Compare The Sims 4: Riviera Retreat Kit (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Maxis. Published by Electronic Arts Inc.. Released on 5/30/2024. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Simulation, Free To Play.

If your Sims builds are missing that sun-soaked Mediterranean poolside vibe, this micro kit delivers a focused set of outdoor pieces that builders have quietly been reaching for since launch.

I spend most of my time in spreadsheets and grand strategy maps, so a Sims build kit is genuinely outside my lane. But after looking hard at what Riviera Retreat actually gives you piece by piece, the value proposition is clearer than most of EA's micro-DLC releases, and it's worth laying out honestly. This is a Build/Buy-only kit, full stop. There are no new gameplay mechanics, no skill trees, no careers, no rabbit holes. What you get is a cohesive collection of Mediterranean-outdoor-themed objects: wicker lounge chairs, vine-covered pergolas, linen furniture, stone pavers, stucco wall textures, archways, and a set of pool-specific additions that includes edging tiles in two styles (the Grotto Gravel Pool Trim and the Riviera Tile Pool Trim, each with 12 swatches), a new pool ladder, and an embellished pool light. On top of that, the Grotto Cascade and Grotto Accent Rock pieces give builders flowing water features outside of pools, which is a functionally useful addition that shows up in a lot of outdoor builds. The Aquaduct Fountain, a Rustic Riviera Arch, stepping stones, a bronze fire pit, cabana curtains, a towel station, and a functional drinks tray round out the package. The earthy-tone palette is the defining trait here. It blends rustic stone neutrals with brighter aquamarine and tile-pattern accents, so you can go understated or add a pop of colour depending on the swatch selection. The kit pulls together cleanly with existing items from Island Living, Spa Day, and Get Together, which is the real practical test for any Sims build content: does it play well with what players already own? Here it mostly does. The items are versatile enough to slot into coastal builds, villa courtyards, or any lot that needs a believable outdoor living space. Some pieces, like the arch and the water-feature rocks, are simple but get heavy use precisely because of that simplicity. The limits are obvious and worth naming. Kits are the smallest tier of Sims 4 DLC by design, and this one adds nothing to live mode. If your reason for playing is storytelling, social gameplay, or building Sim careers, you will never notice this kit is installed. The items also lean heavily into a single aesthetic, so if your builds skew modern or urban, the earthy-rustic palette fights you rather than helping. A handful of items border on niche, and the content count is modest relative to an expansion. That is not a surprise given the format, but it should inform your decision. For dedicated builders who spend their sessions perfecting lot aesthetics rather than managing Sim relationships, Riviera Retreat fills a real gap. The pool trim and water-feature pieces in particular are the kind of functional additions that end up in a lot of builds across themes, not just resort lots. Casual players or anyone primarily in it for gameplay loops should look elsewhere in the DLC catalogue first. Diego, Scout Team

The Sims 4: Riviera Retreat Kit (DLC)
AdventureCasualSimulationFree To Play

The Sims 4: Riviera Retreat Kit (DLC)

May 30, 2024MaxisElectronic Arts Inc.
GamerScout Says

If your Sims builds are missing that sun-soaked Mediterranean poolside vibe, this micro kit delivers a focused set of outdoor pieces that builders have quietly been reaching for since launch.

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About The Sims 4: Riviera Retreat Kit (DLC)

I spend most of my time in spreadsheets and grand strategy maps, so a Sims build kit is genuinely outside my lane. But after looking hard at what Riviera Retreat actually gives you piece by piece, the value proposition is clearer than most of EA's micro-DLC releases, and it's worth laying out honestly. This is a Build/Buy-only kit, full stop. There are no new gameplay mechanics, no skill trees, no careers, no rabbit holes. What you get is a cohesive collection of Mediterranean-outdoor-themed objects: wicker lounge chairs, vine-covered pergolas, linen furniture, stone pavers, stucco wall textures, archways, and a set of pool-specific additions that includes edging tiles in two styles (the Grotto Gravel Pool Trim and the Riviera Tile Pool Trim, each with 12 swatches), a new pool ladder, and an embellished pool light. On top of that, the Grotto Cascade and Grotto Accent Rock pieces give builders flowing water features outside of pools, which is a functionally useful addition that shows up in a lot of outdoor builds. The Aquaduct Fountain, a Rustic Riviera Arch, stepping stones, a bronze fire pit, cabana curtains, a towel station, and a functional drinks tray round out the package. The earthy-tone palette is the defining trait here. It blends rustic stone neutrals with brighter aquamarine and tile-pattern accents, so you can go understated or add a pop of colour depending on the swatch selection. The kit pulls together cleanly with existing items from Island Living, Spa Day, and Get Together, which is the real practical test for any Sims build content: does it play well with what players already own? Here it mostly does. The items are versatile enough to slot into coastal builds, villa courtyards, or any lot that needs a believable outdoor living space. Some pieces, like the arch and the water-feature rocks, are simple but get heavy use precisely because of that simplicity. The limits are obvious and worth naming. Kits are the smallest tier of Sims 4 DLC by design, and this one adds nothing to live mode. If your reason for playing is storytelling, social gameplay, or building Sim careers, you will never notice this kit is installed. The items also lean heavily into a single aesthetic, so if your builds skew modern or urban, the earthy-rustic palette fights you rather than helping. A handful of items border on niche, and the content count is modest relative to an expansion. That is not a surprise given the format, but it should inform your decision. For dedicated builders who spend their sessions perfecting lot aesthetics rather than managing Sim relationships, Riviera Retreat fills a real gap. The pool trim and water-feature pieces in particular are the kind of functional additions that end up in a lot of builds across themes, not just resort lots. Casual players or anyone primarily in it for gameplay loops should look elsewhere in the DLC catalogue first. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

Single-playerDownloadable ContentSteam Trading CardsRemote Play on TabletBuild/Buy FocusedMediterranean AestheticPool CustomizationOutdoor DecorEarthy PaletteNo Gameplay MechanicsBuilder-Targeted DLCWater Features

System Requirements

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Game Info

Developer
Maxis
Publisher
Electronic Arts Inc.
Release Date
May 30, 2024

Features

Single-playerDownloadable ContentSteam Trading CardsRemote Play on Tablet

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