The Sims 4 Marketplace adds Chrome Living and Jasmine Collection Maker Packs
Chrome Living brings an eight-piece Mid-Century build set, while Jasmine adds six CAS pieces, making the latest Marketplace drop useful for builders and stylists alike.

Chrome Living lands as the sharper practical buy of the two new Sims 4 Maker Packs, giving builders an eight-item Mid-Century set built around clean lines, chrome accents, storage pieces and sleek seating. Jasmine Collection goes in the opposite direction, adding six Create-a-Sim items, including two eyeshadows, matte lipstick, glossy lipstick, lip gloss and beauty marks in pinks, greens, browns and blues. Together, the pair covers the two places players feel a CC gap most often: polished build mode interiors and face-detail variety in CAS.
Both packs arrived on The Sims 4 Marketplace at 300 Moola each, a price Sims Community translated to roughly three to four U.S. dollars depending on regional conversion. For players who want a living room that feels organized without looking sterile, Chrome Living is the clearer immediate value. It is aimed at polished display spaces and modern rooms that still read as timeless, which makes it a fit for legacy homes, upscale apartments and any build leaning toward restrained luxury. Jasmine Collection is more specialized, but no less useful for players who spend time fine-tuning Sims appearances and want more control over everyday glam, color variety and subtle facial detail.
The release also shows how fast the Marketplace has shifted from a one-off feature into a weekly content rhythm. EA launched The Sims 4 Marketplace on PC and Mac on March 17, 2026, then brought it to PlayStation and Xbox with the April 16 patch. That matters because the store is no longer just a PC stop for CC-style content. Console players now get the same Marketplace cycle, with EA noting shared storage rules on PS4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series and Xbox Cloud, where kits are included in the game files and storage is reserved for Marketplace content.
EA has framed the Marketplace as the official in-game storefront for downloadable content created by approved Sims Makers, with purchases made in Moola and support flowing directly to the makers. The Maker Program also sets a clear gate: applicants must be 18 or older, proficient in English, in good standing with an EA account and able to pass a technical evaluation by submitting two assets. Sims Community reported that approved makers receive a 30% cut from each purchase, which gives the weekly drop schedule a creator-side incentive as well as a player-facing one. For Sims fans, that makes checking The Marketplace feel less optional now and more like part of the regular routine.
Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?
Submit a Tip

