#scl gen 5
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
~ promoted to Ocean Observer (Conservationist lv. 8)
10 notes
·
View notes
Text
Prism family Such Colorful Lives Legacy!
I'm gonna put this under a cut because it's long, but basically since I'm starting posting my SCL legacy on gen 7 (accidentally wrote 6 on the poll whoops) Sadly no screenshots since I wasn't really taking pictures since I was just playing on my laptop :')
I found the rules here, and tweaked it however I felt like for my own play through, which I'll get into below
Gen 1 — Rosa 🌹
The founder of the legacy! She had a very standard generation where she completed all required tasks, got married and had kids, and didn't do much else. She married Darrel Charm, and had twin spellcaster babies; Clementine and Nova. Lived in San Myshuno for this gen.
Gen 2 — Clementine 🍊
I love and adore her and she's actually still kicking around the save! She's a highest rank spellcaster who took a potion of immortality to be with her vampire wife (Evie Delgato) forever :) (and also because I get extremely attached to my gen 2 heirs and I didn't want her to die). She completed the snow globe collection as a teenager before moving to Del Sol Valley. She had her first two kids, Sol (Granddaughter of Makoa and Lilliana), and Amber (daughter of Kiyoshi) who were both spellcasters, before marrying her wife, Evie, and eventually having a little vampire baby named Alba :)
Gen 3 — Sol ☀️
This was the first generation where I started to change the generational goals; namely I'd done the politician career 10000x so I swapped it out for the Law career, in the judge branch, which then had me swap to max research and debate instead of charisma. I also swapped the "donate to every charity" rule to a "volunteer every Saturday with the whole family" rule. She married Aurelio Robles, lived in San Sequoia, and had one daughter, Ivy.
Gen 4 — Ivy 🌿
I did a TOOOONNN of the kid stuff from growing together with Ivy, which was really fun! I think I did almost all of the kid aspirations with her?? Her generation did follow the actual challenge goals. Her ex-wife was Daniela Banuelos, a random townie who cheated on her with some guy named Troy, and had a kid named Dana. Ivy and Daniela had twins, River and Lake. I think her house was my favorite; she lived in this renovated cottage in Henford-on-Bagley that she built up over time and had a giant garden :)
Gen 5 — Lake 🐟
Also followed the actual goals of the generation for her! She married a mermaid. I forgot to mention that every single heir since Clementine has been a spellcaster lol. Lake ended up having 3 kids because for some reason her, Ivy, and Sol all have essentially the same face, so I kept trying until the game finally gave me someone who se genetics actually show the other parent. So first there was Violet, a spellcaster who married her high school sweetheart and immediately had triplets, and then a fourth child for good measure. After Violet was Lilac, also a spellcaster! And finally came our heir, Lavender, who broke the spellcaster streak and is a mermaid!
Gen 6 — Lavender 🪻
This gen was weird for me because I got super used to having spells like scrubberoo and delicioso, and now all I could do was make it thunder sometimes. I also changed this one up, since I've done a bunch of the original goals a bunch! The aspiration was swapped to Strangerville Mystery, career to Military, and swapped the bookworm trait for Adventurous. I still had her marry a scientist (who she met in Strangerville), and still get abducted and impregnated by aliens! Maybe it was a little cruel of me to make a mermaid live in Strangerville but I gave her a lil pool at least.
And then I'll be posting gen 7! I'll make a separate post introducing the family and generation goals (they are completely overhauled from the legacy rules). The gen 7 heir is starting in high school, because I guess Lavender was just too productive and got things done really fast.
7 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Happy birthday Portia!
27 notes
·
View notes
Text
Creator tag game!
Thankyou @pregnant-piggy and @sleep-i-ness for tagging me:)
RULES: it’s time to love yourselves! choose your 5 favourite works you created in the past year (fics, art, edits, etc.) and link them below to reflect on the amazing things you brought into the world in 2020. tag as many writers/artists/etc. as you want (fan or original) so we can spread the love and link each other to awesome works <3
1. Lie to me - I literally love 5sos so much?! Like I was hearing their album for the 1029 time maybe and I was like, why not write a fic for one of them. Lie to me was my first fully angst fic and honestly I loved writing it, I can't even explain why.
2. Before you go- Harry has a soft spot in my heart I can't explain it. I wrote it for a writing challenge but I simply loved it! I threw in a few merchant of Venice references may as well put memorizing the play line by line to some use am I right so anyway, it is probably my favourite fic I have ever written, like ever. More than lie to me and more than beautiful dream. I had to hear before you go 10-12 times and cry my heart out to the lyrics but it was totally worth it. Check it out, you won't regret it;)
3. A beautiful dream- it's the only soulmate fic I have written and I absolutely adore it. Remus is my baby and I just had to write a soulmate fic for him, because he deserves some love. Anyway, it was so much fun to write and it was my first fan fic to cross 1.5k words and the first to get 100 notes!! It's unbelievable. It's fluffy and a bit sad but it's totally worth a read;)
4. Star crossed lovers -James sirius Potter, my favourite character to write for because I can bend his personality to my will because we know the bare minimum about him. He's like my favourite next gen character and I really do love him. SCL is one of my longest fics and it was worth every hour I spent writing it rather than studying lmao. You may want to strangle Harry but you'll forgive him, promise:)
5. Heartbreak weather- Peter Parker aka baby aka the loml. I literally love him so much and that song is so perfect for him! Peter Parker deserves all the love in the world and Niall's (aka loml #2) lyrics do him justice and I hope you love the fic as much as I do. It's 99% fluff and it's wholesome and I just, I love it so much🥺
1 note
·
View note
Text
Bibliographie
Romans
Ducharme, R. (2005). Dévadé. Paris : Gallimard.
Ducharme, R. (2010). L’avalée des avalés. Paris : Gallimard. (Référé dans le texte : AA)
Ducharme, R. (1972). Le nez qui voque. Paris : Gallimard. (Référé dans le texte : NV)
Ducharme, R. (1973). L’hiver de force. Paris : Gallimard.
Ducharme, R. (2017). L’océantume. Paris : Gallimard. (Référé dans le texte : Oc)
Documents de référence
Andrès, B. (1977). Sur notre scène : des enfants au pouvoir. Voix et Images, 2(3), 447–450. Récupéré de https://doi.org/10.7202/200080ar
Auger, B. (2010). HA ha!... de Réjean Ducharme, un flagrant délire?. Liberté, 51(3), 48–51. Récupéré de id.erudit.org/iderudit/63790ac
Balthazar, L. (1977). Le nationalisme au Québec. Études internationales, 8(2), 266–281. Récupéré de https://doi.org/10.7202/700778ar
Béland, D. & Lecours, A. (2011). Le nationalisme et la gauche au Québec. Globe, 14(1), 37–52. Récupéré de https://doi.org/10.7202/1005985ar
Bellehumeur, G. (2014). Discours situationniste dans l’œuvre de Réjean Ducharme. (Mémoire de maîtrise). Université de Montréal. Récupéré de http://hdl.handle.net/1866/11485
Belzil, P., Burgoyne, L., Denis, J., Frechette, R., Lavoie, P., Lévesque, S., Raynauld, I., Vaïs, M. & Vigeant, L. (1990). La critique à l’épreuve du rire : « Ha ha[UW1] !... » au T.N.M. À la manière de.... Jeu, (55), 126–134. Récupéré de id.erudit.org/iderudit/26984ac
Bergevin, M.-A. (2016). Québec : de quoi faut-il se souvenir? : le mythe politique de la révolution tranquille. (Mémoire de maîtrise). Université du Québec à Montréal. Récupéré de https://archipel.uqam.ca/8896/
Bertin, R. (2012). Trois coups d’un Ducharme / « HA ha[UW2] !... » / « Ines Pérée et Inat Tendu » / « L’Océantume ». Jeu, (144), 42–46. Récupéré de id.erudit.org/iderudit/67742ac
Biron, M. (1990). « Ha ha[UW3] !... ». Jeu, (55), 145–148. Récupéré de id.erudit.org/iderudit/26987ac
Biron, M. (2000). La grammaire amoureuse de Ducharme. Voix et Images, 25(2), 377-383. https://doi.org/10.7202/201486ar
Blémur, B. (2017). La mer amère de la mère : présence et mouvements de l’infantile dans L’Océantume de Réjean Ducharme. (Mémoire de maîtrise). Université du Québec à Montréal. Récupéré de https://archipel.uqam.ca/9767/
Boucher, J.-P. (1989). Réjean Ducharme parolier. Littératures, 3, 95-113. Récupéré de http://litteratures.mcgill.ca/article/viewFile/189/169
Boucher, M.-É. (2006). L'hyper-théâtralité du personnage dans la dramaturgie de Réjean Ducharme. (Mémoire de maîtrise). Université de Montréal. Récupéré de http://hdl.handle.net/1866/7273
Chabot, J.-B. (2013). L’autocratisme dans les romans d’enfance de Réjean Ducharme. (Mémoire de maîtrise). Université Laval. Récupéré de https://corpus.ulaval.ca/jspui/bitstream/20.500.11794/24187/1/29852.pdf
Charlebois, R., Ducharme, C., Doucet, P. et Laporte, R. (2017, 22 août). Ces gens qui ont connu Réjean Ducharme [Webradio]. Dans Société Radio-Canada (prod.), Les grands entretiens – Spéciale Réjean Ducharme. Récupéré de https://ici.radio-canada.ca/premiere/emissions/les-grands-entretiens/segments/eclaireurs_5005/35468/rejean-ducharme-auteur-mysterieux-charlebois-bussieres-gallimard
Coderre, S. (2016). Adapter Ducharme pour la scène. (Mémoire de maîtrise). Université du Québec à Montréal.https://archipel.uqam.ca/9104/
Cormier, C. (2003, 8 février). L'Osstidcho - Le mythe retrouvé. Le Devoir. Récupéré de http://www.ledevoir.com/non- classe/20096/l-osstidcho-le-mythe-retrouve
De Surmont, J. N. (2009). Bruno ROY, L’Osstidcho ou le désordre libérateur, Montréal, XYZ, 2008, 200 p.. Recherches sociographiques, 50(1), 165–167. Récupéré de https://doi.org/10.7202/029984a
Ducharme, R. (2004). Trophoux : R. Plante : collection Forget-Georgesco. Montréal : Lanctôt.
Gauvreau, M. (2009). Winning Back the Intellectuals: Inside Canada’s “First War on Terror,” 1968-1970. Journal of the Canadian Historical Association, 20(1), 161–190. Récupéré de https://doi.org/10.7202/039786ar
Gagnon, F.-M. (2011). Trop brève note sur les Trophoux de Roch Plante. Québec français, (163), (32-35). Récupéré de https://www.erudit.org/fr/revues/qf/2011-n163-qf1823256/65412ac/
Godin, J.-C. (1967). L’Avalée des avalés. Études Françaises, 3(1), 94-101. https://doi.org/10.7202/036257ar
Haghebaert, E. (2007). Réjean Ducharme : une marginalité paradoxale. (Thèse de doctorat). Université Laval. Récupéré de http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/19043
Hotte-Pilon, L. (1992). Le jeu des noms dans l’œuvre romanesque de Réjean Ducharme. Voix et Images, 18(1), 105-117. https://doi.org/10.7202/201003ar
Jaubert, C. (2011). Du « maghanage » : la re(-)présentation de l’Histoire dans Le marquis qui perdit de Réjean Ducharme. L’Annuaire théâtral, (50-51), 103–113. Récupéré de https://doi.org/10.7202/1017315
Jolis, C. (anim.) et Charlebois, R. (invité) (1996, 5 novembre). L’amitié entre Robert Charlebois et Réjean Ducharme [Webradio]. Dans Société Radio-Canada (prod.), Mythique et mystérieux, Réjean Ducharme, l’auteur de génie. Récupéré de https://ici.radio-canada.ca/premiere/premiereplus/arts/p/62422/mythique-et-mysterieux-rejean-ducharme-lauteu
La Bossière, C. (1982). Of Renaissance and Solitude in Québec: A Recollection of the Sixties. Studies in Canadian Literature. 7(1). Récupéré de https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/scl/article/view/7975/9032
Laberge, Y. (2011). Ducharme, parolier en cinq chansons marquantes. Nuit blanche, magazine littéraire, (124), 60-62. https://www.erudit.org/fr/revues/nb/2011-n124-nb1821215/65143ac/
Langlois-Benghozi, M. (1976). La volonté de puissance dans l’oeuvre romanesque de Réjean Ducharme. (Mémoire de maîtrise). Université McGill. Récupéré de http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/-?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=50462&silo_library=GEN01
Leduc-Park, R. (1982). Réjean Ducharme : Nietzsche et Dionysos. Québec : Presses de l’Université Laval.
Leduc-Park, R., Chamberland, R., Girard, G., Pavlovic, D., Julien, J. et Boivin, A. (1983). Dossier : Réjean Ducharme. Québec français, (52), 40-53. Récupéré de https://www.erudit.org/fr/revues/qf/1983-n52-qf1216361/45679ac/
Lefebvre, P. (1983). « Ha ha[UW4] !... ». Jeu, (26), 134–137. Récupéré de id.erudit.org/iderudit/28309ac
Mailhot, L. (1970). Le théâtre de Réjean Ducharme. Études françaises, 6(2), 131–157. Récupéré de https://doi.org/10.7202/036438ar
Michon, J. (1983). La quête du sens. Voix et Images, 9(1), 151–153. Récupéré de https://doi.org/10.7202/200427ar
Millot, P. (2000, 15 avril). Réjean Ducharme, enquête sur un fantôme. L’actualité. Récupéré de https://lactualite.com/culture/2000/04/15/rejean-ducharme-enquete-sur-un-fantome/
Morin, P. (1994). Le rôle de l’intelligentsia dans la modernisation de l’état au Québec: nuancements de la vision salutaire de la révolution tranquille. (Mémoire de maîtrise). Université Laval. Récupéré de http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/21381
Nardout-Lafarge, É. (2001). Réjean Ducharme : une poétique du débris. Montréal : Fides.
Nardout-Lafarge, É. (2011). En pays ducharmien. Québec français, (163), 19–21. Récupéré de id.erudit.org/iderudit/65408ac
Nardout-Lafarge, É. (2011). L’usure du rire chez Réjean Ducharme. Études françaises, 47(2), 121-129. https://doi.org/10.7202/1005654ar
Pavlovic, D. (1987). Du cryptogramme au nom réfléchi. L’onomastique ducharmienne. Études françaises, 23(3), 89-98. https://doi.org/10.7202/035729ar
Pavlovic, M. (1980). L’Affaire Ducharme. Voix et Images, 6(1), 75–95. Récupéré de https://doi.org/10.7202/200251ar
Seyfrid, B. (1993). Rhétorique et argumentation chez Réjean Ducharme. Les polémiques béréniciennes. Voix et Images, 18(2), 334-350. https://doi.org/10.7202/201027ar
Seyfrid, B. (1999). La rhétorique des passions dans les romans d’enfance de Réjean Ducharme. Québec : Presses du l’Université Laval.
Théroux, J. (2011). Ducharme dans l’espace : Quelques formes entre les corps de texte. Québec français, (163), 28–31. Récupéré de id.erudit.org/iderudit/65411ac
Vigeant, L. (1989). Le Ducharme de Faucher — Des romans au spectacle : Un même univers. Jeu, (51), 35–43. Récupéré de id.erudit.org/iderudit/16350ac
Vigeant, L. (1999). Le rêve inassouvi : Ines Pérée et Inat Tendu. Jeu, (92), 35–37. Récupéré de id.erudit.org/iderudit/16463ac
Vigeant, L. (2002). Ducharme revisité : Le Cid maghané et l’Hiver de force. Jeu, (103), 44–50. Récupéré de id.erudit.org/iderudit/26368ac
0 notes
Text
Adeline loved the quiet of early mornings, when the world was just beginning to stir. With a steaming cup of coffee by her side, she spent these peaceful hours gazing through her telescope, studying the mysteries of the sky. While most Sims were still in bed, Adeline was chasing the stars.
That morning, as the sun rose over the horizon, something unusual caught her eye—a bright object moving rapidly through the atmosphere. It wasn’t a bird or a plane; it burned with an intensity that sent a shiver down her spine. Adeline adjusted the telescope, her heart pounding as she realized it was a meteorite, plummeting toward SimNation.
She barely had time to step back before the ground shook with a deafening crash. The meteorite struck with terrifying force, its impact sending a shockwave that consumed everything in its path, including Adeline. In an instant, her love for the cosmos became her final chapter.
Later that day, passersby gathered around the smoking crater, their whispers mixing with the distant chirping of morning birds. Among the wreckage, Adeline’s telescope stood miraculously intact, its lens still angled toward the sky she had adored.
Some say the meteorite left behind a strange glow, as if carrying a piece of Adeline's spirit. Others believe her passion for the stars called the cosmic event to her. Whatever the truth, the morning she left, the heavens seemed a little closer, and the stars a little brighter.
RIP Adeline :(
9 notes
·
View notes
Text
The summer sun blazed over Willow Creek as Brinio, Marileia, Camilla, and Adeline filled the backyard with laughter. Brinio manned his homemade water balloon launcher, dodging Marileia’s sneak attacks, while Camilla lounged on a towel, occasionally joining the fray with precise throws.
Adeline, the heart of their fun, grabbed the garden hose after a surprise hit, chasing everyone in a fit of laughter. When the heat became too much, they flopped onto the cool grass, sharing lemonade and pointing out shapes in the clouds.
A simple day, yet full of joy—a moment that sparkled like the summer sun.
#ts4#ts4 challenge#nsb challenge#such colorful lives challenge#Marileia Pessoa#Camilla Pessoa#scl gen 5
8 notes
·
View notes
Text
💙 maxed Logic skill
💙 maxed Parenting skill
8 notes
·
View notes
Text
Marileia is now a teen and she is already making her way into gen 6 Heir candidates list...
10 notes
·
View notes
Text
💙 double bday, Jake (M, Gen 5 Spouse) is now an Adult, and Brinio (M, Gen 5 Offspring) a Teen.
💙 Cooper (M, Adult cat) and Brinio share a very close bond, and they look super cute together :3
💙 Camilla (F, Gen 5 Offspring) is definitely a lot to handle
#ts4#ts4 challenge#such colorful lives challenge#scl gen 5#nsb challenge#Adeline Pessoa#Jake#Brinio Pessoa#Camilla Pessoa#Cooper Pessoa
7 notes
·
View notes
Text
~ 🗑️
7 notes
·
View notes
Text
#ts4#ts4 challenge#such colorful lives challenge#nsb challenge#Adeline Pessoa#Marileia Pessoa#Brinio Pessoa#Jake#scl gen 5
10 notes
·
View notes
Text
~ breakfast time
#such colorful lives#ts4 legacy challenge#sims 4 challenge#sims 4#sulani#adeline pessoa#off the grid#scl gen 5
37 notes
·
View notes
Text
~ gen 5 - Sulani
32 notes
·
View notes
Text
random teen Brinio
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
~ sulani
25 notes
·
View notes