Plumbot

This is about the robot, for the in-game Sim Highlighter go to PlumBob.Plumbot is a life state that is introduced in The Sims 3: Into the Future. Plumbots are shown in the announcement trailer as well in some promotional images, which also suggested that Plumbots would be fully customizable—and they are.

Sims are able to buy pre-made and pre-programmed Plumbots. There is a "Create a Bot" feature, accessed through Reventlov's Bot Workshop, which allows players to create Plumbots and customize existing ones. Plumbots can have up to seven "trait chips", which allow them to have a variety of features, abilities and skill sets. The number of trait chips a Plumbot can be equipped with depends upon its creator's Bot Building skill. Any Sim with high enough skill can upgrade a Plumbot to give it more trait chip slots. Sims are able to buy trait chips, or design and make them; and are able to buy materials needed to make them Sims are able to build a Bot Building skill which allows them to make better Plumbots, upgrade existing ones, and make more advanced trait chips.

Plumbots can also scan Sims or other Plumbots. This has a small chance of revealing their traits or trait chips.

Since Oasis Landing is set in a future world, relative to the other worlds in The Sims series, they can be considered as the successors of Servos and SimBots.

Unlike SimBots or Servos, Plumbots are immune to water, and even enjoy it.

Simology
A Plumbot's Simology panel will show the bot's name, gender, and quality (on a scale of 0 to 10). It will also show which trait chips are installed.

A Plumbot can gain Lifetime Happiness points from high Mood if the Simulated Emotions or Sentience trait chips are installed. They may also have wishes, even without specific trait chips, which can be promised and fulfilled for happiness as normal.

In the Q&A on July 30, 2013, it was mentioned that Plumbots do not age, but can have accidents. It was implied that Plumbots that are kept maintained will last indefinitely, which is true, as a Plumbot can only die by being crushed by a meteor or falling from the sky. A bug causes some Plumbots to actually have a birthday and age up, causing their bodies to disappear. A guide for restoring them if this happens is here.

Robot Quality
Plumbots have a quality rating that ranges from 0 to 10. Skilled bot-builders can increase a Plumbot's quality by tuning it up or by upgrading its trait clip slots. Increasing a Plumbot's quality increases the amount it can be sold for, and higher quality Plumbots lose Battery Power and Maintenance more slowly.

Motives
Like Servos from The Sims 2: Open for Business, Plumbots have 4 needs. Those needs are: Battery Power, Maintenance, Social, and Fun. Whether or not Social and Fun are greyed out depends on which trait chips are installed. Plumbots have a mood meter, but it will be greyed out unless an appropriate trait chip is installed. Plumbots do not need to eat, and will not want to eat.

Battery Power
This is the Plumbot equivalent of energy. The quality of a Plumbot affects how quickly this decays. The higher a Plumbot's quality is, the longer its battery power will last.

Plumbots can recharge at the Nexus-9 Non-Organic Charging Station, which can be bought in Buy mode for §710. They can also siphon power from electrical appliances, though this will greatly deplete their maintenance need. Plumbots can be shut down, and will replenish power while shut down.

The Solar Powered trait chip allows a Plumbot to use solar power when outside during daylight, and the Efficient trait chip lets Plumbots use power more efficiently.

Maintenance
Unlike Servos and SimBots, Plumbots will require maintenance. The quality of a Plumbot affects how fast this decays (the higher the quality the slower it decays). If a Plumbot's maintenance bar is empty, it will begin to malfunction. Plumbots are able to maintain themselves. When a Sim or Plumbot with a medium or high Bot Building skill tunes a Plumbot, its quality may rise. The Plumbot's quality can only increase if it was lower than the tuner's Bot Building skill. A Plumbot that accrues 15,000 Lifetime Happiness Points can purchase the Maintenance Master reward, which freezes the Maintenance motive.

Trait Chips
Plumbots do not have traits as Sims do. Instead, they can be equipped with special chips, called trait chips, which give them various skill sets, abilities, and features. A Plumbot will have between 3 and 7 trait chip slots, depending on its quality, and players can fill as many slots as they wish. Unlike traits, trait chips can be removed and replaced at any time, though there is a chance that removing a trait chip will damage it.

Create a Bot
The announce trailer suggested that it would be possible to create Plumbots inside a special machine. The live broadcast from July 30, 2013 indicated that clicking on the machine would allow the player to enter Create a Bot, which is similar to Create a Sim, but oriented toward building robots.

This machine is Reventlov's Bot Workshop. It can be purchased in Buy mode for §1,750. In addition, the Bot Emporium in Oasis Landing has a Bot Workshop that Sims can use. Access to Create a Bot requires at least level 2 of Bot Building skill, and is not free. Creating a Plumbot costs §250, and customizing an existing Plumbot costs §100. Create a Bot apparently creates Plumbots with no programming. Trait chips must be bought or made separately and installed after the Plumbot is created.

Create a Bot allows the player to customize the Plumbot by choosing a head, body, arms, and legs. The player can color the parts with Create a Style. There is a "randomize" button, as there is in Create a Sim.

Basics
The very first of the five tabs is Basics. This is where the player chooses the Plumbot's name and gender.

Name: Type in the Plumbot's name. Players can have up to 13 characters.

Gender OS: Choose either Male or Female. The Male (♂) or Female (♀) will be used as an icon for Basics

Voice: Choose one of three voice types. A slider and buttons indicates the controls the pitch of the Plumbot's voice.

Head
The player can choose a head from the collection. The color and pattern of the clothes can be chosen by the player with the Create a Style tool.

Body/Torso
The player can choose a torso from the collection. The color and pattern of the clothes can be chosen by the player with the Create a Style tool.

Arms
The player can choose arms from the collection. The color and pattern of the clothes can be chosen by the player with the Create a Style tool.

Legs
The player can choose legs or a hover bottom from the collection. The legs is used for walking and running while hover bottom is used for floating in the air, however the movements are much more like the legs. The color and pattern of the clothes can be chosen by the player with the Create a Style tool.

Selling a Plumbot
Unlike activated Servos from The Sims 2: Open for Business and SimBots from Ambitions, Plumbots can be sold. Selling a Plumbot requires a TechnoTycoon Plumbot Stand, which is available in Buy mode for §1250, or going to the "Nuts n' Bolts Bot Emporium" in Oasis Landing. A Plumbot cannot be sold unless it is present.

Trivia

 * Plumbots were originally called ServoBots during development.
 * Some of the parts are from Servo in The Sims 2: Open for Business.
 * Plumbots' voices are just like regular Sim voices, but robotized.
 * One of the Plumbot heads looks similar to a Geth head. This could be a possible reference to another game published by EA, Mass Effect.
 * Another head looks like EDI, from the same game.
 * The name "Reventlov's Bot Workshop" may be a reference to R. Giskard Reventlov, a robot character from Isaac Asimov's Robot series.
 * There is a Plumbot by the name of KH-48, this is likely a reference to HK-47 a Hunter-Killer assassin droid from the Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic series.
 * Some pre-made Plumbot models at the Bot Emporium will have the name Elita, which could be a reference to a female robot named Elita-One from The Transformers: Generation One cartoon.
 * Plumbots have their own gravestone and urn. The gravestone has a holographic plaque of spinning gears.
 * The name of the "Steel Chef" trait chip may be a reference to the Iron Chef cooking shows.

Gallery
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