The Sims™ 4 Bundle - Cats & Dogs, Parenthood, Toddler Stuff (DLC)
Three Sims 4 DLC packs in one shot: furry companions and a vet career, a deep family-values system for raising kids across every life stage, and toddler-focused items to flesh out the youngest household members.
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About The Sims™ 4 Bundle - Cats & Dogs, Parenthood, Toddler Stuff (DLC)
If you run a family-oriented save file in The Sims 4, this bundle is close to the most targeted collection EA has put together for that playstyle. Each of the three packs layers onto a different slice of domestic life, and together they create a surprisingly coherent loop: you raise toddlers with the Toddler Stuff items, push them through childhood and adolescence using Parenthood's character system, and let a dog or cat sit at the center of household chaos the whole time. Cats and Dogs is the headliner and the most divisive of the three. The Create-a-Pet tool is genuinely deep, letting you pick breeds, crossbreed, sculpt body shapes, apply paint patterns, and assign traits that drive distinct AI behavior: an excitable dog will jump at every Sim while an aggressive one will bark and growl. The new world, Brindleton Bay, has four distinct neighborhoods including Cavalier Cove for hiking trails, Whiskerman's Wharf for cats to haunt the docks, and Deadgrass Isle with its stray-animal population. Where the pack draws consistent criticism is the non-controllable pet design: you cannot directly play as a cat or dog, you cannot see their needs bar, and you manage them by asking your Sim to check what is wrong. The vet clinic career is there and involves diagnosing symptoms, selecting compatible medicines, and deciding between medication and surgery, but it becomes repetitive fast. Cats and Dogs is honestly closer to a very good game pack than a full expansion in terms of gameplay breadth, though the sheer volume of new build-buy items and CAS options softens that blow considerably. Parenthood is where the bundle earns its keep for anyone who thinks in generations. The pack introduces a five-axis Character Values system covering Responsibility, Emotional Control, Conflict Resolution, Manners, and Empathy. Every mundane action from a toddler setting the table to a teen sneaking out nudges those meters, and when your Sim ages into young adulthood those values crystallize into permanent inherited traits. Raise a neglectful household and your adult Sim may carry the Irresponsible or Insensitive traits for life. Raise them carefully and the Compassionate or Responsible traits open up new social options well into late-game play. The Parenting Skill levels up through interaction and unlocks abilities like Full Parent Mode, grounding, time-outs, and mood-swing counseling for angsty teens. School projects, sibling rivalry interactions, and a family bulletin board all feed the same system. There is no new world, but unlike Cats and Dogs, Parenthood layers into every existing save without asking you to go anywhere specific. Toddler Stuff is the lightest of the three: it is a stuff pack, not a game pack or expansion, so the scope is furniture, clothing, and a handful of items that primarily serve the youngest household members. Manage expectations accordingly. It pairs with Parenthood mechanically because toddler character-value interactions begin the moment a Sim can talk, so having more toddler-age objects creates more opportunities to nudge those early meters. Think of it as the furniture layer to Parenthood's gameplay layer. On Xbox, the controller experience for these packs is functional but slightly fiddlier than on PC, particularly in Create-a-Pet where precision sculpting is harder with a thumbstick. That is a known console-side compromise, not a deal-breaker, but worth flagging. The bundle makes the most sense for players who already spend time with family-play saves and want genuine mechanical consequences to go alongside the life-stage storytelling. If your Sims are mostly single adults living alone or you build more than you play, two of these three packs will sit largely unused. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- EA Maxis
- Publisher
- Electronic Arts Inc.
- Release Date
- Oct 2, 2018