All The Fallen Sims 4 Now
In The Sims 4, death is usually a punchline. A ladder removed from a pool. A fireplace left roaring next to a wool rug. A pufferfish nigiri prepared by a Sim with Level 2 cooking skill. Grim Reaper shows up, cracks a joke, files his scythe, and your Sim becomes a ghost who can possess the toilet.
But All The Fallen—a mod by creator PimpMySims4—turns death into a eulogy.
All The Fallen doesn’t add vampires, drugs, or strip clubs. It adds silence. Specifically, it adds a memorial wall. The mod allows you to place a special interactive photo frame. When a Sim dies—whether from old age, embarrassment, or an errant Murphy bed—you can hang their portrait there. Click on it, and your surviving Sims can “Grieve,” “Share a Memory,” or “Visit Grave Site.” Children Sims can “Ask Why They Left.” Spouses can “Whisper Goodbye.”
The genius of the mod isn't mechanical complexity. It's emotional permission. Base game grief lasts about two sim-days. A widow might cry into cereal once, then autonomously flirt with the mail carrier. All The Fallen forces the player to choose to remember. All The Fallen Sims 4
I installed it after my founder, a painter named Elara, died from laughter. Yes, The Sims 4: she was playful, told three jokes, and literally died of joy. The game treated it as a farce. The mod didn’t.
Her daughter, teenage Ivy, hung Elara’s portrait. Every evening after homework, Ivy would “Share a Memory.” The notification read: “Ivy remembers the time Mom painted her first masterpiece. She smelled like turpentine and honey.” That text doesn't exist in the vanilla game. The mod wrote it for me.
Over generations, the wall filled. Great-grandparents who died fixing the stereo. An uncle who froze to death wearing swim trunks. A cat named Waffles. Each portrait became a gravestone you could visit without leaving the living room. In The Sims 4 , death is usually a punchline
All The Fallen is not a happy mod. It is not flashy. It is a small, solemn drawer in the chaotic dollhouse of The Sims 4. But it does something remarkable: it reminds you that loss, even simulated loss, matters. Not because the pixels are real. But because the act of remembering—of stopping the grind of career, skill, and aspiration to look at a frozen face—is the most human thing a simulation can offer.
In a game where you can be a spellcaster, a scientist, or a starlet, All The Fallen lets you be one more thing: a keeper of ghosts. And sometimes, that’s the richest role of all.
The existence of ATF highlights a divide in the Sims community regarding the "purist" approach to the game versus the "sandbox" approach. The existence of ATF highlights a divide in
For users of ATF, the site is a haven. It allows players to engage in storytelling that mirrors the grittiness of real life or explores mature themes that the base game ignores. For writers of dark, dramatic legacies, these mods provide the visual tools necessary to tell stories involving trauma, vice, or redemption without the game's inherent censorship getting in the way.
However, the site is not without controversy. The content hosted there often brushes up against the limits of decency and, occasionally, the Terms of Service of the game itself. Critics argue that the availability of such content can attract the wrong demographic to a game that is popular with teenagers. As a result, the site is heavily gated, requiring registration and age verification to view or download content.
Forget the §20,000 starter home. ATF introduces a barter economy.
If you wanted "All The Fallen" for the murder, gore, and crime aspects, you want Extreme Violence. This mod is actively updated (as of Q1 2025) and compatible with the latest version of The Sims 4.