The Sims™ 4 Growing Together Expansion Pack (DLC) Xbox Live
Growing Together reworks family play from infancy to elder, adding Milestones, Family Dynamics, and a Midlife Crisis system that finally give multi-generational households something worth tracking.
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About The Sims™ 4 Growing Together Expansion Pack (DLC) Xbox Live
Growing Together is a family-focused expansion for The Sims 4 that landed in March 2023 alongside a free base-game Infant update. The core pitch is generational depth: it introduces a Milestone system that logs meaningful life events for every age group, from an infant's first Tummy Time session all the way to an adult Sim's first house fire or career promotion. Think of it as a spiritual successor to The Sims 2's memories mechanic, but less cluttered and actually tied to outcomes. Completing enough Gross Motor and Fine Motor infant milestones, for instance, carries skill bonuses into the Toddler stage, and a fully nurtured infant can age up with the Top-Notch Infant trait. Neglect those same milestones and your Sim starts life at a disadvantage. That cause-and-effect chain across life stages is where this pack has genuine decision weight. The Family Dynamics system is the other pillar. Relationships between Sims can now be tagged with one of seven dynamics, including Close, Supportive, Strict, Difficult, and Jokesters, which change the available social interactions and the mood modifiers that fire when those Sims are around each other. It makes legacy play feel purposeful rather than arbitrary, because a strained parent-child Dynamic will quietly punish you for years. For Adult Sims, a Midlife Crisis feature arrives as a temporary Aspiration set shaped by which Milestones the Sim failed to hit earlier in life. Complete the crisis goals and the Sim can even swap out existing personality traits or gain new ones beyond the usual four-trait cap. That is genuinely interesting design, and the kind of late-game wrinkle that changes how you plan earlier life stages. New content includes the San Sequoia world, loosely modelled on San Francisco's waterfront, with three neighbourhoods and 12 total lots. The interior design quality is strong, partly because some lots were built by community creators, but the world itself has been criticised for its shallow interactivity: one rabbit hole location on the whole map and no usable water despite the coastal aesthetic. The Community Center lot type is a solid addition, functioning as a gym, arts space, and social hub in one building. Child Sims can now learn to ride bikes, an upgradeable interactive treehouse is buildable by multiple Sims, and new social events like sleepovers and family reunions add scheduling variety. Quirks for Infants and Toddlers emerge naturally during play, with the sort of low-key charm (a Toddler earning a "Little Singer" quirk by barging into a parent's bedroom) that makes individual Sims feel less interchangeable. The honest caveats: players who prefer fantasy, occult, or career-heavy gameplay will find almost nothing here for them. The social interaction menus get more convoluted with this pack installed, and the game sometimes triggers jealousy and conflict independently of a Sim's actual traits, which has frustrated players who run tightly controlled households. The recurring criticism that The Sims 3's single Generations expansion covered much of the same ground as Growing Together plus High School Years plus Parenthood combined is fair and worth knowing before you buy. Build Mode items lack a cohesive theme. Still, for a generational player who wants meaningful feedback loops between early childhood decisions and adult outcomes, this pack delivers more than any previous Sims 4 release aimed at family play. Pair it with High School Years and Parenthood for the most coherent coverage across all life stages. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- The Sims Studio
- Publisher
- Electronic Arts Inc.
- Release Date
- Mar 16, 2023