Frida Goth

Frida Goth is a member of the Goth family featured in The Sims 2 and The Sims 3: Supernatural. She is deceased long before the start of the game in The Sims 2, yet her relatives reside in Pleasantview and are ready to be played.

Life leading up to The Sims 3
In The Sims 3: Supernatural, Frida Goth is a playable ghost living in Moonlight Falls with Samuel Goth, Olivia Goth and her uncle's fortune-telling friend Helen Hall. She moved in with her uncle Samuel after her family tried to force her marrying a Landgraab. She therefore had a fallout with her brother Gunther.

However, her uncle died poisoned by his favorite candies, and his youthful wife Olivia (who is even younger than Frida herself) was really distraught, causing and electrical accident that set the house and then Frida on fire. However, being a ghost suits her rather well.

Frida presence in Moonlight Falls might explain her absence in the Goth's graveyard in Pleasantview, many years later.

Life leading up to The Sims 2
According to the Goth family tree in The Sims 2, Frida is the sister of Gunther Goth, father of Mortimer Goth. This would make Frida the aunt of Mortimer, and thus the great-aunt of Mortimer's two children, Cassandra and Alexander. Frida never had any children and never married. Oddly, Frida and Prudence Crumplebottom are not buried in the Goth graveyard with the rest of their family. This could be a "grave mistake," or their graves may have been burned in one of the fires that happened in the Goths' home.

She does not appear in The Sims, at least, not by name. While it is possible that she is buried in Mortimer's cemetery, she could also be buried in Gunther's. It's also possible that she is alive somewhere outside of the neighborhood.

Her facial structure is almost exactly the same as that of Francisca Pantalone and Denise Jacquet.

Her ghost in The Sims 2 shows that she died of old age, but in The Sims 3: Supernatural, her ghost shows that she died by fire. It is possible she was revived before The Sims 2 and then died of old age.

Other languages

 * English: Frida Goth
 * French: Frida Gothik
 * German: Frieda Grusel
 * Italian: Frida Alberghini
 * Spanish: Frida Lápida
 * Dutch: Frida van de Kerkhof
 * Danish: Frida Spøgh
 * Swedish: Frida Spökh
 * Norwegian: Frida Goth
 * Finnish: Frida Goottila
 * Portuguese: Frida Goth
 * Japanese: フリーダ ゴス
 * Polish: Kunegunda Ćwir
 * Chinese (simplified): 弗里达 高斯
 * Chinese (traditional): 弗麗達 高斯
 * Thai: ฟรี•ด้า โกธ
 * Korean: 프리다 고트
 * Czech: Frida Gothová
 * Brazilian Portuguese: Frida Caixão