The Sims was followed by seven expansion games after its release, so it’s not
surprising at all that we already have our first The Sims 2 expansion in The
Sims 2 University. While the first The Sims expansions were primarily
collections of new objects and décor for the game, University instead adds an
entire new element of gameplay to The Sims 2. Sure, you get plenty of new
objects too, but you also get a new “Young Adult” life stage, a new attribute
known as “influence”, new collegiate neighborhoods, and more. If you’re looking
to expand the gameplay of The Sims 2, then University certainly delivers.
 |
| Sims hanging out on campus. |
OK class, let’s start with the basics. The Sims 2 University is installed
into The Sims 2 as was done with The Sims’ expansions. You can launch The Sims 2
with the University disk and at first things will look pretty familiar – you’ll
see the loading screen followed by the neighborhood selection screen. Once you
select your neighborhood, the game will detect your expansion and give you the
option of going to one of three universities. These three universities roughly
fall along the lines of schools from the East, Midwest, and West, but the
differences between them are more aesthetic than anything else. The universities
are basically additional neighborhoods and function as such. You start with a
view of the campus, select a building, and then you are taken to that lot. Like
in The Sims 2, you’ll still need to call a taxi to move between the lots, which
include Greek houses, dorms, coffee shops, and other campus staples. At this
point it is worth mentioning that getting your first glimpse of college will
take you quite a while. You’ll have a load screen to start the game, another to
load your neighborhood, another to load the campus neighborhood, and then yet
another one to go to a campus lot. These aren’t the fastest of load screens
either – don’t be surprised if you find yourself wondering if the game has
locked up during one or more of them. In the grand scheme of things it may be a
minor complaint, but when you sit down to play a game it is nice to be able to
start playing without losing a chunk of your play time to load screens.
Back to the topic at hand. So you’ve picked a campus, now what? Well the game
gives you the same options that you had before with The Sims 2. You can create a
sim from scratch, you can play using the sims already at the college, or you can
pick a teenager from your neighborhood and send him or her packing off to
school. Sending an existing sim to college has a number of advantages, the first
of which is that it’s the only way for a sim to pass through the Young Adult
stage of life. You can probably guess that an extra life stage is a good thing
because it gives you more time to build up a sim’s skills, but there are other
bonuses to college as well – extra Want slots for one. A college degree will
also open up a few new career paths for your sim. Even if your sim wants to
pursue a career in the tracks that came with The Sims 2, going to college will
allow him or her to skip a few rungs on the ladder to success. Needless to say,
such head start advantages go a long way towards success in life and it will
only cost a sim a few weeks of time as the semesters move along at a healthy
clip. And some simoleons, of course, but a teen sim with good grades, skills,
and job performance will be able to pull in scholarship money. If a sim still
needs some extra dough to pay for that sweet off-campus apartment, then there
are plenty of mini-jobs and money making opportunities available to make ends
meet. You can serve coffee, play music for tips, or even hustle your classmates
for cash by playing pool, but there’s no steady employment to be found at
school.
Page 2 of 3 »