The Sims 4 Bundle Pack: Outdoor Retreat and Cool Kitchen Stuff Pack (DLC) Origin Key
Two Sims 4 DLC packs in one key: Outdoor Retreat sends your Sims camping in Granite Falls with a full herbalism skill tree, while Cool Kitchen Stuff drops a mood-altering ice cream machine into their kitchen.
Compare Prices(0 stores)
Loading prices...
We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.
Screenshots & Media
About The Sims 4 Bundle Pack: Outdoor Retreat and Cool Kitchen Stuff Pack (DLC) Origin Key
This bundle pairs two packs that sit at opposite ends of the Sims 4 DLC spectrum. Outdoor Retreat is a Game Pack, meaning it sits between a Stuff Pack and a full Expansion in scope. It introduces Granite Falls, a dedicated vacation world where Sims rent campsites, modest cabins, or a full lodge for up to seven in-game days. The world has three distinct zones, including a hidden Deep Woods area home to a reclusive Hermit who teaches rare herbal recipes once you earn their friendship. The Herbalism skill is the pack's mechanical backbone: you gather ten new herb types and a new insect collection across Granite Falls, then craft thirteen herbal remedies with practical effects ranging from fertilizer to mood-altering potions. A new Outdoor Enthusiast aspiration tracks your progress through all of this and awards a reward trait that lets Sims genuinely enjoy roughing it rather than complaining every ten seconds. Campfire storytelling, horseshoe courts, the Weenie Roast social event, and portable tents you can pitch on any lot round out the activity list. The honest criticism is that almost all of that content is locked behind the vacation mechanic. Your Sim has to actively choose to travel there, pay daily rental costs, and budget for supplies, which creates a friction wall between normal play sessions and the new content. Players who want outdoor flavour baked into their regular home life will feel that separation keenly. Cool Kitchen Stuff is a leaner proposition. It is a Stuff Pack, which means it exists primarily to add objects and CAS items to your game. The headline object is the Sweet Tooth Ice Cream Machine, which lets Sims craft around 30 flavors unlocked progressively by Cooking skill level. Quality scales with that skill too, so a level-10 cook produces significantly better results. Several special flavors do genuinely interesting things: Chilling Mocha turns the Sim blue and unlocks a Chill Touch mischief interaction on other Sims, Dragon's Breath triggers fire-burp animations, and Plant Matter temporarily greens your Sim out like a PlantSim state. Toppings and garnishes add further customization. The rest of the pack is kitchen furniture: one new stove, one fridge, matching countertops and cabinets in a clean modern style. Community feedback has consistently pointed out that the new appliances have weaker in-game stats than some base-game equivalents, which is a fair complaint. The CAS additions are also thin, with nothing for children and a clothing selection that reviewers have described as underwhelming. If you own the Get to Work expansion, ice cream batches can also be sold at a retail store, which is a small but worthwhile cross-pack interaction. As a bundle the two packs complement each other better than you might expect. Outdoor Retreat's herbalism remedies can affect your Sim's mood state, and those mood states interact directly with how well the ice cream machine performs via Cooking skill checks. The tent from Outdoor Retreat is genuinely portable and can be used on any lot, which means build-focused players get some cross-utility there too. Neither pack is a standalone system-changer; both are content layers that reward players who already have a healthy base game save and want new activities to weave in. If you are a new Sims 4 player, the base game should come first. If you are an established player who has been running out of things to do and wants a skill loop with real depth, Outdoor Retreat is the stronger of the two. Cool Kitchen is best evaluated as a kitchen aesthetics upgrade with a fun interactive centerpiece thrown in. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- Memory
- 2 GB RAM
- Graphics
- 128 MB VRAM - NVIDIA GeForce 6600 / ATI Radeon X1300 / Intel GMA X4500
- Processor
- 1.8 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo / AMD Athlon 64 Dual-Core 4000+
- System requirements
- Windows XP (SP3) / Windows Vista (SP2) / Windows 7 (SP1) / Windows 8 / Windows 8.1
Recommended
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- Storage
- 10 GB
- Graphics
- NVIDIA GTX 650
- Processor
- Intel core i5, AMD Athlon X4
- System requirements
- 64 Bit Windows 7, 8, or 8.1
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- EA Maxis
- Publisher
- Electronic Arts Inc.
- Release Date
- Jan 14, 2015