Sims Sessions is a strange music festival that lacks the spectacle of other limited-time events

Sims Sessions
(Image credit: EA / Maxis)

It's a sunny Sunday in San Myshuno and, the minute the clock strikes midday, my budding interior designer/emerging musical talent sim grabs the festival ticket in her inventory and makes the quick ride over to Magnolia Blossom Park for Sims Sessions. This one-day festival arrives every Sunday in The Sims 4, and here in the real world, the event will only run from June 29 - July 7, meaning anyone who wants to catch the performances will need to make sure they head over to the park during this period. The Sims Sessions is the first limited-time event that The Sims 4 has ever held, and, unfortunately, it really shows.

The main draw of Sims Sessions is the performances of three real-world musicians – Bebe Rexha, Glass Animals, and Joy Oladokun – who'll each perform one of their tracks completely in Simlish for your festival-goers. Thankfully, this part of the Sims Sessions festival is brilliantly done. At the center of the festival area is a wooden stage, and the moment one of the performers emerges, your sim and everyone else attending automatically rushes over to watch. They each take a moment to greet the crowd, and then move behind the piano to perform. 

Sims Sessions

(Image credit: EA / Maxis)

Even in Simlish, the songs are utterly recognizable, and I found myself watching all three of the acts in real-time with almost the same enthusiasm as my whooping sim – look, it's been a long lockdown, okay? Joy Oladokun opens the show with her track 'Breathe Again', followed after a short break by Glass Animals' frontman Dave Bayley, while Bebe Rexha headlines with her track, 'Sabotage'. Each of the performers is brought to life excellently as a sim, with uncanny likeness, their own mannerisms, and performance quirks. As a performance piece, it's impressive and sounds brilliant. It's just a shame that the actual event feels like such a letdown.

Listen in

Sims Sessions screenshots

(Image credit: EA / Maxis)

The moment my Sim arrives at Sims Sessions, it's clear that it's a little less grand than I'd imagined it would be. For a start, it's tucked away in a corner of Magnolia Blossom Park – a recreational site in the base game neighborhood of Willow Creek – rather than its own venue. For a game with so many different neighborhoods and creative themes, it's a shame to not see Sims Sessions appear as a temporary destination in its own right. The actual festival site is underwhelming, the aforementioned wooden stage adorned with a few festoon lights, and flanked on one side by a ramshackle row of three tents. Opposite these tents is a merch stand, which the developer promised would include "artist-themed merchandise", but is actually a selection of themed t-shirts. You can access these from your household's Create-a-Sim menu and add them to your outfits. 

Checking out or running the craft table are your only other options beyond interacting with other sims, buying tees, or watching the performances though. For my sim, someone had set up a small array of awkwardly carved wooden figures, which only highlighted the feeling that Sims Sessions is less of a high-profile music festival and more of an English village fete, but with fewer tombolas. Even the food on hand was limited to carrot cupcakes and a sad slice of cheese pizza, rather than the "snack like a rockstar" options teased by the event promotional details. How the local council managed to bag such A-list musical performances we'll never know.

Sims Sessions

(Image credit: EA / Maxis)

The entire experience was wrapped up by the entire festival site unceremoniously disappearing just past 2am. My sim was singing along while playing the piano, as you're able to do after Bebe Rexha packs up, even picking up a few tips along the way, and then suddenly everyone fled the festival in one long line. A few in-game minutes later, the entire festival was just a memory, like some kind of Cinderella moment. It's worth noting that this disappearing act is the normal behavior for ongoing Sims events, like the Spice Festival or Flea Market pop-ups that were introduced with various expansions. But, for a special, limited-time event like Sims Sessions that hasn't been attempted before in-game, treating it with the same rules as events players have experienced for years felt too abrupt, reducing the spectacle of the event to just another dot on your Sims' calendar. After all, what music festival do you know that really ends at 2am? 

In an industry where limited-time events and now live events are becoming much more common, Maxis and EA have missed an opportunity to make Sims Sessions a much grander affair. Fortnite has set the bar high when it comes to live events, with Epic's battle royale title hosting movie screenings, big end-of-season spectacles, musical performances, and other one-off blowouts, but now others are following suit. Most recently, Call of Duty: Warzone launched its new season with a series of in-game events that drastically changed the map – a spectacle that the community didn't want to risk missing, crashing the game's servers. Live events get players re-engaged and, perhaps more importantly, it gets them talking.  

Despite the fact that Sims Sessions does follow The Sims' series tradition of working with big-name artists – which in the past have included talents like Katy Perry, Lizzo, and Jason Derulo – I expected this to be given more pomp and ceremony than it received. 

For tips on how to get the most out of your Sims game, check out our guides below:

Sims 4 cheats | Best Sims 4 mods | How to get started in The Sims 4 | How to fill out reports in The Sims 4 | How to turn furniture in The Sims 4 | How to age up a toddler in The Sims 4 | How to get more money in The Sims 4 | Sims 4 multiplayer | The Sims 4 relationship cheats | The Sims 4 skill cheats | The Sims 4 free build cheat | The Sims 4 career cheats | The Sims 4 debug cheat 

Sam Loveridge
Brand Director, 12DOVE

Sam Loveridge is the Brand Director and former Global Editor-in-Chief of GamesRadar. She joined the team in August 2017. Sam came to GamesRadar after working at TrustedReviews, Digital Spy, and Fandom, following the completion of an MA in Journalism. In her time, she's also had appearances on The Guardian, BBC, and more. Her experience has seen her cover console and PC games, along with gaming hardware, for a decade, and for GamesRadar, she's in charge of the site's overall direction, managing the team, and making sure it's the best it can be. Her gaming passions lie with weird simulation games, big open-world RPGs, and beautifully crafted indies. She plays across all platforms, and specializes in titles like Pokemon, Assassin's Creed, The Sims, and more. Basically, she loves all games that aren't sports or fighting titles! In her spare time, Sam likes to live like Stardew Valley by cooking and baking, growing vegetables, and enjoying life in the countryside.

Read more
The Sims 4
After 3 years away from The Sims 4, it's finally the game I've been waiting to play
The Sims 2
The Sims has always been a little broken, and the Legacy Collections are preserving the experience of '00s PC gaming warts and all
The Sims 2
After 11 years, The Sims 2 returns with a re-release on the EA App and Steam – and it's still as wonderfully janky as it was in 2004
The best Sims 4 expansion packs: a screenshot of the cover for the Life and Death pack.
The best Sims 4 expansion packs to buy right now
The Sims 2 screenshot of two sims fighting and onlookers cheering or booing for them
The rise, fall, and rise again of The Sims: 10 moments that shaped EA's 25-year life sim legacy
Big in 2025 Two Point Museum montage, showing a family in front of a fossil, more fossils, a zoomed out museum, and a haunted hand
"Player expression" has been vital for Two Point Museum, whether you're displaying captured ghosts or frozen cavemen in your dream exhibit
Latest in The Sims
A shop in The Sims 4 Businesses and Hobbies
How to start a small business in The Sims 4 Businesses and Hobbies
A Sim celebrates his tattoo shop in The Sims 4 Businesses and Hobbies
How to complete The Sims 4 Esteemed Entrepreneur aspiration in Businesses and Hobbies
Paralives
The Sims 4's colorful competitor Paralives is bringing one of my favorite features from The Sims 3 back – the ability to customize literally everything
inZOI Character Studio trailer showing a young woman with ginger-y long hair and a white baseball cap smiling, her hand against her chin
The Sims 4's hyper-realistic competitor inZOI will only "sort of" have sex – but I'm sure a Wicked Whims-style mod will take care of the rest
The Sims 4 screenshot showing a young woman with shoulder-length wavy brown hair and an academic green coat, her expression surprised
New Sims 4 update adds burglars, customizable tattoos – and a "horrific bug" that makes children pregnant: "This is an actual nightmare"
The Sims 4 burglar
After 16 years, EA brings burglars back in The Sims 4 ahead of its Businesses and Hobbies expansion – but that's not all
Latest in Features
Key art for Assassin's Creed Rogue Remastered showing Shay Patrick Cormac in a black and red outfit that's a cross between Assassin and Templar armor, with his ship The Morrigan behind him
Assassin's Creed Shadows can wait – I spent 40 hours mopping up the map in the one game in the series everyone skipped
Avowed screenshot showing a corpse-like figure's face with glowing purple mushroom/spore growths
I thought I was going evil in Avowed, but one quest changed everything I thought I knew about morality in this RPG
Yakuza 0
10 years on, Yakuza 0 is still one of the strongest entry points to a franchise ever made
The Witcher 3 screenshot of Geralt
Avowed and Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 tap into the same thing that makes The Witcher 3 so compelling – and it's something I'm always looking for in RPGs
Marvel Rivals Spider-Man
Spider-Man has become every Marvel Rivals player's worst nightmare
The Iron Mask
The 32 greatest swashbuckler movies ever made