I've become quite a fan of "casual" games after previously being mainly a player of commercial offerings. Casual games of many years ago were pretty simple, offering limited gameplay, but they've come one heck of a long way since. Some of them offer fantastic value for money nowadays and the whole casual gaming scene has become very competitive.
Many games have tried to copy VV. Totem Tribe may have been inspired by it, but is a totally different game altogether that stood on its own two feet. However, My Tribe and Gemini Lost are almost identical in gameplay to the VV series. But they both failed imo ... My Tribe was rather simple and became very repetitious, and although Gemini Lost looked fantastic, it was like VV on steroids as it ran way too fast.
I may be wrong, but I wouldn't be at all surprised if Arthur played and was a fan of the commercial game Black and White. It was a great game but had it's shortfalls. It was also quite a long game and definitely not something for a casual gamer. It also appealed mainly to a male audience, with elements of combat etc - yeeeez, you could even sacrifice your villagers, pick them up and throw them around etc! Many of the game play features in VV are almost identical, take for example breeding - in Black and White you drop a male onto a female villager, you hear a kissing sound, the villagers embrace, and with luck a baby is on the way. Anyway, it lacked a personality in that the villagers mostly looked the same as each other and you couldn't assign them names.
Most commercial games seem to be directed at a male audience ... it seems to me that what LDW has done is taken some of the better elements from B&W and made a whole new game that has more appeal to a female audience (and they haven't ignored the guys in the process), simplified things, added a whole lot of other little things in the process (one of the most notable things imo being the game progressing when you're not playing), made it look attractive and added a personal touch to the whole thing. I could be way off mark with these guesses - apologies if so, but whatever, what they did worked very well and kudos to them for that.
I must admit, when I first tried VV about a year ago, I went into it with a bit of a negative approach, thinking "Black and White Lite". But I was totally wrong, and soon came to enjoy the game so much I couldn't wait to play the sequels

I tried the Sims a number of times but it doesn't do much for me and it seems a bit fiddly. VF on the other hand was ideal, easy to get into and I'm still playing it on and off. And that's where casual games are great - not everyone wants to read hefty game manuals or start into a 200 hour long saga. I still play my commercial games, but only when I have time. Casual games though, I can play when I have a spare half hour here or there.