House For Sims 2
by Heather
First Release: 18 June 2026
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- §182,327
- Residential
- 3×1 Lot
- 6 Bedrooms
- 3 Bathrooms
- + 3 Water Closets
- Activities
- Fireplaces
- 5 Story
- Furnished (Fully)
- Unoccupied
- No Parking
- Nursery
- Requires All Expansion Packs
Grand Illusion Castle makes the most of its narrow 3×1 lot with twin towers, battlements, arched windows, and a tall façade that rises far above its footprint. The wide front view works best as the feature image because it shows the full castle shape at once, including the towers, front stairs, and compact approach from the road.

A closer look at the entry gives the narrow windows, central doorway, and front steps more attention. The entrance keeps everything formal and direct, with no sprawling courtyard to soften the climb into a house that already seems committed to making Sims work for every floor.

The rear view keeps the emphasis on height, with matching towers, crenellated walls, small windows, rear stairs, and shrubs tucked along the back. Even without parking or a broad yard, the castle still feels imposing, mostly because five stories on a 3×1 lot is not so much a floor plan as a declaration.



The entry level overview shows the throne room and dining hall arranged across the long, narrow main floor. Columns, staircases, fireplaces, and throne seating set the castle tone immediately, while the close-up views give each side its own purpose: one room ready for decrees, the other ready for dinner served with entirely too much formality.



The bedroom level continues the split-wing layout, with staircases, fireplaces, bathroom spaces, and two very different furnished rooms. One close-up shows an ornate canopy bed with draped fabric, patterned rugs, candle stands, and a pink wardrobe, while the other shows a black and white canopy bed, red furniture, and a fireplace.



The next overview shows another pair of tower bedrooms tucked higher into the castle, with compact rooms, stair access, fireplaces, and wardrobe storage. The blue and pale bedrooms feel quieter than the grander spaces below, which is probably a relief for Sims who just want to sleep without the throne room making everything feel official.



The twin suite level gives each side a more self-contained setup, with a bedroom area, attached bathroom space, fireplace, stairs, gothic windows, and wardrobe storage. These rooms make the upper floors feel more practical than decorative, especially for household members who would rather not descend several stories every time they need a bathroom.



The highest rooms turn the towers into hobby spaces instead of leaving them as empty lookout points. One side is set up for sewing and pottery, while the other has painting, violin, reading, and desk space. Each room also has a fireplace, which feels very castle-appropriate even when the object looks ready to boil soup.
A five-story castle may sound grand, but the real illusion is convincing everyone that this many stairs counts as luxury instead of cardio.