MC Command Center: The Ultimate Sims 4 Power Mod



Hey Simmers 💚 — if your Sims' world feels like it's been on autopilot, it's time to hire a manager. Enter MC Command Center (MCCC), the mod that quietly runs your save so your towns actually behave like real (and chaotic) living places.


What is MC Command Center?

MCCC is a modular, script-based mod created and maintained by Deaderpool. It gives you control over story progression, pregnancies, population, money, careers, aging, debug tools, and much more — all from an in-game menu (no manual cheat typing required). You can install only the modules you want, so it won't bloat your setup.

Official dev site and downloads linked in the Download section below.


Why use it?

  • Automatic story progression: NPCs marry, have kids, move houses, get jobs and age on their own — your worlds feel alive.

  • Pregnancy & family control: Manage pregnancies, offspring counts, same-sex pregnancies, and more.

  • Money & bills: Auto-pay or randomize household funds for realism or challenges.

  • Time & aging controls: Freeze aging, tweak lifespans, or set mature-only households.

  • Convenient cheats & debugging: Promote Sims, max skills, clear errors, and run console-like commands from menus.


How to install (quick)

  1. Download the required mc_cmd_center.ts4script and whichever optional modules you want (MC Woohoo, MC Pregnancy, MC Population, etc.).

  2. Extract the zip and place the .ts4script (and any .package files the mods include) in your Documents/Electronic Arts/The Sims 4/Mods folder.

  3. Enable "Script Mods" and "Custom Content" in the in-game Settings → Other menu, then restart the game.

  4. Open any in-game computer and click MC Command Center to configure settings and export/import your preferences.

Detailed install & troubleshooting instructions are available on the creator's site.

Source: official installation and download pages. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}


Essential MCCC modules (what to keep)

  • MC Command Center module — core file required to link others. (Always install.)

  • MC Population — controls townie spawning, culling, and moves.

  • MC Pregnancy — pregnancy control & manual pregnancy tools.

  • MC Woohoo — woohoo/pregnancy behavioral options (doesn't add animations; supports them if you have them).

  • MC Cleaner, MC Career, MC CAS — helpful utilities for automatic cleanup, career tweaks, and CAS fixes.

Official module overviews are on Deaderpool's site for full details. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}


Simple recommended starter settings (my go-to)

  • Population: Enable story progression, allow townies to move & reproduce (but keep a modest cap).

  • Pregnancy: Allow same-sex pregnancies, set average offspring count to 1–2 for realism.

  • Aging: Keep normal aging on, but freeze elder aging if you want long-lived legacies.

  • Money: Use randomized household funds for new households to avoid everyone being insta-rich.

  • Backups: Export settings after you tweak them — it saves a ton of hassle if you reinstall or update later.


Troubleshooting & patch advice

After any major Sims 4 patch: remove mods, run the game vanilla to test, then reintroduce MCCC first for compatibility checks. Deaderpool posts updates and pre-release notes on Patreon and the official site — follow those so you don’t accidentally run an incompatible version after a patch. If you see errors, check MCCC's mc_lastexception.html file in your Sims folder; it helps trace conflicts.

Source: developer posts & guidance. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}


Where to download (official & safe)

Important: avoid sketchy reuploads or modpacks. Use the official site, Patreon, or trusted community links (Discord/CurseForge) listed by the creator.

Sources: official download & Patreon pages. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}


Pro tips

  • Run a test with only MCCC active if you’re tracking down a mod conflict (many modders recommend a “mc-vanilla” test).

  • Export your MCCC settings after you set them — saves headaches on reinstalls.

  • If you use realism mods (Woohoo Wellness, Slice of Life, SNB, etc.), install them after MCCC and check for overlapping features — MCCC is flexible and often complements them well.

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