Skeletons can grow beards?! Who says games don't teach?
I am so angry!
PLAYERS: 1
PUBLISHER: Ultra Games
DEVELOPER: Rare
GENRE: Strategy
RELEASE DATE: October 1991
The NES continues to surprise with this smashing port of the 1987
Commodore 64 game, Sid Meier's Pirates!. Typically, computer
ports on the NES are astoundingly bad or slow; just look at The Bard's Tale or any AD&D game to see what I'm referring
to. But Pirates! satisfies because of its varied gameplay. You
start off as a fledgling sea captain of either British, Dutch,
French, or Spanish descent. Your nationality determines what town you
start in, and from there, you start to work your way up the social
ladder by fraternizing with governors. If you help the governors by
taking out their enemies' ships or lands, you'll win special titles
and land and the chance to woo some women or "sea wenches."
This scenario is where Pirates! starts, but you don't have to
follow this path. You want to be a pirate for your entire life,
destroying ships and towns and never settling down? Go nuts! There's
eight different types of ships to acquire, from the dinkiest rowboat
to an enormous War Galleon. The more men you have with you, the less
plunder you share between them all, so consider well how many men you
want at your service. The map for Pirates! is
downright enormous and it will take dozens of hours for you to
explore every nook and cranny. You can search for treasure, find
long-lost members of your family, explore uncharted areas. There's an
absolute wealth of things to do. Unlike Koei strategy games that plop
a thousand options into your lap, Pirates! eases you into its
tumultuous European landscape – talk to the governor, visit the
tavern - before allowing you to roam where you may. Pirates! was
a trendsetter for today's modern open-world games and I'm thankful
that this NES port maintains the original's swashbuckling feel.
A-

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Looks interesting. Love that box art.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I expected crap, and I really enjoyed it. One of the unsung NES games.
ReplyDeleteI've heard its praises sung quite a bit, though usually not by Nintendo. I couldn't get into it, but appreciated what the designers were doing.
ReplyDeleteWho says games don't (Edward) Teach?
ReplyDeleteHad forgotten about this game buy me and my friend used to play it a lot and really enjoyed it.
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