Compare The Sims 4: Moschino Stuff Pack (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Maxis & Blind Squirrel. Published by Electronic Arts Inc.. Released on 9/3/2019. Available on Xbox Series X, Xbox One, Xbox. Genres: Single Player, Bird View, Simulation.

A brand-crossover DLC that sneaks a genuinely overhauled photography system under the label of a luxury fashion collab. More useful than it looks, less essential than it costs.

The Sims 4: Moschino Stuff is the result of a deal between Maxis and Italian fashion house Moschino, and the community's knee-jerk reaction when it was announced was roughly what you'd expect: eye-rolls, comparisons to past brand packs, and a lot of "who asked for this." The honest answer, after spending time with it, is that the actual brand content is the weakest part of the pack, and the photography overhaul tacked onto it is the thing worth talking about. On the fashion side, you get around 25 CAS items split between female and male adult, teen, and elder Sims - three hairstyles and a mix of tops, bottoms, full outfits, and shoes per gender bracket. Kids and toddlers get nothing in CAS, which stings. The clothing is polarising: some pieces are genuinely wearable in everyday playthroughs, others are high-fashion maximalism that only make sense if you are deep into Get Famous roleplay or celebrity storytelling. The Harlequin separates and logo-heavy knitwear will either delight you or go straight to the trash. The Build/Buy side lands better, with about 40 objects total including arched loft windows, curved glass panes, modern sofas, studio backdrops (straight and curved variants), photo drapes, floor markers for model positioning, and digital picture frames. The windows in particular became a genuine community favourite for industrial-loft builds. The freelance fashion photographer career is the pack's actual selling point. It slots in alongside the existing freelance writer and programmer tracks: sign up, pick a gig, fulfill requirements (matching clothing category, hitting a specific pose style from the eight available - Default, Flirty, Goofy, Fashion, Thoughtful, Sad, Relaxed, Excited), submit photos for client approval, collect simoleons. The portable camera tripod removes the blurriness that plagued earlier photography attempts, and you can now photograph toddlers, pets, and groups of up to three subjects. Earning scales with skill, so a low-level sim pulls a few hundred simoleons per gig while a seasoned photographer can clear several thousand. The weak point is pacing: waiting for client approval between shots creates dead time, and the career only covers fashion photography - there is no branching into wildlife, travel, or portrait tracks. Combine this pack with Get to Work's retail system to build a proper standalone studio, or lean on Get Together's Clubs mechanic to keep a steady supply of models and accelerate skill gain. The social networking skill also ties in, and completed covers can earn fame points if Get Famous is installed. Community reception has settled at "better than feared, not essential." Steam reviews land in mixed territory at around 56 percent positive from a small sample. Players who came in skeptical and stayed for the photography mechanics tend to rate it solidly mid-tier. Those who wanted a robust fashion pack were disappointed by the thin CAS offering. If photography is already part of your Sims routine, this pack makes that system substantially more functional. If it isn't, the clothes and furniture alone are a hard sell at full price. Diego, Scout Team

The Sims 4: Moschino Stuff Pack (DLC)
Single PlayerBird ViewSimulation

The Sims 4: Moschino Stuff Pack (DLC)

Sep 3, 2019Maxis & Blind SquirrelElectronic Arts Inc.
GamerScout Says

A brand-crossover DLC that sneaks a genuinely overhauled photography system under the label of a luxury fashion collab. More useful than it looks, less essential than it costs.

Xbox Series XXbox OneXbox
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About The Sims 4: Moschino Stuff Pack (DLC)

The Sims 4: Moschino Stuff is the result of a deal between Maxis and Italian fashion house Moschino, and the community's knee-jerk reaction when it was announced was roughly what you'd expect: eye-rolls, comparisons to past brand packs, and a lot of "who asked for this." The honest answer, after spending time with it, is that the actual brand content is the weakest part of the pack, and the photography overhaul tacked onto it is the thing worth talking about. On the fashion side, you get around 25 CAS items split between female and male adult, teen, and elder Sims - three hairstyles and a mix of tops, bottoms, full outfits, and shoes per gender bracket. Kids and toddlers get nothing in CAS, which stings. The clothing is polarising: some pieces are genuinely wearable in everyday playthroughs, others are high-fashion maximalism that only make sense if you are deep into Get Famous roleplay or celebrity storytelling. The Harlequin separates and logo-heavy knitwear will either delight you or go straight to the trash. The Build/Buy side lands better, with about 40 objects total including arched loft windows, curved glass panes, modern sofas, studio backdrops (straight and curved variants), photo drapes, floor markers for model positioning, and digital picture frames. The windows in particular became a genuine community favourite for industrial-loft builds. The freelance fashion photographer career is the pack's actual selling point. It slots in alongside the existing freelance writer and programmer tracks: sign up, pick a gig, fulfill requirements (matching clothing category, hitting a specific pose style from the eight available - Default, Flirty, Goofy, Fashion, Thoughtful, Sad, Relaxed, Excited), submit photos for client approval, collect simoleons. The portable camera tripod removes the blurriness that plagued earlier photography attempts, and you can now photograph toddlers, pets, and groups of up to three subjects. Earning scales with skill, so a low-level sim pulls a few hundred simoleons per gig while a seasoned photographer can clear several thousand. The weak point is pacing: waiting for client approval between shots creates dead time, and the career only covers fashion photography - there is no branching into wildlife, travel, or portrait tracks. Combine this pack with Get to Work's retail system to build a proper standalone studio, or lean on Get Together's Clubs mechanic to keep a steady supply of models and accelerate skill gain. The social networking skill also ties in, and completed covers can earn fame points if Get Famous is installed. Community reception has settled at "better than feared, not essential." Steam reviews land in mixed territory at around 56 percent positive from a small sample. Players who came in skeptical and stayed for the photography mechanics tend to rate it solidly mid-tier. Those who wanted a robust fashion pack were disappointed by the thin CAS offering. If photography is already part of your Sims routine, this pack makes that system substantially more functional. If it isn't, the clothes and furniture alone are a hard sell at full price. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

xboxFreelance CareerPhotography SkillBrand Collab DLCCAS HeavyBuild-Buy FocusStudio BuilderFashion StorytellingSkill-Gated Earnings

System Requirements

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Game Info

Developer
Maxis & Blind Squirrel
Publisher
Electronic Arts Inc.
Release Date
Sep 3, 2019

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