13 Sick Things We Did to The Sims

If the sims were ever to become sentient, we'd be screwed. Have you ever killed one? We've collected a few stories of cruelty, and virtual horror in The Sims.

Matthias Pawlikowski

In 1971, an experiment was carried out at Stanford University in California, and it became one of the most famous and notorious social experiments. Psychology department Professor Philip Zimbardo gathered 24 volunteers who were divided into two groups: guards and prisoners. The guards were only told to "maintain order" – the specific rules were up to them. The basement of the psychology department was converted into a prison (with proper, barred doors etc.), and then, prisoners were introduced. The experiment was expected to last a month. It was discontinued after 6 days for safety concerns. The guards committed pretty appalling deeds – especially for regular students – including stripping prisoners down and forcing them to simulate sexual intercourse. They weren't allowed to shower, and had to clean the toilet with bare hands.

The Stanford experiment inspired many films, including The Stanford Prison Experiment (2015). - 13 Sick Things We Did to The Sims - dokument - 2020-08-04
The Stanford experiment inspired many films, including The Stanford Prison Experiment (2015).

The experiment proved that mentally sound people never associated with any form of psychosis – your teachers and shopkeepers, your uncles and aunts, your fathers and moms – can become abusers or victims in an instant. The reason for this is, as psychologists believe, the influence of the environment on an individual.

The infamous experiment serves as quite a dreadful commentary on all subsequent pages of this article.

People doomed Sims to this fate

Released in 2000, the game from Maxis is a simulator of prison, sadistic punishment and torture. I mean, you can build a cottage with a garden and a white fence, feed your dog, drive to work, romance other sims, and paint pictures, but I'm sure most of you have, at least once, killed one of the Sims that were too pushy. This article will be about this – the ways, the classic ones and the ones that don't fit in your head – to kill Sims.

I've been asking random people questions for a while: first, whether they've played The Sims, and second, whether they've ever killed anyone there. One of my colleagues told me recently: "Of course. In fact, there's not much else to this game other than killing them. Build houses and go to work? Please. In the end, I always kill them.” It... Made me think. A little about the sanity of my colleague, and a little about the way we play this game. I asked my friend the same question, and he told me: "I do the Wachowskis on them: I lock them in basement and imagine they power an entire neighborhood." Like The Matrix batteries, you know."

So I scoured the internet, inquired colleagues, and the following is what I produced. I have also collected testimonies from members of the editorial staff and encourage you to learn their stories.

What's that in your cheek?

Ladies and gentlemen, this article is sponsored by the letter P for psychopathy, but that doesn't mean it should be treated with dead seriousness. All the stories described here are exactly as untrue as the virtual Sims are untrue. Go easy on the next pages, because they present the ideas of players who were tired of boredom, and motivated by curiosity. The amiable Sims are "a little less real" than human beings, and starving them to death in the basement isn't much crazier than Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2's "No Russian" sequence.

The Sims 4

September 2, 2014

PC PlayStation Xbox
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The Sims 3

June 2, 2009

PC PlayStation Xbox Mobile Nintendo
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The Sims 2

September 17, 2004

PC PlayStation Xbox Nintendo
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The Sims

February 2, 2000

PC PlayStation Xbox Nintendo
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Matthias Pawlikowski

Author: Matthias Pawlikowski

The editor-in-chief of GRYOnline.pl, associated with the site since the end of 2016. Initially, he worked in the guides department, and later he managed it, eventually becoming the editor-in-chief of Gamepressure, an English-language project aimed at the West, before finally taking on his current role. In the past, a reviewer and literary critic, he published works on literature, culture, and even theater in many humanities journals and portals, including the monthly Znak or Popmoderna. He studied literary criticism and literature at the Jagiellonian University. Likes old games, city-builders and RPGs, including Japanese ones. Spends a huge amount of money on computer parts. Apart from work and games, he trains tennis and occasionally volunteers for the Peace Patrol of the Great Orchestra of Christmas Charity.