I won best craftsmanship.Īlso: we had a few students pass away over the years and their parking spots were unavailable and left exactly the way they were while the student went to school there. My school even did competitions on the best parking spots. As soon as you picked your spot and paid, you could go paint your spot. It was during the summer before the school year started. Both my junior and senior years, everyone camped out at the school in the courtyard (tents, sleeping bags, the whole nine yards) to be first in line to pick our parking spots when the doors opened. Seniors got first dibs on their spots and then juniors and sophomores. My high school (in Texas) allowed us to pay $35 a semester to have our own parking spot. Okay, anyways, thanks for coming to my ted talk :D have a lovely day! sims 2 is old, and the about 30 foods you can cook couldn’t have included that many dishes in any case, so lack of different foods would’ve happened either way. despite there being even a work outfit of a mascot fries □Īll that being said, i think they got a lot more foods in with the later games and i’m happy about that. those alongside hamburgers are like the first stereotypical foods i associate with north american cuisine because they are so prevalent in fast food, and yet i can’t get them in game. and that you can only order pizza, but can’t make it. One thing i do find funny though is the lack of fries, donuts and nuggets. also, as a big fan of casseroles and oven cooked veggies the lack of oven-made foods saddens me. there are so many great dishes being overlooked. and a lot of staple veggies can’t be grown, or the ones that can, can’t be seen in your cooking (eggplant parmesan, where you at?) and basically asian, african, pacific island and south american cusine are not foods you can make (you can get some from food stands on a vacation, or order chinese from delivery, but sims can’t cook it) which is such a shame. No porrige, fruits / fruit bowls, different sort of sandwiches or tea for breakfast, no rye bread or hard rye bread, only one salad option, very little stews, foods with mushrooms, chicken, minced meats, no foods with tofu, sausages, beans, oats, lentils, boiled potatoes, oven potatoes, no pea soup, savoury pies, blueberry pies or baked buns. they mostly have been giving ‘suburbia for the (higher) middle class nuclear family’ which makes sense considering how the entire game is somewhat a satire of american suburbia and society. Not north american, i’m finnish, so idk how particular the foods in game really are to the region, but. The food one is so true though! (i main sims 2 so these are about that one) It's just to be sharing an experience and discussion about how the game relates to real life from the US or Canada. Note: This post is not made to make fun of North American culture. In my country, you apply to majors alongside with the universities. You apply to universities before choosing your own major (Sims 4).I never know anyone around me here who have garages at their houses. I used to think this guy was just a weirdo sim who liked dressing up as an animal lol. In Europe and many East Asian countries, even in many small towns outside large cities, you can still take public transport like bus without having to call a taxi. If you've had noticed something, I would love to hear about them. Over the years as an adult now (and I'm also playing the Sims 4 btw), I've learned there are a lot of things in game that I notice are incredibly North American thing you can't really find oustide North America. I started playing the Sims 3 when I was about 11, and didn't know much about the world outside my country.
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