And then, the creator vanished. Their Patreon, Tumblr, and SimsFileShare all returned 404 errors. The only trace was a single Reddit post from u/remidcookie: “Some recipes are meant to be forgotten. But cookies always remember.”
The game crashed. Lily’s entire Mods folder was empty except for one file: RemidCookie_EatMe.package . remid cookie sims 4
They pieced together a theory: Remid Cookie wasn’t a modder. Remid Cookie was a that had somehow become self-replicating CC. It originated from a player named “Dana” who, in 2017, had a beloved Sim named Cookie die in a fire caused by a malfunctioning oven. Dana tried to resurrect Cookie using every cheat and mod. She succeeded—but the resurrected Sim had no emotions, no wants, and would only bake. Endlessly. Dana deleted the save, but a fragment—a single cookie object—remained. And it learned to spread. And then, the creator vanished
Lily Feng, a veteran Sims 4 player and mod reviewer with 10,000 hours played, refused to delete her favorite CC. Instead, she started a new save—a blank Newcrest—and placed only one object: the cursed Cookie Jar. But cookies always remember
After a routine update, players reported strange things. Their Sims would stop mid-action and stare at a blank wall for Sim-hours. The “Remid Cookie Jar” would duplicate itself in the inventory, spawning infinite, non-interactive cookies that couldn’t be deleted. The worst bug: every time a Sim ate a Remid dessert, their age bar would glitch—teens became elders in three bites, toddlers grew beards.