

I popped the infant into CAS and it showed her skin tone as on the white/black slider, a very light gray.

When their daughter was born, her portrait panel icon was light green, similar to her father's skin tone.īut when the mother twirled and the baby was on the screen, her skin tone was peachy beige, a light human skin tone, and her portrait panel icon changed to match it! One of my sims who is on the white/black slider, pretty much in the middle so she's a very dark gray, just had a child with a sim who is on the green slider, on the light end.

The model has no lipstick on, and almost invisible eyeshadow and blush.I've a new question in regards to genetics and skin tones. Here's a comparison between Kurasoberina's "Starfruit Busty" skin and RTSI's "A Matter of Skin" skin (I attached two CAS screenshots). Or at least that's what it's like for me. For a comparison, Rock the Sims Italy's skins tend to be more on the "overly defined" side and can completely change a sim's appearance, so if you use one of her skins more often than not you have to design the sim around the skin instead of the other way around. Right now I'm using her "Starfruit Busty" skin as a default. To give an example of the better and more subtle ones, check out Kurasoberina's. Just be aware that unless you have your settings turned way up, you won't notice the difference in skins during normal gameplay unless the skins are very detailed or you play close-up to your sims. Get a default replacement skin if you aren't pleased with the default EA one I know I wasn't pleased with the lack of detail. I've noticed most skins tend to be on the subtle side, so mixing and matching should be no issue. There are a ton of custom skins out there, and not all of them need to be extreme (super defined boobs and butt, too red lips etc.).
