Compare The Sims 4 Modern Menswear Kit (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Maxis. Published by Electronic Arts Inc.. Released on 12/2/2021. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Simulation.

Thirty-two percent positive on Steam tells you most of what you need to know about this CAS-only DLC. A niche designer collaboration that the Sims community largely rejected on arrival.

My spreadsheet brain does not usually spend time in Create-a-Sim, but evaluating DLC value is a numbers game regardless of genre, and the numbers here are rough. Thirty-two percent positive from Steam reviewers is a signal you cannot explain away, and after spending time with every piece in this kit, the verdict is not a surprise. The collaboration itself is conceptually interesting. Maxis partnered with the British Fashion Council and London-based designer Stefan Cooke, a Central Saint Martins graduate whose real-world label focuses on subverting traditional menswear through unusual silhouettes and textiles. The idea was to translate those real-world pieces directly into Sim-ready clothing. What you actually get is 23 CAS items, covering tops, bottoms, full-body outfits, and shoes, plus three pre-styled looks. No accessories, no hair, no makeup included. The pieces are tagged masculine in the CAS catalog but, as with all Sims clothing, any Sim of the appropriate age range can wear them. That covers teens through elders and nothing else. The problem critics and players converged on is that the execution lands awkwardly in a game context. The real Stefan Cooke label builds its identity around avant-garde shapes, latticed knitwear, scalloped and pleated skirts, and the Wool Varsity Coat with Skirt that serves as a signature piece. Those concepts work on a runway or in editorial photography. Inside Sims 4's art style, several reviewers found the translation produced items that read as frumpy or oddly proportioned rather than fashion-forward. A biker jacket and a pair of clean trousers survive the translation reasonably well, and the neutral color palette gives the kit some mix-and-match utility. But the ceiling on genuinely useful pieces is low, with multiple critics independently arriving at counts of two to four wearable items out of the full 23. The broader community frustration is that male Sims have historically been underserved on clothing variety, and players waiting for that gap to close found this kit addressed a very specific avant-garde niche rather than the basics deficit they had been asking for. For players who are specifically fans of boundary-pushing London fashion or who build Sims around expressive, gender-fluid aesthetics, there is something here. The kit is niche by design, not by accident, and if Stefan Cooke's real-world aesthetic matches your wardrobe sensibility, the Simified versions will slot into CAS rotations. For everyone else, the value proposition is thin. This is a wardrobe kit with no gameplay hooks, no build items, and a shallow item count that splits unevenly between standouts and pieces most players will never touch. Diego, Scout Team

The Sims 4 Modern Menswear Kit (DLC)
CasualSimulation

The Sims 4 Modern Menswear Kit (DLC)

Dec 2, 2021MaxisElectronic Arts Inc.
GamerScout Says

Thirty-two percent positive on Steam tells you most of what you need to know about this CAS-only DLC. A niche designer collaboration that the Sims community largely rejected on arrival.

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About The Sims 4 Modern Menswear Kit (DLC)

My spreadsheet brain does not usually spend time in Create-a-Sim, but evaluating DLC value is a numbers game regardless of genre, and the numbers here are rough. Thirty-two percent positive from Steam reviewers is a signal you cannot explain away, and after spending time with every piece in this kit, the verdict is not a surprise. The collaboration itself is conceptually interesting. Maxis partnered with the British Fashion Council and London-based designer Stefan Cooke, a Central Saint Martins graduate whose real-world label focuses on subverting traditional menswear through unusual silhouettes and textiles. The idea was to translate those real-world pieces directly into Sim-ready clothing. What you actually get is 23 CAS items, covering tops, bottoms, full-body outfits, and shoes, plus three pre-styled looks. No accessories, no hair, no makeup included. The pieces are tagged masculine in the CAS catalog but, as with all Sims clothing, any Sim of the appropriate age range can wear them. That covers teens through elders and nothing else. The problem critics and players converged on is that the execution lands awkwardly in a game context. The real Stefan Cooke label builds its identity around avant-garde shapes, latticed knitwear, scalloped and pleated skirts, and the Wool Varsity Coat with Skirt that serves as a signature piece. Those concepts work on a runway or in editorial photography. Inside Sims 4's art style, several reviewers found the translation produced items that read as frumpy or oddly proportioned rather than fashion-forward. A biker jacket and a pair of clean trousers survive the translation reasonably well, and the neutral color palette gives the kit some mix-and-match utility. But the ceiling on genuinely useful pieces is low, with multiple critics independently arriving at counts of two to four wearable items out of the full 23. The broader community frustration is that male Sims have historically been underserved on clothing variety, and players waiting for that gap to close found this kit addressed a very specific avant-garde niche rather than the basics deficit they had been asking for. For players who are specifically fans of boundary-pushing London fashion or who build Sims around expressive, gender-fluid aesthetics, there is something here. The kit is niche by design, not by accident, and if Stefan Cooke's real-world aesthetic matches your wardrobe sensibility, the Simified versions will slot into CAS rotations. For everyone else, the value proposition is thin. This is a wardrobe kit with no gameplay hooks, no build items, and a shallow item count that splits unevenly between standouts and pieces most players will never touch. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

originCAS-OnlyDesigner CollaborationGender-Fluid FashionLow Item CountAvant-Garde Aesthetic

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

Steam
32%(19)

Game Info

Developer
Maxis
Publisher
Electronic Arts Inc.
Release Date
Dec 2, 2021

Features

Single-playerDownloadable ContentSteam Trading CardsRemote Play on Tablet

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