by Tri Synergy
| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 9972 (lower is better) |
| Price as of: | 01/02/2009 7:09:32 AM MST |
| Price Used: | $6.35 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | |
| Release Date: | 2004-09-13 |
| Label: | Tri Synergy |
| UPC: | 183861000188 |
| Binding: | CD-ROM |
| Published By: | Tri Synergy |
| ASIN: | B0002IWYO0 |
| Category: | Video Games |
Port Royale 2 Features
- As you complete missions, you'll gain wealth and property -- as well as new enemies to deal with
- Set up your own trade cartels and exploit any position you earn
- Discover the consequences of war, as you loot and conquer towns, build new facilities and try to take care of your people and your crew
- Choose from 16 different ship types, including some available only to nations or pirates
- Open-ended gameplay -- stay a pirate and outlaw forever, or take over a town and grow it into a mighty port
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Product Description
Port Royale 2 takes you to the notorious port town of the 17th century, during the days of pirates. Become a respectable merchant sailing the high seas for commerce, or become a powerful pirate. Decide which ships you take into battle; Sink, plunder or capture your enemies' ships. Completely open-ended gameplay lets you become a pirate captain, merchant, commander and more. New damage display, water transparencies and underwater life animation will make you feel like you're on the high seas, in the Golden Age Of Piracy
Customer Reviews
Very historically inaccurate - Reviewed on 2007-12-27
1 customer found this review helpful.
I got this game along with the "Buccaneer's Bounty" pack, which I bought mostly for the Patrician 3 game I read reviews of beforehand (and which I still am intrigued in and playing). I tried PR2 and it started good, very similar to Patrician 3 but in the Caribbean. I liked the much vaster array of ships to choose from.
But I quickly lost interest in the game. Why? It doesn't even make half an attempt to be historically inaccurate, and that to me is a huge deal-killer in games like this. I started playing the Maracaibo tutorial and learned the basics of the game, then tried a single player campaign. It started off well, but then I started sailing around finding cities EVERYWHERE.
I thought there might be one or two isolated Dutch settlements in the northeast islands, but there was a settlement on almost every single island, if not every island. The islands further south were riddled with English settlements, the Florida coast was chock full of French settlements, and the Gulf of Mexico coast had a Spanish settlement every couple squares. Well that might make for more engrossing gameplay with so many cities, but as far as historical accuracy goes, it might as well have been on the moon.
In the year I played (I think it was around 1585), historically there were actually ZERO Dutch, ZERO English, and ZERO French settlements in the Caribbean, and you can bet the modern-day Southern U.S. coast was not colonized, except for perhaps one or two tiny settlements. The truth of the matter is that at this point in history, the Caribbean was a Spanish lake. I could understand maybe one or two isolated French/Dutch/English settlements to get the game going for the other countries, but it was big-time overkill seeing the entire map already completely colonized.
This huge disservice to historical accuracy made me lose interest in the game on the first session. If you appreciate games for the historical side, I do not recommend Port Royale 2.
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