Unhinged Sims 4 player keeps building hidden village bunkers 'for capturing and storing men'

The Sims 4 - a man Sim in a blue suit walks fearfully through an underground city
(Image credit: Electronic Arts)

If I ever needed more evidence that Build Mode and Live Mode players of The Sims are built different, this is it. Sims player Kewlcy has exemplified a Live Mode sicko by building not just one underground kidnapping bunker but an entire hidden city "for capturing and storing men."

It all seems to have started back in 2022 with just a single house. Hidden beneath this gothic home is a basement. And in that basement is a long hallway and security doors all leading to a secret bunker designed like a '50s-inspired home with a fake yard and pool all multiple levels underground.

Kewlcy's amateur abductress witch sim would flirt with random Sims walking by the house above, invite them down into the basement bunker, and lock them inside after a one night stand. By clicking the doors and setting them to lock for everyone but her own Sim (a feature normally used for keeping nosy neighbors from doing things like wandering into your bathroom without permission) she was able to trap them down there indefinitely to live out their lives in captivity.

And then Kewlcy just kept building bunkers, apparently.

Note some objects are misplaced because I don't own all the DLC packs Kewlcy used for the build. (Image credit: Electronic Arts, build by Kewlcy)

Since then she's built a farmhouse with a secret luxury bunker, a small suburban street with a shared secret bunker inspired by the TV series The OA, and a prison bunker hidden under a snowy cottage too. Most recently, Kewlcy took on an even more ambitious bunker build that took multiple months: an entire hidden mini city bunker

There's a gym, a laundromat, a bookstore, and a movie theater for all the captives to share. There's also a quaint little street with seven tiny houses and a central street with fake cars and a park area too. It's got serious Vault-Tec vibes, and not just because of the mid-century decor. We all know plenty of Fallout's citizens didn't know precisely what they were signing up for with life underground.

Kewlcy also mentions the Meow Wolf explorable art exhibition Convergence Station as inspiration in one video, and having been to Meow Wolf's Omega Mart experience in Las Vegas myself, the surreal underground city experience is definitely coming through. 

Rather than creating a family to live in the bunker, it looks like Kewlcy attracts local Sims to these underground vaults and locks them inside. That means she's got no control over their actions and really is just watching them like a bunch of human ants in a terrarium.

@kewlcy

♬ Solas X Interstellar - Gabriel Albuquerqüe

Why, though? For Kewlcy's witch sim, her captives were drafted as free childcare. Other players commenting on her videos have suggested that the city would serve as a perfect human livestock storage for vampire sims. Take your pick of psychological crimes.

Now before you get freaked out and declare this an unprecedented act of deviancy, this is the same game where one of the most popular community challenges is forcing a sim to birth and raise 100 babies—a more abstract form of captivity but a life sentence nevertheless—so this is barely above average on the scale of serial killer shit that Sims players get up to.

For those of you out there that are also Live Mode weirdos, Kewlcy's bunkers are on the Sims 4 gallery under the username "sweetpeaches119" so you can download and play with them yourself. She does tend to use objects from a lot of different DLC packs, and the metal jail gates used in a few builds are specifically from the Get To Work expansion.

Lauren Morton
Associate Editor

Lauren has been writing for PC Gamer since she went hunting for the cryptid Dark Souls fashion police in 2017. She accepted her role as Associate Editor in 2021, now serving as self-appointed chief cozy games and farmlife sim enjoyer. Her career originally began in game development and she remains fascinated by how games tick in the modding and speedrunning scenes. She likes long fantasy books, longer RPGs, can't stop playing co-op survival crafting games, and has spent a number of hours she refuses to count building houses in The Sims games for over 20 years.