This career focuses on the preservation of the animal kingdom. Most of the levels have no uniforms so you can customize your sim's work wardrobe yourself. The carpool for most levels is Sedan with luxury vehicles in upper levels. There are no chance cards completed. If you run into an empty chance card just cancel it out. Below are the job titles and descriptions. Enjoy!
1 Park Litter Picker
You’ve landed your first gig in the great outdoors—congrats! As a Park Litter Picker, your job is to keep nature pristine for both animals and humans. You're responsible for picking up trash, refilling trail maps, and reminding visitors that yes, feeding the squirrels is against the rules. It’s humble work, but it’s the foundation of something bigger. Keep your eyes open—you might just spot a rare bird on your lunch break.
2 Animal Observation Intern
You’re now officially part of the conservation team, clipboard in hand and binoculars around your neck. Your role is to observe and report on animal behavior, nesting grounds, and migration paths. Whether you’re hiking through thick woods or peering into a meadow from a blind, your notes help researchers make big decisions. There’s no paycheck glory just yet, but your fieldwork is essential—and besides, who else gets to say they watched an eagle feed its young on a Tuesday?
3 Wildlife Outreach Officer
You’ve traded muddy boots for presentation clickers—but your mission remains the same: protect the wild. As a Wildlife Outreach Officer, you visit schools, rec centers, and festivals to spread the word about endangered species and environmental responsibility. It’s not enough to save animals—you’re inspiring the next generation to do the same. Bonus: You’re becoming a natural in front of a crowd, and those communication skills will pay off down the line.
4 Habitat Scout
The forest has become your office. Wetlands, deserts, and mountain trails are your daily commute. As a Habitat Scout, you’re sent into the field to survey natural areas, identify threats to ecosystems, and report on species health. One week you might be tracking badger dens, the next you’re assessing flood damage in a marsh. It’s physical, often exhausting work—but your reports are directly shaping environmental response plans. Nature counts on you to speak up.
5 Wildlife Rescue Specialist
When disaster strikes, you're the one they call. You’re now trained to respond to emergency calls about injured, orphaned, or displaced animals. From deer hit by cars to birds tangled in netting, you swoop in with compassion, care, and a travel crate. You assist in surgeries, organize releases back into the wild, and sometimes bottle-feed baby raccoons at midnight. Not glamorous, but incredibly fulfilling. Every life you save reminds you why you got into this field.
6 Conservation Program Coordinator
You’re no longer in the trenches—you’re in the office (well, mostly), designing and managing full-scale environmental programs. From habitat restoration to local clean-up events, you’re the logistical brain behind the scenes. You juggle schedules, write grants, train volunteers, and maybe even run the occasional fundraiser. Your name’s on the press releases now, and you’re finally making moves that influence real-world change on a larger scale.
7 Wildlife Biologist
With your lab coat over a mud-streaked field jacket, you’ve become the quintessential scientist of the wild. You design and lead studies, publish findings, and consult with other scientists worldwide. Your research may focus on animal behavior, environmental toxins, or population patterns—and your conclusions are influencing national conservation policies. Whether you're in the field tagging wolves or running data in a lab, you're pushing the boundaries of what we know about life on Earth.
8 Environmental Policy Advisor
Now that you’ve proven your scientific chops, you're stepping into the world of politics and policy. As an Environmental Policy Advisor, you consult with lawmakers, NGOs, and corporations to push for eco-friendly legislation and practices. You help draft environmental guidelines, run risk assessments, and often testify on behalf of wildlife. It’s a mix of paperwork and power moves—but you’re ensuring the protections you’ve fought for actually become law..
9 Wildlife Reserve Director
You're the boss now. As Director of a national or regional wildlife reserve, your responsibilities range from managing staff to overseeing budgets, safety regulations, and long-term sustainability plans. Media, donors, and community leaders all want your time—but you still find moments to visit the trails and keep in touch with your wild roots. You’re trusted, respected, and responsible for the wellbeing of thousands of animals and the land they call home.
10 Global Conservation Ambassador
You’ve reached icon status. As a Global Conservation Ambassador, you’re traveling the world speaking at summits, collaborating with world leaders, launching worldwide awareness campaigns, and inspiring millions to care for the planet. Your face is on magazine covers, your voice is heard in parliament, and your mission—saving life on Earth—is being fulfilled every day. You started picking up trash. Now, you’re changing the world.
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