Steam Los Sims 2

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Mina Delahoussaye

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Jul 14, 2024, 3:42:31 PM7/14/24
to lizanbeausig

@gyuyoung0515 I've merged your post with the master thread for this issue. If you only own the Sims 4 base game in Steam, no packs, then you should be able to remove the base game from your Steam library, run the Origin reset tool, and add the (now free) Origin version of Sims 4. This occasionally doesn't work, so please post back if you have any trouble with it.

steam los sims 2


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For any packs you own through Steam, you won't be able to use them in your Origin/Mac install. I don't know whether you'd even be able to remove the base game from your Steam account if you owned packs through Steam; you might need to unlink your Steam and EA accounts instead.

i recently am switching over to a mac versus windows and Steam doesn't support Sims 4 on Mac .So i downloaded origin but my DLC that i had bought through steam is showing up as owned but not installed in game on the mac but wont let me install it throught origin it just tells me to install it through steam and download it through there but i have no option for that.

I've seen this issue reported multiple times, but there seems to be many reasons why it happens and different solutions depending on the reason. I need some help understanding what is causing my app to do this and what I need to do about it. So here's the issue...

I downloaded the Sims 4 a while back when I was using a Windows PC. I have just bought a new Mac and wanted to start playing again. I downloaded Origin only to see no download option on my game. I have reset and reinstalled Origin. I have unlinked my Steam account through Origin. The button has still not appeared.

Currently, I have purchased all of my Sims 3 expansions on a disc. However, due to moving several times, I have lost some of the games in the unpacked stuff in the garage. Through the magic of game key retrieval on my old computer, I have registered the missing expansions on my Origin account but there is one left - University Life. It is 10 cheaper on Steam than origin, so I naturally want to buy it at the cheaper price point.

However, I don't own the sims 3 on steam and don't want to negate the cheaper price by having to purchase the base game. If I purchase the DLC as a gift for a friend (my partner) can I simply get the game key off of them and register it myself on Origin? Or can I register my base sims 3 on steam to enable myself to register it on origin?

I have bought several Sims games and expansions recently on Origin, Disks, and Steam. At this point I've purchased about 10 Steam versions of the Sims games and expansions (since I'm buying for 2 players), and FYI: all Steam Sims games and expansions/Stuff packs come with their own CD Key which can be used to register the steam-purchased copies on Origin, and allow you to download the Origin version as well. Thus the key is not "only redeemable" on steam.

A week ago I tried installing the sims 4 on my 512GB SD card through steam.
It did download, i clicked on launch, it showed its launching, and boom... it did not launch, no screen, no nothing, just the button "launch" showing again later on again, as many times as I tried, it just didn't launch, for example I managed to run Pixel worlds with proton, euro truck simulator 2 also, with some crashes though.

I resolved most (But not all) of these when I completely reinstalled Steam from Scratch - which necessitated re-downloading and installing games... (sigh).
Astroneer currently is the only remaining title in my steam that suddenly does exactly as you describe.

Yes, sadly. I removed all of Steam however I did back up my game save files into a new separate folder that I restored after reinstalling Steam from APT (Either Software Store or terminal).
I only backed up specific files and only for a couple of titles.

So I need to move Official folder as well as the community folder from old drive to new drive then also move the main game directory to the new drive but not the same sub folder because that will be a whole dfferent folder under steam apps. correct? or can i just move the official and community folder to the new drive uninstall and then reinstall to the new drive?

Hi.
If I got it right all I need is to move the official and community folders to the new drive and start MSFS that it will ask where the folders went? Or I need to uninstall it from steam and install it again? I got confused.

Hi, I just got a sim from EE after switching from GiffGaff. I put the sim into my router and while most things are working, there is one exception - steam. I have no firewalls or anything and yet every time I try to launch steam, it says no connection. It works fine on my neighbour's internet, so I know that it's not steam. Yet everything else online is working perfectly. I can watch youtube, listen to spotify, message on discord, use my browser, even send this message on the forums. It's just steam that won't work with the internet.

It might be an EE IPv6 issue. EE has introduced IPv6 on its mobile network, but it doesn't fall-back to IPv4 nicely. Can you change the Profile/APN on your EE device to APN Protocol = IPv4 only? Or play around with that setting.

Hi, thank you for your answer! Worked like a miracle. My router was a bit weird and didn't let me change the APN to be IPv4 only, but it did let me set my own one up with the same information as the EE APN and this worked amazingly. Credit also goes to @afarmery who seems to have had similar problems last year. Thank you for your help, I can finally enjoy my faster internet! Seems like something EE should look into though since it seems to be a somewhat common issue.

Throughout the late 19th and early 20th centuries teams of horses and bullocks were replaced by steam engines. Thousands of engines were imported to or made in Australia for use on paddocks, roads, railways and waterways to drive machinery, carry loads and generate electricity.

It was sold by F Lassetter and Co, sole agents of Ransomes products in New South Wales about 1906, to AP Wade of Kenilworth station, near Yass. It powered a 10-stand sheep-shearing plant, and was probably also used on the neighbouring properties of Douro and Bowylie.

During 1917 Kenilworth ran more than 40,000 sheep, and that year set a record when six shearers removed the fleece from 2543 sheep over two days. The engine was retained at Kenilworth until the 1950s when it was acquired by the Horse Era Museum in Canberra. The Horse Era Museum was transferred to the National Museum in 1980.

Ransomes developed a number of models with larger boilers and fireboxes to handle a variety of fuels including straw, peat and sawdust. The engines were designed to a measure of nominal horse power, or NHP, so that farmers could easily choose the model to suit their needs.

The Museum's engineering consultants Col Ogilvie and Ian Stewart developed the plan for simulating the regular action of the steam engine. They first tested the motion of the wheel, crankshaft, and pistons and decided how to adapt the engine for display in the Hall.

Ransomes, Sims and Jefferies Limited was a major British agricultural machinery maker also producing a wide range of general engineering products in Ipswich, Suffolk including traction engines, trolleybuses, ploughs, lawn mowers, combine harvesters and other tilling equipment. Ransomes also manufactured Direct Current electric motors in a wide range of sizes, and electric forklift trucks and tractors. They manufactured aeroplanes during the First World War. Their base, specially set up in 1845, was named Orwell Works.

As a result of a mishap in his foundry in 1803, when a broken mould caused molten metal to come into contact with cold metal, making the metal surface extremely hard, Robert discovered the process of chilled casting. He used it to refine the manufacture of plough shares, which he advertised as 'self sharpening' ploughs, and obtained a patent for his discovery.[4] His next patent was obtained in 1808, and was for the standardisation of plough fittings, enabling parts to be easily replaced when they wore out.[5]

In 1809 Robert Ransome, now aged 56, was looking for someone younger to take the business forwards. His eldest son James returned from Great Yarmouth to become his father's partner, bringing with him several of his skilled craftsmen. Now called Ransome and Son, the business prospered, with output doubling over the next six years.[7] Another period of social unrest followed, with agricultural depression and the introduction of the Corn Laws in 1815. Robert had employed William Cubitt in 1812 as the company engineer, and they diversified so they were not solely dependent on the sale of agricultural products. They cast the components for Stoke Bridge, Ipswich, which was swept away in a flood in 1818. Cubitt was responsible for the new design, and the bridge lasted for over 100 years. Cubitt's designs for wind-regulating vanes for windmills and a treadmill for grinding corn in prisons were also manufactured, and he then supervised the installation of gas lighting in Ipswich, which included the construction of a gasometer near to the foundry.[8] Cubbitt became a partner in the firm in 1821, but continued to carry out consultancy work in his own right. He was in such demand that he moved on in 1826, to pursue his civil engineering career, for which he was later knighted.[9]

In 1851 export trade was initiated which by the early 20th century was more important than the home market and included distributing agencies throughout the world with a branch establishment in Odessa.[13]

In 1869 four engineers, Allen, who remained the senior partner in the parent firm, his elder son R.J. Ransome, R.C. Rapier and A.A. Bennett, took the firm's railway department aside from the parent business and established Ransomes & Rapier at Riverside Works, Ipswich.

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