SimGo update adds new phone activities, expands Sims mini-game system
SimGo turned a single Laser Tag idea into a phone-based activity hub, and the June 10 update added two more mini-games with buffs for wins, losses, and close calls.

SimGo stopped looking like a one-off mod the moment it turned the phone into a place to start a whole activity loop. What began as Laser Tag has been expanded and renamed so more play styles can live under one umbrella, and the June 10 update added two more activities to the system.
That matters because SimGo is built around immediate in-save payoff. CurseForge describes it as a simple activities mod found on the Sim’s phone, and the current lineup already includes Laser Tag, Arcade Games, and Grid Arena. Each activity comes with its own winning, losing, and close-call buffs, so a quick phone click can lead to a mood swing, a small victory, or a near miss that sends a story in a new direction.

The mod’s June 10 file was listed for The Sims 4 game version 1.124.63, with the package showing 158 downloads when the expanded version appeared. Just a week earlier, on June 3, the project was still filed as Laser Tag Activity, which makes the change easy to trace: the concept started narrow, then grew into SimGo once Rommekai had more activities to group together. In the earlier Laser Tag version, Sims entered a rabbithole and returned with unique buffs, a structure that already pointed toward quick, self-contained gameplay.
For players, the appeal is obvious. SimGo creates a compact social or leisure scene without demanding a full event, a career overhaul, or a big storytelling setup. That makes it useful for teen hangouts, friend-group outings, and low-stakes weekend plans that still need a clear beginning, middle, and payoff. Because the outcomes are tied to buffs, each session carries a little arc: win, lose, or squeak by with a close call, then roll that result into the next scene.

The broader pattern is familiar across The Sims 4 modding scene. Electronic Arts maintains an official mods hub with guidance on managing downloaded mods, while CurseForge presents itself as a major Sims 4 mod repository and a central home for mods and CC. SimGo fits that ecosystem neatly, showing how a small phone interaction can become a reusable framework instead of a single add-on. The mod’s latest expansion suggests the phone-based micro-system is not just a gimmick, but a format with room to keep growing.
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