Nintendo DS

The Sims 3

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The Sims 3 on Nintendo DS was developed by EA Redwood Shores and published by Electronic Arts. Rather than fully reproducing the home-console version, it adapts the series into a portable life-sim with stronger adventure structure, quests, and town events. Players create a Sim, build relationships, and pursue goals while exploring a more directed handheld experience. It is remembered as a distinctive spin on the series with a compact, quest-driven pace.
Series
Platform
Release Date
2009-01-01
Plays
3

Play unfolds through town exploration, dialogue, errands, and management of your Sim’s needs. After creating a character, you move between locations, accept tasks, earn Simoleons, and improve abilities relevant to jobs or requests. The DS version simplifies building and emphasizes story progression, object interaction, and NPC relationships. Controls combine button movement with menu and touch-based interactions, and progress unlocks new areas, items, outfits, and additional activities.

Player-created Sim

The main character designed by the player, whose daily life, jobs, relationships, and personal goals drive the game.

Town residents

NPCs who provide quests, social opportunities, clues, and event-based progression throughout the town.

Finish early tutorial objectives quickly to open up the town and its services. Keep needs such as energy and hygiene in good condition before taking on longer tasks. Focus first on skills and friendships tied to current objectives so progress is more efficient. Read quest text carefully, since some goals depend on specific locations or interactions. Save money early and spend on items that improve convenience rather than cosmetic extras.

No cheats or unlockables available

Tips

Memorize key facilities and frequently visited locations to reduce wasted travel time.

Tips

Check objects and talk to multiple residents when a quest seems unclear; clues are often spread around town.

Tips

Do not let your Sim’s needs drop too low before story missions, or efficiency will suffer.

Tips

Balanced socializing and task completion usually leads to smoother progression.

User Reviews

It feels more like a quest-based life adventure than the main console game, but that format suits the DS well.

User Reviews

Players who enjoy directed objectives and town exploration often appreciate this version more than those seeking deep building tools.

Comments

5/5
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