In the last year, Kayla Sims began raising
her own cows and chickens. She did a bit of traveling, trying dishes like bhel
puri, tuna maki rolls, beef yakisoba, and feijoada for the first time. She even
did some cooking; one day, she made a crown roast and baked a birthday cake
shaped like a hamburger.
اضافة اعلان
But she didn’t
need a farm or an airline ticket or a stove — just “
The Sims,” the long-running
video game that allows players to create characters, called Sims, and build a
virtual life around them, from the houses they live in, to the clothes they
wear, to the jobs they work.
For Sims (yes,
that’s her birth name), one of the most enjoyable parts of the game has been
the chance to learn more about cooking, farming, foraging, and cuisines from
across the world — all from the comfort of her desk in Oviedo, Florida, where
she streams herself playing “The Sims” on YouTube and Twitch under the username
lilsimsie.
“There’s just no way you could have experienced all
of those things in your lifetime,” said Sims, 22. But by playing “The Sims,”
“you learn about a lot of other foods that you’ve never seen before. And I
think that everyone probably has that experience.”
Food featured in the long-running video game The Sims. Making pixelated food look appetizing isn’t easy. (Photo: NYTimes)
Since its debut
in February 2000, “The Sims” has become one of the most successful PC video
game franchises in history, with more than $5 billion in sales as of 2019,
according to its publisher,
Electronic Arts. Millions of players around the
world log in each day to create Sims avatars and watch their lives play out in
vivid fashion. The game’s popularity has only grown throughout the pandemic;
Simmers, as fans call themselves, racked up 1.2 billion hours of play in 2021.
Part of that new
and, for some, renewed interest may stem from a simple need to fight off
boredom. But much of the game’s appeal can be chalked up to players’ ability to
create an increasingly exacting vision of how their Sims live, dress, and eat.
In early
versions of the game, food was used simply to satisfy Hunger, one of a handful
of basic needs that every character has, or to add an element of exoticism when
Sims traveled to new locales. But “The Sims 4,” released by the game developer
Maxis in 2014, expanded the depth and realism of how players can interact with
food.
“I think ‘The
Sims 4’ was really where we made this conscious effort to recognize that food
is more than a place,” said Lyndsay Pearson, a vice president on the creative
side of “The Sims,” and a Maxis employee since 2002. (Electronic Arts acquired
Maxis in 1997.)
Many Simmers
cite the “
City Living” expansion pack, a 2016 upgrade, as a major turning point
for the game — it made food something to explore and learn about. Players could
take their Sims to food stands, where they could not only encounter foods like
pork adobo, tagine and goi cuon, but also learn to tolerate spicy foods, use
chopsticks properly and, ultimately, gain the ability to make those foods at
home.
Today, Sims can
own and operate a restaurant or cafe, design menus and hire and fire employees.
They can work their way up from assistant dishwasher (earning 15 Simoleons per
hour) to celebrity chef (410 Simoleons) in the Culinary career track, or become
professional food critics.
(Photo: NYTimes)
They can be
vegetarian or lactose intolerant, and most Sims children go through a
picky-eating phase. Sims with the Foodie personality trait, one of nearly 60
characteristics that players can choose when they create a Sim, pride
themselves on eating good food, and can watch cooking shows for inspiration.
They can invite friends over for a wienie roast in their backyard fire pit,
order delivery from a Sims service called Zoomers, forage for rare ingredients
in nearby Granite Falls or join with family members to prepare a meal.
All told, there
are more than 300 dishes that Sims can try or cook across more than a dozen
game upgrades.
Loel Phelps, a
design director for “The Sims,” said his team uses consultants, research and
input from employees with diverse backgrounds to decide which foods, and
elements of cooking and eating, best fit the spirit of the game.
“‘The Sims’ is
about real, lived experiences, so once we have a theme or setting, I like to
reach out to those around me or explore food trends on Instagram and
TikTok,”
Phelps wrote in an email. “What are their favorite iconic dishes? What do
people eat for breakfast, lunch, snack and dinner in that environment? Why and
how do they eat those foods, and do we have the right tools in a virtual
kitchen to prepare, serve and eat them?”
Copywriters then
create extensive descriptions of those foods, explaining how they’re prepared,
as well as the real-world cultures where they originated. Want to learn all
about pho, nigiri, choripán? “The Sims” can be your guide.
Like reality,
the world of “The Sims” is imperfect. Some of the foods are so pixelated that
they aren’t all that appetizing. (“Some of it just looks nasty,” Kayla Sims
said.) And most of the dishes that players cook most often — like spaghetti,
pancakes, clam chowder and tuna casserole — still reflect a white American
palate.
As a result,
many players, both in the
US and abroad, don’t see their foodways reflected in
the game, especially dishes that originated in South Asia or Africa.
“I’d like to see
stuff I grew up eating,” said Micah Henson, 26, a doctoral candidate in applied
mathematics at the University of Washington who grew up in the South, cooking
alongside her mother and grandmother. “Like collard greens and baked mac and
cheese and candied yams and black-eyed peas, especially like a New Year’s
black-eyed-peas tradition.”
A spokesperson for
Maxis, which continues to operate as a subsidiary of Electronic Arts, said that
adding new features, items and cuisines “with the goal of making all of our
players of all cultures and backgrounds feel represented in the game” remains a
priority. On Wednesday, for instance, dishes inspired by Brazilian Carnival and
the Lunar New Year will be added to the game free of charge.
But the process
is slow-going, and if there’s a food item that doesn’t exist in the game,
there’s always the option to create it yourself — a practice known as
“modding.” Dr. MunMun Chattopadhyay, 36, a physician in Kolkata, India, has
made a name for herself by creating high-quality custom food content for “The
Sims.”
On her website,
players can download pixelated versions of shrimp and grits, cornbread, nasi
lemak, rhubarb tart and fried tofu, as well as foods she grew up eating, like
tandoori chicken, biryani, idli and malai kofta. Last year, Maxis officially
added a few food items designed by Chattopadhyay to the game to mark its 21st
anniversary.
But the doctor’s motivation for modding goes beyond
a desire for formal recognition. Like most Sims
players, she is seeking an
escape from daily life — and satisfying her own fascination with food along the
way.
“In reality, I’m just
walking and walking and walking all day long, and then I have a toddler and now
I’m pregnant again, so it’s very hectic,” she said. “It’s just kind of a wish
fulfillment. What I cannot do in real life, I’m doing it in ‘The Sims.’”
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