Thegame has a limit of 8 sims so no, you cannot do this. There are mods that will allow you to have more than 8 sims in a household. however that doesn't mean you will be able to merge your two families as the game will refuse. You can with a mod have more than 8 (children, grandchildren) however be aware that if you load the household in CAS the family will be truncated to 8.
(btw I am not working with origin but Ive been through this before so ik whats going on) Unfortunately sims households can only have 8 sims at a time, which might be why you cant merge the households together. The only possible way to do this is to download a mod that could allow you to, but viruses could be spread through mods so I would'nt try to if I were you. Hope my answer helped. - A nerd making a difference
Thanks, and yeah, that's where my research lead me to... I was wondering tho, is it possible to replace a customer sims with one from the Gallery ? (Like using the cheat "sims.spawn" (or something like that I can't remember), then modify the family (through CAS or simple edit mode) and replace this sim with one I have in my gallery?
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I have yet to see my Sims go anywhere or do anything other than things around the house or leave for work. I would expect that, based on their personality traits, they would do things. At the very least, I'd expect them to go to venues in their city. Or even more, use their attributes and plan a vacation. Are these tasks too complex for Sims, even with story progression and free will?
Sims will never be anyplace other than home or work by their own free will, however, you can send them shopping or relaxing (spending money in the process).
The most likely reason for why they do not go places other than home or work on their own would be because doing so would cost money, which a Sim cannot manage without the player's prior consent.
They do not, however, based on their traits they will develop wishes to go to certain places as a hint for you as to where they'd like to go, rewarding a small amount of lifetime happiness if you fulfill it.
For non-house-hold sims, Traits do have an effective on lot assignments for when it needs to generate a crowd for a lot, preferring Sims whose natural inclinations/schedules have a preference for those lots, but will select other sims (as long as their traits do not prevent that assignment at all) if the minimum threshold isn't met yet.
Researchers have different ways of categorizing single-parent households. In this report, single-parent households have a sole adult living with at least one biological, step or foster child under age 18. Some other organizations, including the U.S Census Bureau, also include households that have grandparents, other relatives or cohabiting partners present.
Around the world, living in extended families is linked with lower levels of economic development: Financial resources stretch further and domestic chores such as childcare are more easily accomplished when shared among several adults living together.
In early adulthood, Americans continue to live with their parents at relatively high rates. Adult child households account for 20% of Americans between the ages of 18 and 34. (Adult child households are defined as at least one parent living with one son or daughter 18 or older and no minor children or other family members.) Young adults in the U.S. are similar to their Canadian counterparts in this regard, and North America has a higher share of young adults who live in this arrangement than any other region.
Americans also differ from others around in the world in their living arrangements after age 60. Older adults in the U.S. are more likely than those around the world to age alone: More than a quarter of Americans ages 60 and older live alone (27%), compared with a global average of 16%. There are only 14 countries with higher shares of older adults living alone, and all are in Europe. They include Lithuania (41%), Denmark (39%) and Hungary (37%).
The most common arrangement for older U.S. adults, however, is to live as a couple without any other children or relatives. Almost half of U.S. adults ages 60 and older live in such households (46%), compared with a global average of 31%. Conversely, older Americans are much less likely to live with a wider circle of relatives. Just 6% of older U.S. adults live in extended-family households, compared with 38% of adults ages 60 and older globally.
Living in smaller households after age 60 is often tied to national rates of economic prosperity and life expectancy. Older adults are more likely to live alone or as couples in countries where an average person can expect to live more than 70 years. In countries where lives are shorter, adults 60 and older tend to live with other family members instead. Life expectancy is often linked to other markers of prosperity within a country, so older adults who can expect to live into their 80s also tend to live in countries where living alone is more affordable.
And in countries where governments provide fewer retirement benefits or other safety nets, families often face greater responsibility to support aging relatives. Cultural norms also play a role, and, in many parts of the world, it is expected that adult children will care for their aging parents.
Women ages 35 to 59 in the U.S., for example, are more likely than men in the same age group to live as single parents (9% vs. 2%), a pattern mirrored in every region and religious group around the world.
And women, on average, are younger than their husbands or male cohabiting partners in every country analyzed. That age gap is 2.2 years in the U.S. and in the rest of the world ranges from 2 years in the Czech Republic to 14.5 years in Gambia. Within the U.S., Jewish partners are closest in age, with only one year between them, while Christians and the unaffiliated have an equal gap (2.2 years).
When I first got my gateway it worked ok 6 months now and it sucks so bad I can't play games and half the time my wife can't even watch her shows without it buffing I think TMobile needs to stop making new stuff and fix theyre crappy service when I get another service in dropping this crap
If you have multiple towers in your area, monitor which you're connected to when you have issues (CGI in the advanced metrics). I started having very poor service and finally figured out it was always when I got bounced off my home tower to another down the street. Although, even though I figured out what the issue is, tmobile will do nothing to fix the poor service on the one tower.
My phone is always fast. Even though it is smaller, runs on a battery, and the location varies. But t mobile gives so much priority to cell phones, my home doesn't have the 25 needed to stream a TV show at certain times.
He mentioned about sending new hardware and I declined. He then mentioned something about refreshing their network settings on their end. I did have to reboot the gateway, but after they did something on their end, they said it would take 24 for 48 hours to take full effect (odd, but OK)
It has been a few days past the 48 hours and it has been good, but too early to say it is reliable. I have a speed test app on my phone so I have a easy way to track the history of my bandwidth and ping.
A week ago, when I had trouble streaming at 4:45 pm (before the refresh), I was getting 35.5 Mbps download, which can barely support streaming at 4k quality. Usually I get 250+Mbps which is way more than needed.
Hi, checking in from Carlsbad California. We switched over about a year ago. The home internet was never good but passable. We travel frequently and our security system and cameras require internet, they now go down consistently and have to be manually reset. Small problem when your not at the house.
Tijuana tower, att tower, unknown tower when there is a T-Mobile tower very close. Terrible option for Carlsbad ca. goes down 20 times a day not counting buffering and the techs are unable to do anything. As mentioned above, no good options in Carlsbad. Did hear a neighbor went to spectrum commercial for $280 per month and seems satisfied. We live in a third world country. Thank goodness ting is coming for $89/mo. Signed up. Just resigning myself that it will take another 6-12 months.
Absolutely useless, the past 3 months I have had no Internet more than I have had Internet. TMO even sent me a new "router". No fixes, it goes offline probably over 40 times a day. But! The router says service is good.
I think i'm starting to experience the same issues that everyone else is. Supposedly if we're not on a contract we can leave. I'll go back to pay more comcast if I need to. At least their connections were reliable.
Just how large and persistent are these racial wealth gaps? As figure 1 shows, median net worth for white households has far exceeded that of Black households through recessions and booms over the last thirty years. While movements in white wealth are easier to see due to the larger scale, during the most recent economic downturn, median net worth declined by more for Black families (44.3 percent decline from 2007 to 2013) than for white families (26.1 percent decline). In fact, the ratio of white family wealth to Black family wealth is higher today than at the start of the century.
Wealth is the sum of resources available to a household at a point in time; as such it is clearly influenced by the income of a household, but the two are not perfectly correlated. Two households can have the same income, but the household with fewer expenses, or with more accumulated wealth from past income or inheritances, will have more wealth. Figure 3 shows median net worth at different points in the family income distribution. What is immediately evident is that the racial wealth gap remains even for families with the same income. For those in the top 10 percent by income (only 3.6 percent Black), the racial wealth gap is still quite large: median net worth for white families in this income group is $1,789,300 versus $343,160 for Black families. A racial gap exists in every income group except the bottom quintile (23.5 percent Black), where median net worth is zero for everyone.
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