Compare The Sims 4: Cozy Kitsch Kit (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Maxis. Published by Electronic Arts Inc.. Released on 11/14/2024. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Simulation, Free To Play.

If your Sims' living room still looks like it was furnished by a committee, this 27-piece retro Build/Buy kit from community creator myshunosun is a cheap, focused fix with genuine personality.

I spend most of my time in games optimizing systems, so when I sit down with a Sims 4 kit my instinct is the same: does this add meaningful decision-making to the build process, or is it just filler padding out EA's DLC catalogue? Cozy Kitsch lands closer to the former than most kits at this price tier. The 27 Build/Buy items cover a surprisingly coherent range of living and dining room needs, including a corduroy sofa, the checkerboard Ex-Fireplace, the AINA Dining Table, the Grandma's Painted Dining Chair, a wall shelf (Sleeqframe), pendant lights in three lengths with ten color swatches each, a neon sign (Nuff Said Neon Sign), the Vibe Checked checkered rug, and enough clutter pieces like vases, candles, and a fruit bowl to sell the lived-in look. Three of those 27 slots are technically the same pendant light in different hanging lengths, which is worth knowing upfront, but it is also genuinely useful and more than most ceiling fixtures get. The aesthetic throughline is mid-century modern filtered through a 1970s color sensibility. The palette runs deep jewel tones and muted oranges and yellows rather than screaming primaries, which means the pieces coordinate well within the kit and also play nicely alongside existing sets like Pastel Pop. If you tend toward maximalist builds or want to stage a retro apartment for storytelling purposes, the color coherence here is the main selling point. Builders who prefer minimalist or neutral interiors will find very little use for any of it. What makes this kit more interesting than a typical Maxis release is its origin. This is one of the first official Creator Kits, meaning the entire set was designed by CC creator myshunosun, a community figure known for both Build/Buy and CAS custom content. EA published and sold it, but the creative direction, item naming, and asset modeling came from the creator side. The practical upside is that the items feel like high-quality custom content rather than the sometimes generic output of an internal team working to a deadline. The practical downside is that Creator Kits currently ship without Styled Rooms or a Welcome Screen on install, so there is no out-of-box reference build to show you how the pieces work together. If you are newer to Build/Buy mode, you will need to experiment on your own. The kit covers living and dining room space adequately but does not touch kitchen functionality, and there are no CAS items at all. For builders running a tightly themed household from floor to ceiling, pairing this with a complementary CAS kit is worth considering. The small item count also means the kit works best as a statement accent layer on top of a broader furniture catalog rather than a standalone room solution. Anyone expecting to furnish a full home exclusively from this kit will hit a ceiling fast. Taken for what it is, though, a personality-forward, retro-leaning accent pack with strong colorway discipline and community DNA, it delivers squarely within the kit format's scope. Diego, Scout Team

The Sims 4: Cozy Kitsch Kit (DLC)
AdventureCasualSimulationFree To Play

The Sims 4: Cozy Kitsch Kit (DLC)

Nov 14, 2024MaxisElectronic Arts Inc.
GamerScout Says

If your Sims' living room still looks like it was furnished by a committee, this 27-piece retro Build/Buy kit from community creator myshunosun is a cheap, focused fix with genuine personality.

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About The Sims 4: Cozy Kitsch Kit (DLC)

I spend most of my time in games optimizing systems, so when I sit down with a Sims 4 kit my instinct is the same: does this add meaningful decision-making to the build process, or is it just filler padding out EA's DLC catalogue? Cozy Kitsch lands closer to the former than most kits at this price tier. The 27 Build/Buy items cover a surprisingly coherent range of living and dining room needs, including a corduroy sofa, the checkerboard Ex-Fireplace, the AINA Dining Table, the Grandma's Painted Dining Chair, a wall shelf (Sleeqframe), pendant lights in three lengths with ten color swatches each, a neon sign (Nuff Said Neon Sign), the Vibe Checked checkered rug, and enough clutter pieces like vases, candles, and a fruit bowl to sell the lived-in look. Three of those 27 slots are technically the same pendant light in different hanging lengths, which is worth knowing upfront, but it is also genuinely useful and more than most ceiling fixtures get. The aesthetic throughline is mid-century modern filtered through a 1970s color sensibility. The palette runs deep jewel tones and muted oranges and yellows rather than screaming primaries, which means the pieces coordinate well within the kit and also play nicely alongside existing sets like Pastel Pop. If you tend toward maximalist builds or want to stage a retro apartment for storytelling purposes, the color coherence here is the main selling point. Builders who prefer minimalist or neutral interiors will find very little use for any of it. What makes this kit more interesting than a typical Maxis release is its origin. This is one of the first official Creator Kits, meaning the entire set was designed by CC creator myshunosun, a community figure known for both Build/Buy and CAS custom content. EA published and sold it, but the creative direction, item naming, and asset modeling came from the creator side. The practical upside is that the items feel like high-quality custom content rather than the sometimes generic output of an internal team working to a deadline. The practical downside is that Creator Kits currently ship without Styled Rooms or a Welcome Screen on install, so there is no out-of-box reference build to show you how the pieces work together. If you are newer to Build/Buy mode, you will need to experiment on your own. The kit covers living and dining room space adequately but does not touch kitchen functionality, and there are no CAS items at all. For builders running a tightly themed household from floor to ceiling, pairing this with a complementary CAS kit is worth considering. The small item count also means the kit works best as a statement accent layer on top of a broader furniture catalog rather than a standalone room solution. Anyone expecting to furnish a full home exclusively from this kit will hit a ceiling fast. Taken for what it is, though, a personality-forward, retro-leaning accent pack with strong colorway discipline and community DNA, it delivers squarely within the kit format's scope. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

Single-playerDownloadable ContentSteam Trading CardsRemote Play on TabletCreator KitBuild/Buy OnlyMaximalist DecorRetro AestheticMid-Century ModernNo CAS ItemsColor Swatch DepthCommunity Creator ContentStorytelling Builds

System Requirements

System requirements for The Sims 4: Cozy Kitsch Kit (DLC) aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Steam
100%(8)

Game Info

Developer
Maxis
Publisher
Electronic Arts Inc.
Release Date
Nov 14, 2024

Features

Single-playerDownloadable ContentSteam Trading CardsRemote Play on Tablet

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