Cancel X. Topic Archived. Sign Up for free or Log In if you already have an account to be able to post messages, change how messages are displayed, and view media in posts. First, only people who have University AND open for business can do this. Now build your house into 2 seperate parts, with things like your bed, shower, and kitchen in one. The other part should have a bubble blower and a bathroom. Seperate the two sides with Mayan Doors that are used for dorms, then lock your side.
Next start a business from home and buy a meter to charge around 10 or more simoleons every hour. You can live like normal going in and out of your side, going to work and such and paying guests will sit on the bubble blower for HOURS.
Trust me, this works! Enjoy : let me know how your results turn out. FluffyKidJoe 12 years ago 2. It does work well, you don't realyl need the bubble blower though. Specifically, you can turn your house into a business lot!
Here are the facts, pros, and cons First of all, you need to think in time. It takes loading time when you load new lots, and if you're on a weak machine, then this can grate on your nerves.
Generally speaking, on a 1. Still, this guide writer has incredible patience; you may not. The point is, every time you make a transfer from a home lot to a business lot, there will be a loading time; using the home lot as a business lot also eliminates that time. Also, your Sims will need to worry about transport time. Even if you have an Alienware rig, your Sim will still need to walk to the car or taxi to transfer between lots.
Granted, this doesn't take much time in the grand scheme of things. But, like loading times, it may grate on your nerves. Combining your house lot and business lot will eliminate this time too. Secondly, think about the cost.
We know the symbol for simoleons isn't the American dollar sign, but sue us, we're too lazy to type the special character. First-generation Sims will need to be extremely lucky to afford much more than a small lot, and that's assuming he doesn't care about expanding his house. Conversely, starting a home business is free. Yes, you read that right: there is no fee to flag your home as both a house and a business.
There is the natural cost of needing to stock your shelves and so on, but that's going to happen no matter where your business is. Your Sims' privacy isn't exactly a huge issue. Still, customers will get in the way of your family, eat their food, clog the toilets This is especially true as your business grows and you get more customers. Although you can lock the house, the fact is that you must commit some land to the business.
Whether that means a separate floor, a separate room, or part of a current room: every tile occupied by a customer or piece of shop property is one tile your family can't use. Also, if you've got a home business going, that means you'll have to balance the time between when you deal with customers and when you deal with your family's issues.
With an off-site business, there is a time-freeze back at the house while you're working. Finally, the game keeps track of how much your business makes or loses, but it counts anything done in Build or Buy Mode. This means the numbers will be greatly skewed if you run a home business, because buying anything from a new shower to some flowers will be tallied as an "expense," while selling your old shower or getting a regular paycheck from another family member will go to the "revenue.
So, which is for you? If you've got a single Sim, or you have few obligations with the family, a home business is the best bet. If you're into numbers, or if your family is too large to properly take care of, go for an off-site business.
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