New Sims 4 motorbike mod adds licenses, fuel, and custom sounds
This motorbike mod turns two wheels into a real routine: lessons, a license, fuel checks, and refill stops. It is built for realism players who want transport to matter.

The strongest pitch for Hiole’s Corner’s motorbike mod is not that it adds a shiny new ride. It is that it makes transportation in The Sims 4 behave like transportation. Instead of a decorative vehicle or a bicycle swap, the mod builds a whole routine around licenses, fuel management, and custom engine sounds, turning a quick trip into a small but meaningful part of daily life.
That matters most for realism players, rotational households, rags-to-riches saves, and Sims with commutes baked into their stories. A Sim cannot simply hop on and go. They need driving lessons first, and each lesson gives a confidence buff before the next step. After roughly three lessons, the Sim earns a proper license, which makes the bike feel earned rather than handed over. For players who do not want the grind, a shift-click shortcut grants the license instantly, a flexible touch that keeps the mod useful in both challenge saves and sandbox play.
The fuel system pushes the realism even further. Each ride consumes fuel, and players can hover over the bike to check the gas level. Once the tank runs dry, the bike has to be refilled before it can go anywhere again. That extra loop is small, but it changes the feel of travel. The bike stops being disposable scenery and starts acting like something a Sim has to maintain, plan around, and budget for, which gives everyday errands more weight.

The presentation helps sell the illusion. The mod replaces the usual bicycle audio with custom engine sounds, and it also removes the awkward habit of Sims autonomously hopping on for tiny movements. That keeps player control tighter and prevents the bikes from feeling like a weird base-game shortcut. In Build/Buy, the package includes two vehicles, a sleek scooter and a vintage-style motorcycle, each with multiple swatches and pricing meant to feel grounded. A CurseForge translation page also describes the set as playable motorcycles and mopeds that include a classic Vespa and a vintage bike inspired by Triumph and Royal Enfield models.
Hiole’s Corner said the creator has played The Sims for 15 years, has made custom content for about four years, and aims to release at least two custom content items or mods per month. The mod was posted as a locked Patreon release dated January 21, and the creator says mods become free after early access. It also requires XML Injector, so this is clearly aimed at players who want two-wheeled travel to deepen storytelling instead of just decorating a driveway.
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