The Sims 4 Business Chic Kit (DLC)
If your Create-A-Sim sessions run longer than your actual gameplay sessions, this kit has something for you. Around 25 pieces of sharp office wear, but the gaps in body-type polish are hard to ignore.
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About The Sims 4 Business Chic Kit (DLC)
I'll be upfront: strategy is my wheelhouse, not fashion kits. But as someone who has spent embarrassing amounts of time optimizing Sim career paths, I care deeply about whether the wardrobe actually supports the story you're trying to tell. Business Chic, the 40th Kit released for The Sims 4 and a creator collaboration with CC modder Madlen, lands squarely in Create-A-Sim territory. There is no new gameplay loop here, no career mechanic, no office lot. What you get is a focused wardrobe drop aimed at players who want their corporate Sims to look the part. The item count sits at roughly 25 pieces spread across both masculine and feminine frames. On the feminine side, you get full-body sets, skirts, pants, blazers, button-up tops, a quarter-sleeve sweater, and three heel options ranging from a kitty heel to a ribbon-ankle style, plus a knee-height boot. Masculine offerings cover button-ups, a turtleneck, a blazer-with-tie combination, two trouser cuts (one belted and ankle-tapered, one high-waisted and relaxed), and dress shoes in nine color swatches. The swatch variety is a genuine strength, including less common tones like a warm orange that is genuinely hard to find elsewhere in the base wardrobe. Pairing this kit with career paths like the Salaryperson career from Snowy Escape, the Tech Guru or Writer tracks from the base game, or the small business system introduced in the Businesses and Hobbies expansion gives the clothes actual context. The problems are real, though. Community reviewers flagged noticeable texture morphing on plus-sized Sim body types, particularly button textures on blazers that stretch in a way that should have been caught before release. For a kit made by a CC creator, someone who ostensibly knows the engine inside out, that is a quality control miss. There are also no pre-made styled looks bundled in, which means newcomers who are still learning Create-A-Sim will be dropped in front of 25 loose pieces with no assembly guide. Experienced players will not care, but it is worth flagging. And the fundamental friction point that community discussions keep circling back to: the game does not let you freely assign career outfits without using the cheat command sims.modify_career_outfit_in_cas, which undercuts the whole premise of dressing your Sim for work. Who is this actually for? CAS-focused players who spend real time building characters for career-based storytelling, legacy households, or screenshot content. If you cross-reference it with Get to Work, Discover University, or Snowy Escape for the Salaryperson career, the pieces earn their place. If you rarely touch Create-A-Sim and want mechanics, skip it entirely. The kit does what it says on the label, no more, no less, and for a player base that treats the wardrobe as half the game, that is enough to justify the small ask. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Maxis
- Publisher
- Electronic Arts Inc.
- Release Date
- Jan 30, 2025