In episode seven of the Sims 4 enchanted by nature let’s play, what should have been a fulfilling fairy tale turned into a Sims 4 Enchanted by Nature Review of rollercoaster of bugs, disappointments and oddly entertaining glitches. Shantel Chantal and Chenise return, but their whimsical journey through the mystical forest world is anything but magical. From broken quests to fairy dust overloads and moody ghost kids, the gameplay reflects more struggle than spellbinding.

See video about the new updates from SatchOnSims

Shantel’s uphill questline struggle

The main story arc in this pack revolves around completing magical fables, with the final challenge called “Plants Lie Here.” This quest is meant to be the culmination of the entire fable journey but in practice, it’s a broken loop. The option to deliver the required item often doesn’t appear or gets buried under weird menus. Players had to cancel and restart quests multiple times before finally delivering the item to the mystical fairy.

Even when completed, the reward feels disconnected. Players receive an aura blossom seed, which is inconsistent with earlier tasks requiring aura petals. It leaves the gameplay progression feeling sloppy and unfinished.

Sims 4 enchanted by nature review: Fairy points and pointless perks

Chenise racks up fairy skill points rapidly, but unlike traditional Sims skills, there’s no real payoff. You gain points, but nothing actually happens. You can’t use them to unlock interactions, transform Sims or even alter the environment. It’s like leveling a skill bar for bragging rights and not much else.

This leads to frustration, especially in a game centered on magic and fantasy. Players expect mystical growth and creativity, but what they get is mostly filler.

Sims 4 enchanted by nature review: World design feels hollow

The green forest world in this expansion may look peaceful but it’s empty. The neighborhoods are packed with reused assets, fake buildings and little to no activities. The most interesting part is Gothic Chenise’s haunted garden, which players visit only to steal orchids for crafting. Other than that, the world lacks interaction or purpose.

The design makes you question why three separate neighborhoods exist when they offer minimal unique gameplay. Players can sit at fake cafes, buy herbs or view a historical monument but it doesn’t add meaningful content. The world might look charming in screenshots but in motion, it offers nothing new.

Sims 4 enchanted by nature review: Gnome antics and ghost parenting

A surprising standout from this episode is the use of enchanted gnomes. Players can assign them tasks like cleaning or gardening which adds a bit of amusement and utility. They also seem to interact with toddlers, possibly cleaning them with their green fairy aura.

Sims 4 Enchanted by Nature review, adding to the chaos, ghost Sims are back. Tax Credit 6 returns from the dead and starts giving gifts to their siblings. There’s a mix of lighthearted family drama and spooky nonsense, which keeps things interesting despite the technical problems.

Sims 4 enchanted by nature review: Natural living and burnout

Shantel continues leveling her natural living skill and finally reaches level 10. It grants several cool buffs like satisfying hunger through frog eating and sleeping on the ground for skill boosts. However, the skill progression is glacial, especially when Shantel gets burnt out from overworking.

The game’s burnout system kicks in, slowing down all progress. Oddly, her burnout may be triggered by raising the natural living skill itself since the game sees it as work. Even when trying to recover, her sleep bar glitches, preventing proper rest. It’s another example of how interconnected systems in this pack tend to clash rather than complement.

Sims 4 enchanted by nature review: Flower pressing and emotional candles

Another feature introduced in this expansion is the enchanted flower press. You can use harvested herbs and fairy dust to create decorative items like the bonnet beauty candle. However, the feature feels shallow. The candle provides a romantic emotional aura, but crafting it requires an excessive number of rare items. Worse, the emotional effects aren’t unique or impactful.

Even houseplants, which you can grow indoors, offer minimal gameplay changes. You can nurture or scold them, but there’s no actual reward or development.

Sims 4 enchanted by nature review: Career split lacks excitement

The holistic career path splits into two at level six: apothecurist or lifestyle coach. Most players might be drawn to the apothecurist for its magical vibes, but lifestyle coach offers a new way to help Sims through nature and fitness.

Unfortunately, both tracks rely on similar mechanics like studying on the computer or seeing clients at home. So far, the lifestyle coach path doesn’t stand out, but it could bring surprises in future episodes.

FAQs Sims 4 enchanted by nature review

How do you complete the “plants lie here” fable?

You must find the mystical fairy, then deliver the crafted item using the correct menu path.

What can fairy skill points be used for?

Currently, fairy skill points do not unlock any specific abilities or perks.

Is the flower press feature worth using?

Not really. It provides basic decor items with minor emotional auras.

What does the natural living skill unlock?

It allows ground sleeping for skill gains, hunger satisfaction via frogs and fairy interaction boosts.

Can you avoid burnout in this pack?

Only by limiting skill grind and letting Sims rest, which may feel counterproductive.