Patreon Must Be Destroyed Sims 4 ((top)) -
During the early 2000s, a commercial market for mods grew. Sites like TSR (The Sims Resource) began charging subscription fees for access to premium custom content. In response, community members, led by a coder named Pescado, argued that paid sites were a direct violation of EA’s End User License Agreement (EULA), which explicitly banned selling user-created content.
For the community to heal, the extremists on both sides must compromise. EA needs to enforce its own "non-commercial" rule more strictly, shutting down permanent paywalls definitively. Creators need to abandon the culture of surveillance and aggression. And players need to accept that if they want high-quality mods, they must either pay a fair, temporary early-access fee or patiently wait for the free release. Patreon Must Be Destroyed Sims 4
If you cannot release your CC for free after one month—if you need that permanent paywall to survive—you don't have a CC business. You have a digital hoarding problem, and you are holding the save files of thousands of players hostage. During the early 2000s, a commercial market for mods grew
Let’s talk about the parasocial toll.
Websites, spreadsheets, and shared drives dedicated to scraping paid Patreon content and rehosting it for free have proliferated. To the rebels, these platforms are clearinghouses of justice, returning the game to its open-source roots. To the creators, they are theft. For the community to heal, the extremists on