Compare The Sims 4: Incheon Arrivals Kit (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Maxis. Published by Electronic Arts Inc.. Released on 10/5/2021. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Simulation.

If your Sims wardrobe skews toward beige and K-pop star energy, this 20-piece CAS kit punches above its tiny price tag. Just know you are buying layered coats and minimalist streetwear, not gameplay depth.

I normally live inside spreadsheets and late-game diplomacy screens, so asking me to review a CAS-only clothing kit is a bit like asking a rally driver to review parking sensors. That said, I spent real time in Create-A-Sim with this one, and here is my honest read on whether it is worth the micro-spend. The Incheon Arrivals Kit draws its design brief from the specific cultural phenomenon of Korean airport fashion, the casual-yet-precisely-styled look that K-pop celebrities sport when cameras catch them mid-transit at Incheon International. Maxis collaborated with TV host and Miss Korea USA 2016 winner Jazzy Cho to keep the references grounded. The result is 20 clothing items for teen-through-elder Sims across both masculine and feminine categories, with a healthy number of unisex pieces in the mix. Specific standouts include a long women's coat designed for a designer-runway silhouette, ripped jeans with a long side belt for masculine Sims, a leather-accent jacket, a blazer-hoodie hybrid, and hanbok-influenced pieces that bring Korea's traditional dress language into modern cuts. Footwear is present in the form of heeled boots and sneakers, though no accessories ship with this kit at all, which is a notable gap compared to what the companion Fashion Street Kit delivered. On the palette question: the entire kit skews heavily toward neutrals. Beige, white, grey, and occasional black or brown dominate the swatches, with a few soft pastels scattered in. Players who want bright statement colors will leave disappointed. The upside of that restraint is real cross-pack compatibility. The muted tones layer cleanly against items from existing expansion packs, and the kit pairs especially well with City Living's San Myshuno aesthetic or the Get Famous celebrity-Sim wardrobe. The layered tops are a genuine CAS win, falling across a wide range of bottoms in a way that older Sims clothing rarely managed. The community criticism that does stick is a legitimate one: some pieces clip and layer awkwardly against each other inside CAS, particularly the boots, certain skirts, and the blazer. For a kit where precise mix-and-match is the whole point, those visual glitches are annoying rather than game-breaking, but they are there. Who is this actually for? Sims players who run storytelling or rotational households and care about wardrobe diversity will find 20 well-crafted, coherent pieces that fill a genuine gap in the base-game's fashion options. Players who primarily use CAS to dress up celebrity or influencer Sims, especially in urban or travel-themed scenarios, will get the most mileage. If you have zero interest in Create-A-Sim and spend your playtime building careers or managing households, this kit offers you nothing. There is no gameplay mechanic, no build-buy content, no new interaction. It is entirely a wardrobe drop. Buyers should also note that no content exists for children or toddlers, so households skewing younger in age range will not benefit at all. As a strategy player who treats CAS as a loading screen obstacle, even I can see the craft here. The Jazzy Cho collaboration kept the cultural references specific rather than superficial, and the masculine-feminine balance is noticeably better than what older Sims kits delivered. The layering glitches need a patch, the no-accessories decision stings, and the neutral palette is a design choice that will divide the player base straight down the middle. But for what it sets out to do, it mostly does it. Diego, Scout Team

The Sims 4: Incheon Arrivals Kit (DLC)
CasualSimulation

The Sims 4: Incheon Arrivals Kit (DLC)

Oct 5, 2021MaxisElectronic Arts Inc.
GamerScout Says

If your Sims wardrobe skews toward beige and K-pop star energy, this 20-piece CAS kit punches above its tiny price tag. Just know you are buying layered coats and minimalist streetwear, not gameplay depth.

PC
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About The Sims 4: Incheon Arrivals Kit (DLC)

I normally live inside spreadsheets and late-game diplomacy screens, so asking me to review a CAS-only clothing kit is a bit like asking a rally driver to review parking sensors. That said, I spent real time in Create-A-Sim with this one, and here is my honest read on whether it is worth the micro-spend. The Incheon Arrivals Kit draws its design brief from the specific cultural phenomenon of Korean airport fashion, the casual-yet-precisely-styled look that K-pop celebrities sport when cameras catch them mid-transit at Incheon International. Maxis collaborated with TV host and Miss Korea USA 2016 winner Jazzy Cho to keep the references grounded. The result is 20 clothing items for teen-through-elder Sims across both masculine and feminine categories, with a healthy number of unisex pieces in the mix. Specific standouts include a long women's coat designed for a designer-runway silhouette, ripped jeans with a long side belt for masculine Sims, a leather-accent jacket, a blazer-hoodie hybrid, and hanbok-influenced pieces that bring Korea's traditional dress language into modern cuts. Footwear is present in the form of heeled boots and sneakers, though no accessories ship with this kit at all, which is a notable gap compared to what the companion Fashion Street Kit delivered. On the palette question: the entire kit skews heavily toward neutrals. Beige, white, grey, and occasional black or brown dominate the swatches, with a few soft pastels scattered in. Players who want bright statement colors will leave disappointed. The upside of that restraint is real cross-pack compatibility. The muted tones layer cleanly against items from existing expansion packs, and the kit pairs especially well with City Living's San Myshuno aesthetic or the Get Famous celebrity-Sim wardrobe. The layered tops are a genuine CAS win, falling across a wide range of bottoms in a way that older Sims clothing rarely managed. The community criticism that does stick is a legitimate one: some pieces clip and layer awkwardly against each other inside CAS, particularly the boots, certain skirts, and the blazer. For a kit where precise mix-and-match is the whole point, those visual glitches are annoying rather than game-breaking, but they are there. Who is this actually for? Sims players who run storytelling or rotational households and care about wardrobe diversity will find 20 well-crafted, coherent pieces that fill a genuine gap in the base-game's fashion options. Players who primarily use CAS to dress up celebrity or influencer Sims, especially in urban or travel-themed scenarios, will get the most mileage. If you have zero interest in Create-A-Sim and spend your playtime building careers or managing households, this kit offers you nothing. There is no gameplay mechanic, no build-buy content, no new interaction. It is entirely a wardrobe drop. Buyers should also note that no content exists for children or toddlers, so households skewing younger in age range will not benefit at all. As a strategy player who treats CAS as a loading screen obstacle, even I can see the craft here. The Jazzy Cho collaboration kept the cultural references specific rather than superficial, and the masculine-feminine balance is noticeably better than what older Sims kits delivered. The layering glitches need a patch, the no-accessories decision stings, and the neutral palette is a design choice that will divide the player base straight down the middle. But for what it sets out to do, it mostly does it. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

Single-playerDownloadable ContentSteam Trading CardsRemote Play on TabletCAS-Only DLCK-FashionCultural CollaborationWardrobe ExpansionLayered ClothingMinimalist PaletteMix-and-Match CASTeen-to-Elder Content

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
Oct 5, 2021

Features

Single-playerDownloadable ContentSteam Trading CardsRemote Play on Tablet

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