In this Sims 4 Cottage Living animal and produce colours guide, we explain how to buy farm animals in this new pack, as well as what you need to do to change their coat and produce colours. There are reasons beyond aesthetics to want to change your animals’ colours in The Sims 4: Cottage Living pack. Colour-changing livestock can produce special eggs, milk, and wool that are needed for special recipes, or can be sold for a few extra Simoleons.

How to buy animals in The Sims 4: Cottage Living

The new animals introduced in Cottage Living work a little differently to pets from the Cats & Dogs expansion pack. While they’re still independent creatures you can befriend, they’re not counted as family members in the same way that house-pets are — which also means that you can’t create and customise them in Create-A-Sim, or adopt them from animal care services. In order to populate your Sims’ barnyard, you need to buy either an Animal Shed or a Chicken Coop, both of which can be purchased in Build Mode. Interacting with these objects will then give you the option to purchase cows or llamas (from the Animal Shed) or chickens (from the Chicken Coop). The animal you just bought will be magically transported to their new home, and pretty soon they’ll wander into the yard to say hello.

How to change animal and produce colours in The Sims 4: Cottage Living

Farm animals aren’t exactly cheap, but there are actual material benefits to owning them. The three buyable farm animals introduced in Cottage Living each produce a different harvestable item: chickens make eggs, cows make milk, and llamas make wool. Your Sim will be able to harvest this produce at regular intervals (if you’re caring for them well, around once per in-game day). Eggs and milk can be used for cooking, while llama wool keeps your yarn costs down when cross-stitching or knitting. Some recipes or patterns call for very specific colours or flavours of this produce. This is an especially big deal if you’re doing the new Simple Living Lot Challenge, which disallows your Sim from cooking any recipes they don’t have all the ingredients for. For example, if you want a Matcha Tea Cake anytime soon, you’ll need to know how to get green eggs. Put simply, produce colour and flavour is determined by the animal’s emotional state — and the best and most reliable way to influence this is by feeding them animal treats. Your Sim will gain their first treat recipe — for Friendly Treats — after buying their first animal. Subsequent recipes are unlocked by getting to know your neighbours, both human and animal: new treat recipes are gifted to you by NPCs from Henford-on-Bagley when you do favours for them, and wild animals (such as birds and foxes) when you befriend them. After eating treats, llamas always take on the colour of the wool they’re going to produce. Cows and chickens can also transform under the effects of a few of the treats, as noted in the table below. So if it’s your dream to own an amazing technicolour barnyard, this is how to make it a reality. The transformative effects of treats on your animals are temporary, and will last until the next time you harvest produce from the animal. The critter will then return to their normal state until the next time you feed them a treat.

Animal treats list: recipes and effects

That’s all we have on animal and produce colours for now, but be sure to check back over the next few days as we continue to dive into what Cottage Living brings to the table! In the meantime, why not check out our comprehensive guide to Sims 4 cheat guide? Or take a look at our page explaining Sims 4 skills — including the cross-stitch skill added with Cottage Living.

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