September 2019 - last edited September 2020 by crinrict
Product: The Sims 4
Platform:Mac
Which language are you playing the game in? English
How often does the bug occur? Often (50% - 99%)
What is your current game version number? 1.55.108.1220
What expansions, game packs, and stuff packs do you have installed? Cats and Dogs, City Living, Get Together, Get Famous, Get to Work, Seasons, Parenthood, Vampires, Laundry Day, Perfect Patio
Steps: How can we find the bug ourselves? Place any roof type on a room or basement (with basement you have to remove the ceiling, it doesn't matter if you remove the ceiling on the room), then apply any glass roof pattern - time of day or weather makes no difference.
What happens when the bug occurs? On a room it doesn't allow any light or shadow, more like a normal non-glass roof texture - this glitch is consistent. On the basement, it causes a glitch where if viewed from the level the glass roof is on the basement below disappear - this glitch appears roughly 50% of the time, it shows more regularly if the there is only one basement with a glass roof.
What do you expect to see? Expect for the glass roofs to allow light into a room and cast shadows, basement should be visible from ground level with the ceiling removed.
Have you installed any customization with the game, e.g. Custom Content or Mods? Not now. I've removed them.
Did this issue appear after a specific patch or change you made to your system? Neutral/Not Sure
The basement bug is temperamental and I reloaded between screenshots so its visible. I think the glitch appeared sometime in the last two months, but I can't say for certain as I haven't been actively playing for a while.
Edit By Crinrict: Adjusted Tag
September 2019
Good Luck
Crin
I don't work or have any association with EA. I give advice to the best of my knowledge and cannot be held responsible for any damage done to your computer/game.
Please only contact me via PM when asked to do so.
Important Threads
September 2019
@crinrict Here's the graphics settings, I have tried turning the graphics up and down to see if it makes any difference but so far no dice. The problem is fairly recent, as only a couple of months ago I could place glass roofs fine.
September 2019
September 2019
September 2019
I have a Macbook Pro, 15-inch 2017 model using Sierra v.10.12.6 (with these graphics: Radeon Pro 560 4096 MB, Intel HD Graphics 630 1536 MB)
Putting all settings on the highest still creates the same bug, and it still does it if I move my sims 4 folder to the desktop and launch a brand new game (seen below):
September 2019
September 2019
Thank you for the response, I'll keep my fingers crossed and wait!
September 2019
@CalyxSpaceAce I'm the person on the same Mac who's still running Sierra, for reasons no one can quite figure out. (What can I say, I don't like change.) I spent a bit of time testing, and noticed a few things:
1. Everything looks normal when a roof is not quite closed, with lighting on high or extra high:
2. When lighting is on high (the default setting for my laptop) and both roofs cover the entire rooms, neither room is lit, and the basement loses any floor or wall texture:
3. When lighting is on extra high, the surface-level room has proper lighting, but the basement still does not:
4: If I place objects in the basement (lighting extra high), those objects do have the appropriate shadows, separate from the overlay of the roof pattern:
5. Furthermore, when I made a lot with three separate basements and nothing else (lighting on extra high), the same principles as above applied. But when I added a small ground-level room, suddenly I could make exactly one of the three basements show correctly on command, even with a closed roof, as long as at least one of the basements was still partly open. In this screenshot, the middle basement is open, and the other two are closed:
These screenshots are all with afternoon lighting, because the shadows stand out the most then. The angle of morning lighting means rooms smaller than a certain size aren't lit up at all. Lowering the pitch of the roof helps some, as does rotating the roof so that the sunlight faces a glass side. I tried a couple different roofs, different angles, and different patterns, although not all of them, because at some point I was ready to be done; there was no difference.
So I don't know what's going on here, or why, but it's definitely weird, and it seems unlikely to be intentional.