It's been a rollercoaster week for 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:The Sims 4 community. We've seen a small patch, which has fixed some bugs and caused some controversy, as weꦜll as being given an insight i𝐆nto the latest Stuff Pack.
This last week has given players a small patch that's brought a couple of big changes. The first is the removal of a custom content artwork loophol🧸e. Previously players could take photos of custom 𓆉content artwork and images and then use those photos in builds, without being flagged for custom content. This content will now be properly flagged as customized.
The custom content flag denotes content that has not been approved or endorsed by The Sims team and is not supported. EA/Maxis are presumably not allowed to endorse any content that uses trademark🅠s unofficially, such as copyrighted artwork, and so ensuring that all custom content is properly flagged is likely far more important than most people realize. However, that hasn't stopped CC lovers from being upset that this loophole is now closed. A CC tag reduces visibility on the gallery so creators using this trick are sad to see it go.
The second controversy surrounds the patch's "improvements" to the main menu. These appear to include popups that advertise DLC packs missing from players' games. Many are finding these aggressive, especially since the main menu already contains small prompts in the top box and the list of packs at the bottom of the screen. The Sims team has not yet spoken about this issue.
In positive news, SimGuruConor has giving more insight into the development of the second community created stuff pack. He talks about how knitting will work, elders reminiscing in rocking chairs and more. One of the most interesting additions to the pack is an online platform called Plopsy, which will be used by sims to sell crafted creations, including knitted items,🌃 woodwork, and paintings. This pack is shaping up to be unique and exciting.