The Sims taught us how to Get a Life at a time loaded with pop culture touchstones

The Sims
(Image credit: EA)

The 2000s brought us spiral hair gems, Avril Lavigne, and Groovy Chick everything – and also one of the best-selling games of all time: The Sims. The life simulator became a pop-culture phenomenon overnight and a cornerstone of sandbox gaming. Only PC players were able to board the launch bus to Sims city in 2000, however; we had to wait till 2003 to live our Big Brother dreams on PS2. 

So let's fast forward a few years, to when The Sims upped sticks and finally arrived on console, having undergone some serious renovations. It came to us in glorious full 3D, and with a far more nimble camera than the PC version had. Thanks to the analogue sticks, we were spinning around more times than Kylie Minogue as we decorated the kitchen of our Y2K pad, which felt more immersive than it would have from the older version's four static angles.

Show me the Simoleons

The Sims

(Image credit: EA)
SUBSCRIBE!

The only playable mode upon starting the game on PS2 was Get A Life, the series' first dedicated foray into story mode. In it, once you've created your Sim, they fall well and truly on their feet, taking up residence in an extravagantly large mansion. They are then quickly swept into their lover's arms to share a steamy kiss, followed by a blurred-out dip in the infamous heart-shaped hot tub. Living the dream! 

Ah no, dreaming the dream. Just when your Sim seems to be living their best life, they are dragged from their idyllic reverie and slapped with harsh reality by their own mother – and she is far from happy. In truth, she's a nightmare to live with, and a menace for turning the radio on while your poor Sim was trying to have 40 winks. Yet she is surprisingly compliant when you ask her for a few simoleons (the game's currency) – §800, to be precise. 

Your first story goal is to fly the nest. When you move into a new home you have a number of tasks to complete before you can progress. Some goals enable you to access paid services such as housekeeping, but most unlock items in the catalogue so you can purchase them. Although limited, Get A Life holds some items that you won't find elsewhere, such as a Teppanyaki table. The catalogue's also packed with staples that became classics, such as the §80 Werkbunnst Chair – if you know, you know. As you progress through the six stages, levelling up your life gets harder as the unlocks keep flowing. 

You're also able to unlock a series of two-player minigames, adding yet another fresh feature into the mix. Each location lays out a scenario and gives you a typically timed goal for completion. Tasks vary from swindling unsuspecting Sims out of money to making friends with a certain number of 'Townies', and even stealing someone's food (an unforgivable crime). It's a great Sims twist on the typical PvP fare, allowing you to claim sweet victory for tidying up an apartment quicker than the mate sitting beside you. If you'd rather live in domestic harmony, you can run a home in multiplayer freeplay instead.

Sim-ply the best

The Sims

(Image credit: EA)

"The Sims holds up admirably almost 20 years later, and its unique modes make it well worth a revisit – as Avril says, can we make it any more obvious?"

Unlocked once you've got your start in Get A Life, the classic freeform Sims experience is yours with just a tap on 'Play The Sims'. And as much as we love the new modes, classic play still reigns supreme. While adding wallpaper can be a bit of a faff while building, once you're used to the DualShock's sensitivity constructing builds and commanding your Sim is intuitive, meaning you can lead that dream life in no time. 

Having the ability to pan around freely as you build really is a blessing. It only falls down when it comes to furnishings. With technical storage limitations on the console, you're only able to place as much furniture as your Buy Mode meter allows. But if choosing the heartshaped bed over the heart-shaped hot tub is your toughest decision that day, it's not all that bad – you win some, you lose some. 

So whether you're running a harmonious home with a pal in multiplayer or flying solo, The Sims holds up admirably almost 20 years later, and its unique modes make it well worth a revisit – as Avril says, can we make it any more obvious?


This feature first appeared in Play Magazine. For more fantastic features, interviews, reviews, and more, you can subscribe to Play magazine here .

Read more
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 Sims 4
After 3 years away from The Sims 4, it's finally the game I've been waiting to play
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
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 Medieval
The 8 best Sims spin-offs and quirky console exclusives to play right now
The Sims 4 screenshot showing a young woman with shoulder-length wavy brown hair and an academic green coat, her expression surprised
The Sims is back after 25 years, and it's teaching Sims 4 players a lesson in retro life sim difficulty: "Damn this game is hard"
Latest in Simulation
inZOI Character Studio screenshot showing a young woman with short black/pink hair, black cat-like ears, and a black blouse with a bowtie
The creator of upcoming life sim Inzoi says he was "recklessly brave to even think about creating a game of this scale"
Stardew Valley Castle Village mod
Stardew Valley Expanded creator is building an "even more ambitious" mod with a whole new city and "dungeons inspired by The Legend of Zelda"
Guitar Hero
Guitar Hero expert finally annihilates world record 200% speedrun of the game's hardest song after trying and failing 50,000 times
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
Stardew Valley Baldur's Gate 3 mod Baldur's Village
Baldur's Gate 3 director Swen Vincke gives his official approval to the Stardew Valley mod that brings the D&D RPG to Pelican Town
Boro and Alta sit on a bench together in Wanderstop
Wanderstop review: "Exalting the transformative power of tea"
Latest in Features
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 Punisher holding two machine guns in the rain
Daredevil: Born Again - Learn the bullet-riddled comic book history of the Punisher before he officially joins the MCU
A woman in a underwater machine waving during the cinematic teaser for Subnautica 2.
Subnautica 2: Everything we know about the new underwater survival game
Daredevil: Born Again
Who killed [SPOILER] in Daredevil: Born Again episode 3?
The AMD Ryzen 7 8700G being held above a motherboard by a reviewer
AMD's pro-consumer 9070 strategies are exactly why it's primed to dominate the CPU market in 2025