Join CNET.com.au: Receive free newsletters, post to forums and win prizes. Sign up now!

The Sims 2: Pets

By Andrew Park on 02/11/2006

More EA reviews , RRP: AU$49.95

The good:

  • Pets add an interesting new dimension to the game
  • Plenty of new items to choose from

The bad:

  • Pet management is difficult to schedule into a regular sim's day
  • New gameplay options will appeal mainly to experienced Sims 2 fans
  • Like with all other sims expansions, no noticeable technical improvements

The bottomline:

The Pets expansion adds an interesting wrinkle to The Sims 2 but won't set the world, or even your sims' house, on fire.

Editors' rating:

7.1/10

Users' rating:

9.6/10

Tags:

2 | expansion | pack | pets | sims | cat

The Sims 2 remains a popular and difficult-to-describe strategy game that lets you control the lives of little computer people in the house you build for them, as they love, grow old, have families, chase their dreams, and occasionally use the potty. And the most recent expansion, The Sims 2: Pets, doesn't break with tradition, so to speak. It adds domestic dogs, cats, birds, and rodents to The Sims 2, along with plenty of new items. If you weren't already a fan of the series, it seems doubtful that Pets will change your mind, but the expansion still adds plenty of content that will definitely be of interest to experienced players looking to add more to their Sims 2 experience in any way they can.

Pets act as brand-new family members, although hamsters and birds generally stay put in their cages. For these smaller pets, you can feed them; play with them to give your sims some social contact; and in the case of birds, teach them to talk to improve your charisma. Dogs and cats can be much more interesting. You can create canines and felines from a great number of different breeds and are given tonnes of different customisation options that let you choose size, age, different ear types, fur colour patterns, and even some minor pet accoutrements, like collars. You can also determine your pet's personality, such as whether your pet is friendly or aloof, neat or messy, and quick to learn new tricks or a bit slower on the draw. If those last sentences got you excited, there's a good chance that The Sims 2: Pets is for you.

Yes, you can choose to be a crazy cat lady if you wish to.

That's because pets -- dogs and cats, anyway -- function like limited people in the game. You can't take direct control of dogs or cats, but you can teach them new skills (pet tricks) by spending virtual hours (which equates to several minutes of real time) of your day training them until they learn how to sit, shake hands, and roll over. This system is similar to how you can improve your sims' marketability by spending virtual hours repeatedly training at skills like charisma, repair, and cleaning. You can use interactions with them to fulfil your sims' social needs (so yes, you can play as a "crazy cat lady" who associates only with her house cats), just like you can with live-in family members. And you can even send your pets off on different career paths. If you care to, you can have Fido pursue an exciting career in showbiz, for instance, and just like in the original Sims games, in Pets an increasingly nice car will pull up to your sims' house to pick them up as they climb the professional ladder and whisk them away for hours on end, until they return home later that day with an honest-to-goodness paycheck. These new options open up a slightly different avenue for gameplay than having just another roommate.

Cats and dogs can also interact with each other, and based on the personality you've given them, they may get into fights with the neighbours' pets or get friendly with them, even to the point of building up a relationship that leads to a new litter of puppies or kittens. In the meantime, if you happen to care about your house's property value, your dogs and cats are always works in progress, since you must constantly catch even the best-behaved pets in the act of destroying furniture, digging up the yard, or relieving themselves in the house so that you can scold them -- which teaches them not to do such things. Either way, patterning your pets' behaviour is surprisingly time consuming and not always convenient -- if you want to have a well-behaved pet, you have to always keep an eye on it and constantly drop what you're doing to dash over and scold or praise it -- and once you get there, actually giving your pet that feedback takes a little while, too.

This is the main issue with the way cats and dogs work in the game -- trying to create the perfect pet, or even a decent one, is difficult to schedule in the bustling world of The Sims 2, where your sims are also trying to make it in the working world themselves, build up their own skill points, pursue their wants and life goals, and take care of their own personal needs for food, rest, and social interaction. This is to say nothing of the other Sims 2 expansions' gameplay features, like University's influence system, Nightlife's group outing and dating system, or Open for Business' start-your-own-company system. If you try to pursue any or all these different gameplay styles, they'll just put even more time constraints between you and nurturing and developing your pet. You can try to either double up on pets, or on family members, and micromanage each sim, and experienced Sims 2 players may indeed take that approach as the toughest challenge yet -- juggling a household, a cadre of cronies, a steady girlfriend, a burgeoning home business, and a happy dog or cat. Most other players will probably have trouble keeping up with the conflicting needs of both their sims and pets, which are both demanding and require separate blocks of time in any given virtual day.

All pets take serious time to manage.

Otherwise, the expansion adds some welcome new music tracks that fit in just fine with the game, along with well-suited animal noises (dogs barking, cats purring, and so on) that are just as expressive as the still-upbeat gibberish "simlish" language that sims use to communicate with each other, and now to coo at and criticise their animal friends. While the expansion doesn't add a new set of out-of-home "lots", the out-of-home areas that sims can visit by calling a cab, it does add plenty of new objects both for lots, such as pet-shop stalls if you own Open for Business; pet supplies, including scratching posts, doggie chew toys, aviaries, and so on; plus new household items.

Even though it does add a decent-sized chunk of new content to the original game, The Sims 2: Pets isn't about redefining the Sims 2 experience or winning over any new converts. It seems to be for players who already know and love The Sims 2, who will actually spend time layering spots and coloured patches onto a dog's fur, or who find the idea of having a starlet house cat bringing home the bacon (while the deadbeat family sits at home and plays pinball all day) to be hilarious.

ccoque91
24/10/2007, 11:15 AM

rating
6
/10

It souns very good

Report offensive comment

sims*luver
29/07/2007, 03:16 PM

rating
10
/10

i absolutely love the sims pets game... ive only ever played it once and i havent bought it yet but thats only because i lost my money box.... if i had the money i would definitely buy it and i would race at any chance to get it for free... i would highly recommend this game to any other sims lovers......


luv u
xo.

Report offensive comment

chelsea
28/07/2007, 05:37 PM

rating
10
/10

its alot of fun and pets add more fun to the sims 2

Pros: fun

Cons: too little time to do everything needed and i thort sims2 went qwik whoosh this time reely flies

Report offensive comment

mary
01/06/2007, 01:58 PM

rating
10
/10

i like it very much

Report offensive comment

mmnfkgs
12/05/2007, 05:06 AM

rating
10
/10

its so cool and i found aout all these cheats

Report offensive comment

KlintMane
10/03/2007, 12:27 AM

rating
10
/10

I have this game and it's really cool.I like it

Report offensive comment

steph
02/02/2007, 02:41 PM

rating
10
/10

great game play sims 1 all da time hot

Report offensive comment

Charlie
30/11/2006, 12:41 PM

rating
10
/10

it was great to plat

Pros: it was good
it is better than any of the other sims games

Cons: you should be able to have a free trial download

Report offensive comment

wilia
05/11/2006, 05:33 AM

rating
10
/10

I want game "THE SIMS2 PETS"

Report offensive comment

  • Leave a comment

All fields marked with * are required

What do you think

Rate this product:

Need help? Read our guidelines for what each number rating represents.

Your e-mail will not be displayed

You must read and type the 6 chars within 0..9 and A..F

You must read and type the 6 chars.

  • News

  • Features

  • Oi!

  • Must read

  • World of Warcraft to sell token device for added security

  • Whaddyareckon?: Ultimate Street Fighters

  • Blizzard teaser augurs new game?

  • Wii Fit hacked to work with WoW

  • Call of Duty 4 answered 10 million times

  • Valve announces best PC gaming idea of the year (so far)

  • Street Fighter IV heads home

  • James Cameron: 3D heading beyond movies

  • Nvidia to make all your PC games 3D (if you so choose)

More news »

Find the right game

Brand
  • Multiple options can be selected

    More reviews »

    Membership benefits

    Create wishlists

    Create wishlists

    See a product on CNET.com.au that you want? Add it to your wishlist and send a hint to your friends and family. Sign up for a free CNET.com.au membership now!