I do play Sims 3. There are good and bad points about the game that makes it worthwhile to consider and buy.
Good Points:
- Improved building tools
The building tools are really cool. You can drag a wall to make the room bigger or smaller instead of knocking the wall down and then making a new wall. You can actually build within one tile of the lot instead of two like in Sims 2 when you couldn't build a house one tile away from the edge.
- Improved coloring tools
The coloring tools are fun to use. You can actually customize your furniture, walls, floors, fixtures (lights, sink, etc), mail posts and garbage cans (the ones outside on the sidewalk). There is no limit to your imagination. You save a lot of space on your hard drive not downloading any recolors since you can create them yourselves.
- Gardening
This is the highlight of the game for me. More vegetables to collect and plant. Different fertilizers to use on the budding plants. Gardening opportunities are available at certain levels to make gardening worthwhile to do. I enjoyed this part of Sims 3 a lot because I can have a reason for a garden. In Sims 2, I still enjoy gardening, but there are no opportunities to offer for growing and harvesting plants except to sell them in an "outdoor farmer's market".
- Jobs
The jobs were fun to explore. There is a variety of opportunities to gain from working through the levels of the careers in Sims 3 similar to Sims 2, but you get to choose which branch to specialize in once your Sim hits a certain level. One of my Sims is a Thief, and she went into the Master Thief track. The other track is World Leader. The hours are quite flexible enough to allow your Sim to take on a part-time job to make extra cash.
- No Loading Times
Sims 3 has one upper hand over Sims 2. No loading screens, no long loading times between lots. You can literally go out into the neighborhood map and choose a destination for your Sim to go to and watch your Sim hop into a car or onto a bike and go down the street with your Sim just like you would with your family or friend in their cars in real life.
- Children
They can pretty much take care of themselves in Sims 3. Their parents could head off to the store and not worry about their kids being taken away. The only exception is that a parent has to be home for their baby and toddler since they technically can't take care of themselves. Children can pretty much go anywhere alone like to the park to play, to the river to fish and whatnot. But there are limitations to what children can do in Sims 3.
BUT there are mods out there now to allow them to do much more in Sims 3 than in Sims 2.
- Trait System
No longer do we rely on zodiac signs to determine our Sims' personalities and futures. The traits in Sims 3 are hilarious. You can mix up a bunch of traits in any way you want with a few exceptions. A Sim can't be athletic and couch potato at the same time, but I know some people in real life who can be athletic and be couch potatoes at the same time.
But the traits define the Sims much more in interesting ways as in how they will deal with life, other Sims, their careers and their futures.
These are some of the good highlights of Sims 3 I think are worthwhile to consider. There are too many to list, but these are the selling points for me pretty much because in Sims 3, you can almost do anything you want with building and recoloring.
Bad Points:
- Rabbit Holes
You can't watch your Sims work, attend classes or school and shop at stores. They disappear into "rabbit holes", but you could hear your Sims doing things inside though. I know someone is attempting to circumvent that in an experiment, but I doubt it will work. Not without extensive mod editing tools to truly edit the core game files like we did with Sims 2.
- Careers For Teens
There are only about 3 to 5 careers for your teens in Sims 3. They are part-time jobs teens can take up after school from about 3 PM to 6 or 7 PM. There are no other careers I know of at this date to give teens more variety. Sucks big time because teens in Sims 2 have tons of opportunities to take full-time careers if they want, they could take night classes and so forth with mods out there in existence.
- Romance
Whoever thought up and implemented the system to enable romance between adults should be shot. I actually had to
WORK hard to get my two adults in a marriage to gain more romantic interactions. I believe married Sims should already have
all of the romantic interactions available regardless. Nothing pisses me off more than to see one spouse reject the other spouse's advances. Really ridiculous.
* This is a project I plan to look into to see if I can make all interactions available. If someone already did this, let me know.*
- Lighting
Lighting in Sims 3 seems to be very strange for certain video cards. I own an ATI Radeon XT1300 series video card with 256 onboard DDR memory which is supposed to do a good job rendering the visuals almost as realistic as possible. Except Sims 3. My Sims look fine indoors, but when they go outside, their skins looked splotchy. I noticed the rough edges of shadowing on them and thought maybe anti-aliasing in game wasn't working right because I HAD anti-aliasing turned on from the ATI Catalyst control panel.
This is an area where many people have discussed about the video cards they used to play Sims 3 with. Many people ended up going out to buy better video cards for that reason alone like I described with the lighting and rendering issues. I might either add a new video card to my system to work with my current video card or just go out and buy a better one with 1 GB onboard memory. But I am not done messing around with the game options and ATI options yet.
- Memory
Yes, Sims 3 can be memory intensive because of the amount of rendering the computer has to do if you set all of the game options to Max. Your best bet is to get at least 1 GB memory for your machines if they are older than 2 years or 2 GB or more for your machines if they are less than 2 years old. Memory sticks are so cheap now that you can practically plunk down about 40 bucks for a 2 GB DDR2 or DDR3 stick or pairs if they come in pairs. Most online computer parts sites sell them for cheaper than that. My partner found a pair of DDR2 2 GB memory sticks for around 10 to 20 bucks at one site, but it was the site we don't buy from. I'm just saying that there are many places you can go to and get your machines upgraded with new stuff. Best Buy probably will install them for free on the same day if they are not behind in their customer queues. Still, it is an investment you have to think about first and commit to.
These are just some of the bad points about Sims 3, but in the end, it is up to you to see for yourself if you want to buy Sims 3. Take a look at the different screenshots in the Sims 3 section. There are stunning pictures of the scenery around your Sims at different times, beautiful homes to pine for (and wish for in real life! Lewisb40 did a fantastic job on the homes she built or remodeled for Sims 3), delicious Sims in both men and women's sections. Look at them for yourselves.
My advice is to make sure you have a list of system specs on hand to consider when you look at the boxed product at the store. Consider how much money you want to spend if your machine lacks in memory and video card specs. I know of some people who successfully ran Sims 3 on machines with processors running at just under 2GHz. But that's them who might've overclocked their machines..
Hope this will help you consider.