New Sims Series - Father Winter's Babies

Hey Y'all. In 2019 I started a sims series called Father Winter's Babies. I recorded the first three episodes in October 2019. I planned the series primarily because I was curious what a sim baby with Father Winter would be like. What traits and abilities would they have as they grew up. Honestly, I still don't know the answer to that question since I stopped playing the save after I noticed that the videos I was making weren't getting any views in 2021. And on top of that the Sims forum was really toxic. People were sabotaging my channel by down voting my videos and reporting them. I guess haters are gonna hate.

Why I Stopped Recording

Since it takes so long to play, record, and edit videos and I wasn't getting a return on the investment of my time, I stopped playing. However, with the new Infants update and Growing Together expansion pack coming out, I figured it would be great to play this save since it is a pretty vanilla game and will give me a chance to play the game while my mods are being updated for the Growing Together EP. 

It's Up to You

So folks, here is the first episode of Father Winter's Babies - a convergence of the Seasons expansion pack, the upcoming base game infants update and the new EP Growing together. I plan to play through the base game before I purchase the EP, Growing Together. So, in all I promise about six - eight episodes in this  first season. And if my channel gets traction and more views, I'll add a season two. If not, I'll play my other saves when my mods are updated without recording and editing. So, folks the ball is in your court, whether my YouTube channel grows or remains as it is. And to my existing subscribers and readers, thank you ever so much for taking a chance on this lil indie channel and blog.


Leave a comment here, on my YouTube channel or tweet along with me here:

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Show Us Your Builds - Willow Creek

New Life Simulation Games on the Horizon and I'm Here for It

Sims 4 Infants - Good Idea, Horrible Implementation