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Sims Get To Work For Mac

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Unleash your imagination and create a unique world of Sims that's an expression of you! Explore and customize every detail from Sims to homes, and much more. Choose how Sims look, act, and dress, then build and design their incredible homes. Read no further unless you (or a family member) play Sims 3 and want to get it working in macOS Sierra. And really, try the linked forum post first; this is just a backup plan. The following is quoted verbatim as posted by user 'Ashpeef' on the Sims forums. I organized it as a numbered list and formatted some text, but left the content unchanged.

  1. Sims Get To Work For Mac Os
  2. The Sims 4 Get To Work Free
  3. Sims Get To Work For Macbook Air

Sims Get To Work For Mac Os

When we upgraded all our Macs to macOS Sierra, my daughter was upset because Sims 3 broke. After much scouring of the internet, I found the solution and tweeted about it:

My daughter's fave game, Sims 3, was getting stuck on the loading screen in Sierra. This Info.plist edit fixed it: https://t.co/HzjgWnB7cr

— Rob Griffiths (@rgriff) December 14, 2016

It dawned on me, though, that if that forum post ever vanishes, I'll be in trouble with future new Macs and/or reinstalls, so I thought I'd document it here, too. Read no further unless you (or a family member) play Sims 3 and want to get it working in macOS Sierra. And really, try the linked forum post first; this is just a backup plan.

The following is quoted verbatim as posted by user 'Ashpeef' on the Sims forums. I organized it as a numbered list and formatted some text, but left the content unchanged.

It's probably the Launcher that crashes at the time it hands over control to the game itself. You could try starting the game directly, bypassing the Launcher. Here's how (also a rather long story, I'm afraid...) :lol:

  1. Within your Applications folder, locate and open the folder The Sims 3
  2. Find the application The Sims 3.app, then right click (or hold the Control key and click if you can't right click) to get the context menu.
  3. In that menu, select Show Package Contents. A new window opens with only one item: the folder Contents
  4. Within that folder there is a file info.plist (usually the second item)
  5. Right or Control click that file for the context menu and there select Open With
  6. You'll probably have to scroll down almost to the bottom of the list to find TextEdit.app. Use that program to open the file.
  7. Now the real thing: locate the line CedegaGameName about 2/3rds down. Note: not the one just above it with CedegaGameDir!
  8. The next line should end ...Bin/S3Launcher.exe
  9. Change S3Launcher.exe to TS3W.exe and save the file.

The next time you start the game, it should begin straight away with the EA and Maxis logos.

If you later on want to start with the Launcher again, just do the same thing, this time changing TS3W.exe back into S3Launcher.exe

To make this easier to do in the future, I made an alias of the info.plist file in our Documents folder. And as I'm not a masochist, I used BBEdit, not TextEdit, to edit the file.

Related Posts:

When we upgraded all our Macs to macOS Sierra, my daughter was upset because Sims 3 broke. After much scouring of the internet, I found the solution and tweeted about it:

My daughter's fave game, Sims 3, was getting stuck on the loading screen in Sierra. This Info.plist edit fixed it: https://t.co/HzjgWnB7cr

— Rob Griffiths (@rgriff) December 14, 2016

It dawned on me, though, that if that forum post ever vanishes, I'll be in trouble with future new Macs and/or reinstalls, so I thought I'd document it here, too. Read no further unless you (or a family member) play Sims 3 and want to get it working in macOS Sierra. And really, try the linked forum post first; this is just a backup plan.

The following is quoted verbatim as posted by user 'Ashpeef' on the Sims forums. I organized it as a numbered list and formatted some text, but left the content unchanged.

It's probably the Launcher that crashes at the time it hands over control to the game itself. You could try starting the game directly, bypassing the Launcher. Here's how (also a rather long story, I'm afraid...) :lol:

  1. Within your Applications folder, locate and open the folder The Sims 3
  2. Find the application The Sims 3.app, then right click (or hold the Control key and click if you can't right click) to get the context menu.
  3. In that menu, select Show Package Contents. A new window opens with only one item: the folder Contents
  4. Within that folder there is a file info.plist (usually the second item)
  5. Right or Control click that file for the context menu and there select Open With
  6. You'll probably have to scroll down almost to the bottom of the list to find TextEdit.app. Use that program to open the file.
  7. Now the real thing: locate the line CedegaGameName about 2/3rds down. Note: not the one just above it with CedegaGameDir!
  8. The next line should end ...Bin/S3Launcher.exe
  9. Change S3Launcher.exe to TS3W.exe and save the file.
Get

The next time you start the game, it should begin straight away with the EA and Maxis logos.

If you later on want to start with the Launcher again, just do the same thing, this time changing TS3W.exe back into S3Launcher.exe

The Sims 4 Get To Work Free

To make this easier to do in the future, I made an alias of the info.plist file in our Documents folder. And as I'm not a masochist, I used BBEdit, not TextEdit, to edit the file.

Sims Get To Work For Macbook Air

Related Posts:





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