Compare The Sims 4: Desert Luxe Kit (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Maxis. Published by Electronic Arts Inc.. Released on 9/14/2022. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Simulation.

Committed Sims builders chasing that Southwestern minimalist aesthetic have a narrow but cohesive add-on here. Everyone else will wonder what they paid for.

I spend a lot of time thinking about resource allocation, and nothing tests that instinct quite like a Sims kit priced as a standalone purchase. Desert Luxe landed in September 2022 as a Build/Buy-only DLC developed with community creator Rosa (known as Aveline), a Sims speed-builder whose fingerprints are all over the collection's design language. That origin story matters, because it sets expectations correctly: this is a builder's tool, not a gameplay expansion, and it will not do anything for Simmers who care primarily about what their household actually does day to day. The kit ships with 28 build/buy items anchored around an outdoor living setup. The catalogue includes a BBQ, a bar, a loveseat, an outdoor fireplace, modular seating, curtains, and one standout piece - a genuinely well-executed awning. Stone and wood textures run throughout, and the majority of swatches sit in the beige-to-warm-brown band, with occasional black and white options rounding things out. That swatch palette is the kit's most debated characteristic. If Southwestern desert minimalism is already your build style of choice, the cohesion across pieces is genuinely useful. If you were hoping for the vibrancy that Oasis Springs or StrangerVille project as actual in-game worlds, you will be disappointed. The desert, as real-world visitors know, is not uniformly beige. On a practical level, the curtains carry a known quirk: alignment with window frames can go sideways, and a workaround involving free-placement commands is the community-accepted fix on PC. The included shelf is a small head-scratcher - it is sized for decorative clutter, but the kit ships with zero clutter items to fill it. The fireplace and seating pieces pull double duty well enough indoors, so the collection is not strictly a patio-only set, but calling it "functional architectural" content is a stretch when the awning is the only piece that genuinely qualifies as architecture. Community reception reflects that gap: players who bought in at the right moment were largely satisfied at the right price, while those evaluating it as a paid add-on are considerably more skeptical about item count versus cost. Where it earns its keep is in cross-kit combinations. Paired with Spa Day, Courtyard Oasis Kit, or even select City Living items, Desert Luxe fills a specific role in high-end or bohemian-adjacent builds that the base game's furniture catalogue handles poorly. The natural material palette plays well with those packs without clashing. For builders who construct themed lots and rotate through Oasis Springs regularly, having these pieces in the catalogue makes a real difference in the quality of a finished room. For anyone else, the gap between what this promises and what 28 items can actually deliver at full price is hard to justify. Diego, Scout Team

The Sims 4: Desert Luxe Kit (DLC)
CasualSimulation

The Sims 4: Desert Luxe Kit (DLC)

Sep 14, 2022MaxisElectronic Arts Inc.
GamerScout Says

Committed Sims builders chasing that Southwestern minimalist aesthetic have a narrow but cohesive add-on here. Everyone else will wonder what they paid for.

PC
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About The Sims 4: Desert Luxe Kit (DLC)

I spend a lot of time thinking about resource allocation, and nothing tests that instinct quite like a Sims kit priced as a standalone purchase. Desert Luxe landed in September 2022 as a Build/Buy-only DLC developed with community creator Rosa (known as Aveline), a Sims speed-builder whose fingerprints are all over the collection's design language. That origin story matters, because it sets expectations correctly: this is a builder's tool, not a gameplay expansion, and it will not do anything for Simmers who care primarily about what their household actually does day to day. The kit ships with 28 build/buy items anchored around an outdoor living setup. The catalogue includes a BBQ, a bar, a loveseat, an outdoor fireplace, modular seating, curtains, and one standout piece - a genuinely well-executed awning. Stone and wood textures run throughout, and the majority of swatches sit in the beige-to-warm-brown band, with occasional black and white options rounding things out. That swatch palette is the kit's most debated characteristic. If Southwestern desert minimalism is already your build style of choice, the cohesion across pieces is genuinely useful. If you were hoping for the vibrancy that Oasis Springs or StrangerVille project as actual in-game worlds, you will be disappointed. The desert, as real-world visitors know, is not uniformly beige. On a practical level, the curtains carry a known quirk: alignment with window frames can go sideways, and a workaround involving free-placement commands is the community-accepted fix on PC. The included shelf is a small head-scratcher - it is sized for decorative clutter, but the kit ships with zero clutter items to fill it. The fireplace and seating pieces pull double duty well enough indoors, so the collection is not strictly a patio-only set, but calling it "functional architectural" content is a stretch when the awning is the only piece that genuinely qualifies as architecture. Community reception reflects that gap: players who bought in at the right moment were largely satisfied at the right price, while those evaluating it as a paid add-on are considerably more skeptical about item count versus cost. Where it earns its keep is in cross-kit combinations. Paired with Spa Day, Courtyard Oasis Kit, or even select City Living items, Desert Luxe fills a specific role in high-end or bohemian-adjacent builds that the base game's furniture catalogue handles poorly. The natural material palette plays well with those packs without clashing. For builders who construct themed lots and rotate through Oasis Springs regularly, having these pieces in the catalogue makes a real difference in the quality of a finished room. For anyone else, the gap between what this promises and what 28 items can actually deliver at full price is hard to justify. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

Single-playerDownloadable ContentSteam Trading CardsRemote Play on TabletBuild/Buy OnlyOutdoor LivingMinimalist AestheticCommunity Creator CollabCross-Kit SynergySouthwestern ThemePatio Builder

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
Sep 14, 2022

Features

Single-playerDownloadable ContentSteam Trading CardsRemote Play on Tablet

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