- Open The Sims 3.
- Click on the … (options) button at the bottom left of the screen or press F5 on your keyboard.
- On the Graphics tab (usually the one that opens by default), slide all the sliders under Graphics details to low.
- Click on the blue check mark at the bottom right to save your changes.
- Restart The Sims 3 and check to see if it runs better now.
Still not better? Try running in Windowed mode:
- Open up the Graphics options again.
- Uncheck the box beside Enable Fullscreen Mode.
- Click on the blue check mark at the bottom right to save your changes.
- Restart The Sims 3, and see if windowed mode works better for you.
Depending on your graphics card, you may need to make a couple more adjustments to get the best out of your game:
Check Advanced Rendering is switched on.
- Open the Graphics options
- Click on the check box beside Advanced Rendering to tick it.
- If the box is already checked, leave it as it is.
- Click on the blue checkmark at the bottom right to save your changes.
- Restart The Sims 3 and check how it’s running.
I’ve done all that, but my graphics are still weird.
If you’re still seeing glitchy graphics, it’s possible that there’s a problem with custom content you’re running.
Disable your custom content (see below), and try the game again to see if there’s an improvement.
If your game runs better with custom content disabled, it could be down to an outdated or corrupted exchange download.
Troubleshooting these can be tricky, but it’s more time-consuming than hard to do.
Follow the steps in this article, but make sure to back up and use The Sims 3 folders for all your testing.