Compare The Sims 4 Courtyard Oasis Kit (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Maxis. Published by Electronic Arts Inc.. Released on 5/18/2021. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Simulation.

Builders hunting for a coherent Moroccan-inspired palette will find exactly what they need here, but anyone expecting gameplay depth should look elsewhere in the Sims 4 DLC catalogue.

I'll be honest: my first instinct when EA announced the Kits format was skepticism. Micro-content drops with a singular focus felt like a monetisation move dressed up as creative freedom. Courtyard Oasis, though, is one of the better arguments for the format actually working, at least if you sit firmly in the builder camp. What you get is a tightly focused Build/Buy collection of 29 objects, all pulling from the same Moroccan riad reference point. The structural pieces are the headline attraction: wide archway doors with intricate lattice detailing, matching tall windows with carved wooden frames, ornate columns, and a rose-petal fountain that functions as a genuine centrepiece rather than an afterthought. The floor and wall tiles ship with multiple swatches that run from bold terracotta and cobalt patterns to more restrained neutral options, which is smart design because it lets the kit slot into builds that do not want to go full maximalist. Furniture covers a sofa and chair set with filigree-patterned textiles, octagonal and small circular side tables, glass-and-metal lanterns in freestanding and wall-mounted variants that share matching swatches, a decorative vase, a rug, and two distinct plants. One of those plants is genuinely oversized in small rooms, though the scale-down cheat handles that. The honest limitation is scope. This is a build-mode-only kit. There is no new gameplay mechanic, no new social interaction tied to the fountain, no career or aspiration hook. If you buy Sims 4 expansions for the gameplay systems, this kit gives you nothing. The items are also weighted heavily toward outdoor courtyard spaces and larger footprint builds; the tall archway doors and full-height windows look awkward crammed into a small starter home. Players running compact lots may find half the catalogue impractical without creative workarounds. Where it genuinely earns its keep is in combination with City Living's San Myshuno apartments or the Jungle Adventure world, where the architectural language fits naturally and gives storytellers a visual vocabulary that the base game's European-suburban defaults never offered. The cohesion across the whole kit is also notable. The swatches across pillars, tiles, furniture, and lighting were clearly designed to work together, which is not always a given with Sims 4 content drops. Steam user sentiment sits at roughly 78 percent positive across a small sample, and the broader Sims community has generally treated Courtyard Oasis as one of the stronger kits relative to the format's mixed overall reputation. The kit format itself drew criticism at launch for price-per-item value versus older stuff packs, a fair debate, but Courtyard Oasis came out ahead of that comparison in most community assessments. For a strategy-minded buyer evaluating the Sims 4 DLC stack, the calculus is straightforward: if you have City Living or Jungle Adventure and you build frequently, this slot fits cleanly. If you are still filling out gameplay-critical expansions, come back to this one later. Diego, Scout Team

The Sims 4 Courtyard Oasis Kit (DLC)
CasualSimulation

The Sims 4 Courtyard Oasis Kit (DLC)

May 18, 2021MaxisElectronic Arts Inc.
GamerScout Says

Builders hunting for a coherent Moroccan-inspired palette will find exactly what they need here, but anyone expecting gameplay depth should look elsewhere in the Sims 4 DLC catalogue.

PC
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About The Sims 4 Courtyard Oasis Kit (DLC)

I'll be honest: my first instinct when EA announced the Kits format was skepticism. Micro-content drops with a singular focus felt like a monetisation move dressed up as creative freedom. Courtyard Oasis, though, is one of the better arguments for the format actually working, at least if you sit firmly in the builder camp. What you get is a tightly focused Build/Buy collection of 29 objects, all pulling from the same Moroccan riad reference point. The structural pieces are the headline attraction: wide archway doors with intricate lattice detailing, matching tall windows with carved wooden frames, ornate columns, and a rose-petal fountain that functions as a genuine centrepiece rather than an afterthought. The floor and wall tiles ship with multiple swatches that run from bold terracotta and cobalt patterns to more restrained neutral options, which is smart design because it lets the kit slot into builds that do not want to go full maximalist. Furniture covers a sofa and chair set with filigree-patterned textiles, octagonal and small circular side tables, glass-and-metal lanterns in freestanding and wall-mounted variants that share matching swatches, a decorative vase, a rug, and two distinct plants. One of those plants is genuinely oversized in small rooms, though the scale-down cheat handles that. The honest limitation is scope. This is a build-mode-only kit. There is no new gameplay mechanic, no new social interaction tied to the fountain, no career or aspiration hook. If you buy Sims 4 expansions for the gameplay systems, this kit gives you nothing. The items are also weighted heavily toward outdoor courtyard spaces and larger footprint builds; the tall archway doors and full-height windows look awkward crammed into a small starter home. Players running compact lots may find half the catalogue impractical without creative workarounds. Where it genuinely earns its keep is in combination with City Living's San Myshuno apartments or the Jungle Adventure world, where the architectural language fits naturally and gives storytellers a visual vocabulary that the base game's European-suburban defaults never offered. The cohesion across the whole kit is also notable. The swatches across pillars, tiles, furniture, and lighting were clearly designed to work together, which is not always a given with Sims 4 content drops. Steam user sentiment sits at roughly 78 percent positive across a small sample, and the broader Sims community has generally treated Courtyard Oasis as one of the stronger kits relative to the format's mixed overall reputation. The kit format itself drew criticism at launch for price-per-item value versus older stuff packs, a fair debate, but Courtyard Oasis came out ahead of that comparison in most community assessments. For a strategy-minded buyer evaluating the Sims 4 DLC stack, the calculus is straightforward: if you have City Living or Jungle Adventure and you build frequently, this slot fits cleanly. If you are still filling out gameplay-critical expansions, come back to this one later. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

originBuild Mode FocusedMoroccan ArchitectureCourtyard BuilderCultural AestheticSwatch-Cohesive PackOutdoor Build KitNo Gameplay MechanicsStorytelling Asset

System Requirements

Minimum

OS *
64 Bit Required. Windows 7 (SP1), Windows 8, Windows 8.1, or Windows 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
17 GB available space
Graphics
128 MB of Video RAM and support for Pixel Shader 3.0. Supported Video Cards: NVIDIA GeForce 6600 or better, ATI Radeon X1300 or better, Intel GMA X4500 or better
Processor
1.8 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, AMD Athlon 64 Dual-Core 4000+ or equivalent (For computers using built-in graphics chipsets, the game requires 2.0 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, 2.0 GHz AMD Turion 64 X2 TL-62 or equivalent)

Recommended

OS *
64 Bit Windows 7 (SP1), 8, 8.1, or 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
18 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GTX 650 or better
Processor
Intel core i5 or faster, AMD Athlon X4

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Maxis
Publisher
Electronic Arts Inc.
Release Date
May 18, 2021

Features

Single-playerDownloadable ContentSteam Trading CardsRemote Play on Tablet

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