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Teasers for The Sims 1 and 2 re-releases continue with this official Y2K-inspired Sims site that’s giving me severe nostalgia whiplash

The Sims turns 25 in just a few days, and EA is out to make sure I feel old as hell about it. As part of its ongoing celebrations, which started earlier this month with a rather lackluster Behind the Sims presentation but has slowly been ramping up the goodies, the developer just dropped an atrociously accurate Y2K-style website dedicated to the first two games. Comic Sans and all.

I mean hell, even the URL is giving me major throwback vibes: www.the-sims-y2k.com. The dashes between every word is practically screaming early 2000s at me, but the thing I love the most is the fact that you quite literally have to type the “www.” for the URL to actually work. You know, like the… old days? Try and type the address sans-World Wide Web and you’ll be met with an error. It’s such a small detail that I’m not even sure was intentional, but I really hope it is.

The website itself is an absolute visual nightmare which, again, how perfect is that? There’s a loading bar when you first punch in the address, each asset on the page slowly transitions in from the sides—remember when old-ass websites would cram every animation and soundbite into them like a 10-year-old’s PowerPoint presentation?—and every icon makes a wee noise as you hover over it.

Features Producer Mollie Taylor posing with some of the filters on The Sims Y2K website.

Please enjoy these pictures I took very quickly thanks to Sim Urself. (Image credit: EA, Maxis Studios)

As for the features contained within the site, they’re fine. There’s the “Sim Urself” page which, as it turns out, is not taking a photo of yourself to be turned into a Sim like I originally thought. Instead it’s a painstaking throwback to the days of taking pictures with different filters using your crusty old webcam, something which I spent far too much time doing as a child. Yes, of course I used the filter of Don Lothario in the hot tub, thinking about me through the lens of my work laptop camera.

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