December 14, 2025
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
Primary Menu
  • News
    • State
    • Nation
  • Sports
    • Basketball
    • Baseball
    • Cheerleading
    • Cross Country
    • Football
    • Golf
    • Intramurals
    • Lacrosse
    • Soccer
    • Softball
    • Swimming & Diving
    • Tennis
    • Track & Field
    • Volleyball
    • Wrestling
  • Feature
  • Opinion
    • Editorials
    • Letters
    • Senior Send-Offs
    • Editorial Cartoons
  • Entertainment
  • Reviews
    • Music
    • Books
    • Experiences
    • Games
    • Movies
    • Other
    • Restaurants
    • TV
The Reflector
Primary Menu
  • News
    • State
    • Nation
  • Sports
    • Basketball
    • Baseball
    • Cheerleading
    • Cross Country
    • Football
    • Golf
    • Intramurals
    • Lacrosse
    • Soccer
    • Softball
    • Swimming & Diving
    • Tennis
    • Track & Field
    • Volleyball
    • Wrestling
  • Feature
  • Opinion
    • Editorials
    • Letters
    • Senior Send-Offs
    • Editorial Cartoons
  • Entertainment
  • Reviews
    • Music
    • Books
    • Experiences
    • Games
    • Movies
    • Other
    • Restaurants
    • TV
Follow The Reflector on social media! @ReflectorUIndy on Instagram, /ReflectorUIndy on Facebook
  • Home
  • 2019
  • November
  • 13
  • Why do students love The Sims?
  • Featured Stories
  • Opinion

Why do students love The Sims?

Macy Judd | Staff Writer November 13, 2019

A new expansion pack for The Sims 4, called Discover University, will come out on Nov. 15,  and it has a lot that a college student can relate to. Players can choose to have their virtual character, called a Sim, live in a dorm, live off-campus, study life away, attend sporting events or go to parties. 

This expansion pack lets players enroll in the classes they want to take, which also comes with grades that can be affected by how often a Sim attends class or studies. 

This expansion pack explores the decisions college students make on a daily basis, presenting a fairly realistic version of the actions and consequences that college students face. 

It’s no secret that being a college student is difficult. Students are expected to go to school full time, hold a part-time job, maintain a social life, study, study some more, attend classes regularly, keep up with hours upon hours of homework and still somehow get a good night’s sleep. 

With such a jam-packed schedule, it’s hard to make sure everything is done correctly. People need room to make mistakes, which is why I believe that The Sims is such a popular game among college students. 

The Sims is a single-player game developed by Maxis and published by the company Electronic Arts. It is a life simulator, in which a player makes his or her own virtual character which he or she can customize, both physically and mentally. 

Players can choose their Sims’ body types, different traits, names and even facial structure. They must keep up with the Sims’ hygiene, hunger and social life in order to keep their Sims happy and healthy.

In addition to maintaining the Sims’ wellness, the players also can have their Sims make decisions about daily life or careers. Sims can go to college, start a family, commit crimes or completely neglect their health. Based on the decisions a player has the Sim make, the Sim faces different consequences. 

Graphic by Noah Fields

Like players’ Sims, college students also face consequences for their actions. For example, if I were to go on a party-going spree, I might find myself falling behind in my schoolwork, becoming exhausted or even developing an addiction to alcohol. 

So, this is where a Sim can come in handy. 

Players who feel compelled to make such decisions in their own lives can first have their Sims make those irresponsible decisions in their own lives instead. 

A player could have his or her Sim attend party after party and then watch how that affects the Sim rather than such player performing the actions himself or herself in the real world. 

The players themselves do not have to face the consequences that the Sims face, and they get that “second chance” to make better decisions, which could be why the game is so appealing to college students.

Some may disagree and say that the Sims’ lives are always going to be accurate representations of the consequences people could really face, which is true. Obviously the players’ and a Sims’ lives are not the exact same. 

But because players can customize the Sim to be almost exactly like themselves, physically and mentally, the players can get a pretty good idea of what could happen.

Besides the Discover University expansion pack, The Sims have several other packs that range anywhere from paranormal to medieval. There’s a pack that lets players make their Sims vampires or ghosts; one that lets players make their Sims knights or wizards. There’s even a pack that lets players’ Sims care for many different pets. 

Obviously, there are limitations on what people can do in reality. People are not vampires or wizards, so expansion packs like these are just for entertainment. 

People don’t always get second chances in the real world. It’s difficult to know exactly what to do, especially for a college students, who are at a time in their lives when the decisions they make could have permanent outcomes, positive or negative. 

Making room for mistakes is important, but unfortunately people don’t always get that. 

The Sims allows players to live through their decisions using characters who are not real and get a general idea of what might happen as a result of those decisions.

Everyone who plays The Sims does so for different reasons. Some may indulge in activities that they can’t indulge themselves. Some may want to live lives that they cannot live in reality. 

Ultimately, the entire reason people choose to play is about actions versus consequences. Getting others to make decisions and watching those decisions play out allows people that second chance they rarely get in real life.  

Tags: Indianapolis Indy Macy Judd Noah Fields The Reflector The Reflector Online The Sims The Sims 4 UIndy University of Indianapolis

Post navigation

Previous: Gentrification hurts low-income Hoosiers, but it doesn’t have to
Next: The UIndy Underground Series provides new capstone experience for theatre majors

Related Stories

Group of students gathered outside in the snow to enjoy the holiday lighting
  • Featured Stories
  • Multimedia
  • News

Gallery: UIndy Smith Mall Holiday Lighting 2025

Willa Allen, Social Media Manager December 4, 2025 0
opinion
  • Opinion

Satire: Uncle Earl banned from Thanksgiving dinner

Logan McInnes, Managing Editor November 18, 2025 0
opinion
  • Opinion

Satire: Trump to receive all of Santa’s coal

Luke Cooper, Editor-in-Chief November 18, 2025 0

Categories

Recent Posts

  • Gallery: UIndy Smith Mall Holiday Lighting 2025
  • Satire: Trump to receive all of Santa’s coal
  • Satire: Uncle Earl banned from Thanksgiving dinner
  • Satire: Baptism in Smith Mall canal at UIndy
  • Senior Send-Off 2025: Luke Cooper

Archives

NEWSLETTER

Subscribe to The Reflector's newsletter, The Rundown

Advertisements

One Somerset Apartments | Competitive, affordable off-campus housing. Convenient location catty corner across from campus. Pet-enthusiastic with plenty of green space. Call or text 317-650-8733 for more info!

You may have missed

Group of students gathered outside in the snow to enjoy the holiday lighting
  • Featured Stories
  • Multimedia
  • News

Gallery: UIndy Smith Mall Holiday Lighting 2025

Willa Allen, Social Media Manager December 4, 2025 0
opinion
  • Opinion

Satire: Trump to receive all of Santa’s coal

Luke Cooper, Editor-in-Chief November 18, 2025 0
opinion
  • Opinion

Satire: Uncle Earl banned from Thanksgiving dinner

Logan McInnes, Managing Editor November 18, 2025 0
Smith Mall canal at UIndy
  • Opinion

Satire: Baptism in Smith Mall canal at UIndy

Luke Cooper, Editor-in-Chief November 18, 2025 0

General Info

  • About
  • Awards
  • Advertising
  • Contact
  • Policies
  • Print Editions
  • Reflector Archives
  • Accessibility Statement

General Info

  • About
  • Awards
  • Advertising
  • Contact
  • Policies
  • Print Editions
  • Reflector Archives
  • Accessibility Statement

Subscribe

Subscribe to The Reflector’s email newsletter to stay up-to-date on the latest campus news.

Subscribe

Subscribe to The Reflector’s email newsletter to stay up-to-date on the latest campus news.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
© Copyright 2025 The Reflector and The Reflector Online. All rights reserved. | MoreNews by AF themes.