All The Fallen Sims 4

If you’d rather play a pre-made world, these community creations are well-known:

Always check the creator’s required packs and mods before downloading.


| Type | Description | Best Packs | |------|-------------|-------------| | Fallen Angel | Once divine, now stripped of wings or grace. Struggles with morality. | Realm of Magic, Vampires | | Cursed Undead | A ghost or zombie with lingering consciousness. | Paranormal, Life & Death | | Dark Spellcaster | Uses forbidden magic at a price (e.g., aging faster, losing emotions). | Realm of Magic | | Possessed Sim | Controlled by a demonic entity (roleplay via traits/mods). | StrangerVille (possession) | All The Fallen Sims 4

All The Fallen Sims 4 remains a legendary piece of lost media in the Sims community. It represents the player base’s desire to push the "M" rating onto a "T" rated game. While you likely cannot download the original working version today, its DNA lives on in modern mods like Extreme Violence and Life’s Tragedies.

Final Recommendation: Do not click shady "All The Fallen 2025 Download" links on YouTube. They are almost certainly viruses. Instead, visit Sacrificial Mods’ official page or Nexus Mods for Extreme Violence. You will get the same dark gameplay, supported by updates, without crashing your save file. If you’d rather play a pre-made world, these


Have you found an old backup of All The Fallen? Only use it if you have rolled your game version back via Steam’s "Beta" tab. Otherwise, stick to the modern alternatives for a stable, bloody story.

The short answer is: No, not the original version. Always check the creator’s required packs and mods

The creator, ColonolNutty, has largely moved on from the project. The mod was broken by several game patches (specifically the Horse Ranch and For Rent expansions, which changed the simulation core). Attempting to install an old version of All The Fallen will likely cause:

However, the spiritual successor exists. The community has since embraced a different mod that does everything All The Fallen did, but better and legally: Extreme Violence by Sacrificial Mods.

The Sims 4 offers a complex, multifaceted space for engaging with death—one shaped by systems design, player practices, and cultural contexts. Rather than presenting a single stance on mortality, the game facilitates diverse experiences from grief to experimentation, highlighting how digital play reorganizes meaning around death.

This paper analyzes representations of death, grief, and the afterlife in The Sims 4. It examines game mechanics, narrative affordances, player practices, and cultural implications of sim mortality, arguing that The Sims 4 offers a liminal space where death is simultaneously trivialized and meaningfully engaged—shaped by systems design, community creativity, and players' emotional labor.