

It has a 14 day trial so you can at least try it out to see if it would serve your purpose and work with your Sims games acceptably or not (some games work better than others, but I've managed to get Rocket League running on my M1 Mini through it).

There's a video guide to set up Crossover below if you wish to try it. Below are the recommended system requirements if you will be playing on either Mac or Windows. There's no guarantees they'll run well though. Discover if you can play Sims on your Chromebook, what versions can you play, and the future plans for Sims on Chromebooks.

You could also try using Crossover (or maybe free alternatives like WineskinServer, or PlayOnMac on an Intel Mac) to install Steam in a Wine Bottle and then try The Sims games in that. If you check the fine print of the download (or the case/pamphlet of the hard copy if you purchased the disk) it will tell you how much memory you need avai. If your MacBook Pro is an Intel model then using Bootcamp to install Windows is likely to be your best option to run them through Steam. It did come out in 2000 on Mac, June or July, I believe. Answer (1 of 5): This depends entirely on the MacBook in question and the amount of memory available on the hard drive and/or how old it is. According to the applegamingwiki, they work OK via Rosetta on M1 Macs if your MacBook Pro is an Apple Silicon one. That's a shame given you've bought them already at some point on Steam. If you're really keen to play The Sims and don't mind paying for them again then Sims 3 & 4 are both available for Mac via EA's Origin store.
