basic, of these changes is that your friendships will decay while you're away, even though time is technically standing still. In order to keep your friendship scores intact, you'll have to buy postcards and send them back home to all your buddies, lest they start resenting your sim and his or her new tan.

The other form of constant "pressure" on your sims will be one that most people are all too familiar with: money problems. While you have an unlimited budget with which to build and create your own Vacation Island, much like you designed your Downtown in Hot Date, you'll have to carefully manage your simolian budget while your family is actually on vacation at the island resort. Everything costs money on the island. Want to set up a beach volleyball court? That'll cost you. Want to build a snowman? You'll have to rent the equipment to do so, and that'll cost you. Want to buy gifts from the gift shop? Yup, that'll cost you. Even the hotels will charge you on a nightly basis for every one of your family members. The Maxis designers are still deciding whether to make this budget separate from your savings back home or not, but the length of your stay on the island will be directly determined by how well you manage your funds.

The Sims Vacation

Of course, there will be ways to offset this financial burden. For one thing, Vacation Island will have several boardwalks with games that feature Maxis' sense of humor--games like Whack-a-Will and arcade cabinets of Sim Mars and Seal Clubber 2: Barley's Revenge. Strewn among these games will be slot machines that will occasionally pay out some money that your sims can use to extend the length of their vacation. Your sims will also be able to rent a metal detector from one of the island's equipment shacks and scour the sand for coins and other valuable items that'll also let them stay longer. You can even go the cheap route and forgo hotels altogether in favor of tents and igloos. Sure, sleeping under the stars will degrade your sims' comfort levels a bit, but it'll be a lot cheaper than paying for an expensive hotel room. Besides, your sims will be able to mess around inside the tents the same way they did in the restaurant booth in Hot Date.

Fun for the Whole Family

Vacation will also introduce the concept of souvenirs to The Sims. These collectible items can be acquired many ways--you can cash in your tokens from carnival games, you can find them with your metal detector, or you can simply buy them from the gift shop--and they vary wildly. Souvenirs are usually simple relics, and they include everything from a quartz crystal to a wooden statue of an ancient fertility god--you can even find a pirate's buried treasure chest. When you acquire them, souvenirs automatically go into your sims' inventory, and when your sims go back home, they'll appear in a specially made cabinet and will increase the value of all the household items and furniture within their vicinity. They'll also attract any houseguests you have, and if you gather a large enough crowd around this cabinet, your sim will actually reminisce about the vacation through thought bubbles. If you want, you can also pick up any of these souvenirs and place them anywhere in your house.

The Sims Vacation

The Sims: Vacation will also have certain types of items that can't be found or bought. Maxis is referring to these as "super souvenirs," and they're intended to reward players who manage to pull off a successful vacation. After all, the game will let you take your entire family with you to Vacation Island, and kids have a notorious tendency toward deviance when on vacation. Whenever your kids' moods drop below a certain level, they'll start to become rowdy and end up performing headache-inducing acts like kicking passersby, stealing items from the gift shop, shoving carnies, force burping, armpit farting, and throwing temper tantrums. If the island's vacation director--a character that Maxis likens to Hot Date's cranky old lady--catches your Sims' kids being bad, you'll get slapped with a hefty fine. Of course, new social interactions like scolding or play fighting should keep your kids in line and your sanity in check. There are also "family fun" objects, as Maxis calls them, that'll raise the spirits of your entire family at once. These include things like snowmen and sandcastles, which can be constructed by all members of the family at once. If you do manage to keep the mood levels of all your family members high throughout the course of your vacation, you'll be rewarded with the super souvenir--like a massive golden sun--which amplifies the social and financial bonuses of the standard souvenirs.

The Sims Vacation

Of course, Vacation will be a Sims game, and when you get right down to it, most Sims players just want to collect more stuff. Obviously, Vacation will deliver. The expansion pack is going to have 143 new objects--not counting all the souvenirs--like a polar bear rug, picnic blanket, miniature golf castles, venetian blinds, lodge doors, reversible art deco windows, marble columns, winding waterslides, stone fireplaces, and many types of new foliage. And what's more, all the items from Vacation Island--the arcade machines, the beach chairs, you name it--can be bought and placed in your home. The resort has three separate themes, so there'll be plenty of new objects for closet interior decorators to enjoy.

Maxis' previous expansion packs for The Sims have consistently been satisfying additions to the original game, and we have no doubt that Vacation will be no different. Naturally, the company plans on creating a strong Web community for Vacation, as it does with all its games, so you can expect a feature like "island exchange" to be available right around the time of this add-on's release. Look for it in late March.

14 Feb 2002 - 22:30

Please take a few days to try the new Make-A-Date tool as we will open the new Date Exchange very soon!

14 Feb 2002 - 22:20

We would like to thank everyone that entered, winners will be presented soon.

11 Feb 2002 - 22:00

The Hot Date patch is back! We would like to thank all of you for your continued patience and support. This patch has been through thorough testing and we are confident that this will remedy the issues the other patch created and also fix the previously known shipped issues. Please report any issues you experience on the BBS.

Go To Hot Date Patch

7 Feb 2002 - 22:10

The judges have made their decisions and chosen the winning skins from the TSO Skins Contest. Winning skins and artist info is available in the events area.

Go To Events

7 Feb 2002 - 22:00

Enter the "I'm Hot, I'm Not" Skin Contest and you might win $250! Entries must be received by February 13th.

Go To Events

31 Jan 2002 - 22:10

Enter the "I'm Hot, I'm Not" Skin Contest and you might win $250!

Go To Events

31 Jan 2002 - 22:00

The Sims™ Virtual Date is a wild dating game with a digital hunk or babe. Wendy or Richard? Benny or Crystal? Disco or Opera? Beach or the Zoo? You make the call! Get lucky and you could score (tokens, that is...).

Go To Pogo.com

30 Jan 2002 - 22:00

Here is a quick interview with Sid Meier on EA.com where he chats about SimGolf and working with Will Wright.

Go To EA.com


Sid Meier Talks About Sid Meier's SimGolf

While almost 3 years have passed since Sid Meier and Electronic Arts first collaborated on Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri, Sid Meier's name is still synonymous with strategy. Last year, he completed the third edition to his signature turn-based strategy series, Civilization. And instead of relaxing, Mr. Meier and his team at Firaxis again partnered with Electronic Arts and Maxis to create the next game in the popular Sim series, Sid Meier's SimGolf.

On Friday, Sid Meier's SimGolf arrived at Electronic Arts and retailer's shelves nationwide as players nationwide rediscovered that Meier's formula for highly-addictive gameplay can easily make hours evaporate for anyone (whether they enjoy a day on the golf course or not).

We had a chance to ask Meier a few questions to delve a little further into how Sid Meier's SimGolf came to be.

EA GAMES: Sid, you've already had a great 2001 with the release of Civilization III and it comes as no surprise that even after finishing such a massive undertaking, you've already finished another game. How did the initial idea that became Sid Meier's SimGolf come about?

Sid: The idea for this game came last summer as I was at the library leafing through a golfing magazine. In the middle of the magazine was this cool map showing a lovely piece of land with a stream, hills, grass, trees, and wetlands. There was a contest to use this piece of land to design the three most interesting, varied, and attractive golf holes possible. Hey, (I said to myself, quietly) that might make a cool computer game. Nobody had really made a fun game out of designing and building a golf course. So I grabbed some trees and textures from Gettysburg, built a couple of golfer animations in Poser, and threw together a quick prototype and started playing.

EA GAMES: SimGolf seems to take all the best elements of The Sims and your turn-based experience and stitch them together into a really fun game that even non-golfers can enjoy. What type of player do you think would have the most fun with the game?

Sid: SimGolf has something for everyone: golf course design, building, managing, playing the course and a lot of fun player and story customization. I think this game will appeal to fans of sims games and gamers that have played and enjoyed some of my other titles like Railroad Tycoon and Civilization. You don't have to be an avid golfer or a fan of golf simulations to enjoy this game but I think if you do play those games you'll find that it can test your knowledge of golf and course design as well. There really is something for everyone here.

EA GAMES: The game takes place on 16 fictional courses worldwide. Are any of them directly inspired by courses that you've played on?

Sid: Players may develop property in 16 different locations around the world and can choose from 4 different environments from which to play. Many of the elements in the four environments are inspired by real courses around the world. You may build an Eastern Woodlands course (grass, trees, lakes, ducks) or an English links course (heather, sheep and pot bunkers). They'll also be a Southwest Desert course (sand, cactus, and target golf) and a lush Tropical course (beaches, palm trees, and crocodiles). In addition, you can customize your courses with landmarks reminiscent of some of the most famous courses.

EA GAMES: In the past you've stated that the SimCity series inspired you to create Civilization. How does it feel to finally have a chance to collaborate on a game with SimCity's creator, Will Wright?

Sid: I've always been a big fan of Will's games and have spent countless hours playing Simcity and the Sims. Of course, being a game designer, I soon came to the conclusion that I'd like to write a game like this - to borrow some of the ideas that Will has pioneered and combine them with my own. Once we (Firaxis) began design on SimGolf we presented it to Will and his group at Maxis. While all the coding and design was completed at Firaxis, Maxis has been very supportive and has given us some great design feedback. The game has been a lot of fun to work on and I think once you play SimGolf you'll find it's a totally unique experience.

EA GAMES: Who's the better golfer?

Sid: That's yet to be determined Happy

EA GAMES: Considering that you and Wright are considered household names in the gaming industry, was it challenging to get all of your ideas into SimGolf?

Sid: Actually, I'm amazed at the number and variety of features we were able to put in the game. Not only can you build an endless variety of courses, you can then customize your golfers, get to know their different personalities, create your own stories for the golfers, customize a world class golf pro, play your courses, hold sanctioned championship tournaments at your resort, entice the rich and famous to build homes on your courses…the fun goes on and on…

EA GAMES: Golf really is a lot like turn-based strategy. You have to figure out how one move will affect your next move. How closely does SimGolf's strategy elements simulate the intricate balance that you've achieved in your other games?

Sid: The design and gameplay philosophy of SimGolf is very similar to some of my other games. A golf course is really just a big playground for grown-ups - whether you're a golfer or not, I think player's will find lots of different ways to play and explore this world. We've come a long way from the earliest prototype - but always with the idea of leaving players free to choose their own path. You can create the world's most beautiful, most challenging, or most outrageous course -- the choice is yours. You can pamper your players with lovely gardens, comfy benches, and a luxury hotel or torment them with monstrous sand traps, tacky vacation homes, and spine-chilling golf shots -- the possibilities are endless.

EA GAMES: Now that SimGolf is done, what next? Maybe play a little real golf?

Sid: We've got a lot exciting ideas in the pipeline but we're not ready to talk about them yet. As always, we'll let you know as soon as we can.

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