Metascore
80

Generally favorable reviews - based on 14 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 11 out of 14
  2. Negative: 0 out of 14
  1. Jun 12, 2023
    70
    The Sims 4: Cottage Living adds a variety of new and exciting opportunities to the base game. The new style is themed very well and fits the country aesthetic. The overall number of added features can be overwhelming at times, but this pack comes highly recommended to anyone wishing for a bit more action in the lives of their Sims.
  2. Jul 30, 2021
    70
    The Sims 4: Cottage Living is a gorgeous expansion that adds some of the best and most on-trend in-game items and experiences we’ve ever had, but it's come with that it seems are causing issues for pretty much everyone playing the game. There is a lot to do, a lot to see, but also a lot of glitches to fix in Henford-on-Bagley.
  3. Jul 29, 2021
    70
    Cottage Living will make a lot of fans happy, and there are plenty of positives in the expansion's attempt to make good on the farming and countryside themes. It's a shame then that a number of aspects hold the pack back from realising its full potential. Henford-on-Bagley is a nice enough world, but errs too much on the safe side to leave a lasting impression.
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  1. For me, The Sims was always supposed to be a kind of corny ideal life, rather than a simulation of reality, and a Cottagecore expansion is such a good theme to do that with. In real life, getting up every day to collect eggs and clean out your hen house is a pain in the ass, and you can't make friends with birds without serious effort. But this lifestyle is realised in sunny technicolour in Cottage Living. Apart from anything else, it's reignited my desire to flood the feed with posts about The Sims. So you're welcome and/or sorry in advance.

Awards & Rankings

User Score
5.4

Mixed or average reviews- based on 5 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 1 out of 5
  2. Negative: 3 out of 5
  1. Oct 24, 2021
    4
    The good
    The fairs are quite interesting (excluding the glitches) Looking after pets is quite fun at first and it does add some interesting
    The good
    The fairs are quite interesting (excluding the glitches) Looking after pets is quite fun at first and it does add some interesting deaths that appear quite amusing, So ideal for retired sims

    The bad
    very lacklustre , bored after a few hours of gameplay, despite the world being aesthetically pleasing it just adds little to the gameplay. This pack is almost too family friendly and the foxes are simply annoying. This pack is only good if you prioritise family gameplay.

    simply mediocre
    Full Review »
  2. Sep 24, 2021
    4
    When you have dedicated your franchise to being family friendly, you will sooner or later run out of things that are interesting enough to beWhen you have dedicated your franchise to being family friendly, you will sooner or later run out of things that are interesting enough to be put in a life simulation. This is normally the part where the Sims hammer out your megastars and superstars expansions, but as with so many things the Sims 4 is way, way beyond that point.

    I would like to point at the description, which raves about two (out of four) things that are not in the game - well, there are forests, but they are part of the ever illusive open world this game doesn't have, and abundant new ways to connect to the countryside, that this game also doesn't have - not the ways, and not the countryside.

    The "woodland creatures" live in their own rabbit holes, numbering three: Rabbits (now that's fitting), birds (that don't go anywhere except if you enslave them to garden for you, how realistic is that) and foxes, that look suspiciously like someone just sabotaged the sliders in the pet creator and it shows in their profile pictures where it turns them into horribly deformed nightmare creatures, one of the the several new features that didn't make it into the description because they are of course bugs.

    Like every new feature their main purpuse seems to be overdoing the three things that they can actually do until you are pissed enough to turn them off, which leaves us with cozy architecture and cozy furniture that even your grandma would sneer at for not wanting to move into a retirement home made out of prejudices angainst old british people, but now you can. And you probably will, because you paid for this, and discover the two new plots of fertile soil that you can put "giant" crops in, after you grinded your gardening skill to the usual heights. You can eat that stuff, even though you know how much chicken **** went into it, or put it out in a sunny warm August day to have it prized in a competition that is mysteriously populated with standard crops of the beginner variety or the same kind of pie, and yet lose. I mean of course, get a participation trophy.

    And the odd jobs from the unspeakable island expansion make a comeback as "favors" that you get paid for, because Crumple-on-Forever has the worst post office in the world, and therefore a lot of packages that went missing or never got anywhere. And who hasn't dreamed since the day of the Sims 1 to finally do Mrs. Crumplebottom? Yeah, not me, but then again, I also never wanted the f*ing farm expansion that everyone wanted since those days, because I knew it would be boring, and now everyone knows.

    Can't fault the developers for once, I'd say they actually showed half an effort this time.

    But there is a reason why nobody wants to be a farmer anymore once he discovers the aforementioned more interesting things in life once puberty hits. So, EA, now that we have done all of that and you are certainly not going down that road with the medieval crap again, can we have that GTA expansion that *I* always wanted? No? Well, thank god for the modding community then.
    Full Review »