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Sometime this spring, after a deal with Disney was struck, Sea Dogs II, was magically transformed into Pirates of the Caribbean. I admit here that I have publicly and privately have been critical of this transformation, but I’ll do my best to set that aside for this review, even though I think it was a CHEAP AND CYNICAL MOVE on Bethesda’s part. However, as the cooler-headed Randy Sluganski pointed out to me (Wow, this is the first time anyone has ever referred to me as ‘cooler-headed’! – Randy), at least we know Bethesda will take that money and use it to try and make good games (just not another Morrowind expansion, please! We’re tired!).
Also admirable are the lovely graphics. Though they could use a bit more variety (every town and jungle looks exactly the same) what’s there is extremely attractive. Kudos must also go to Bethesda for actually having an ATTRACTIVE MALE LEAD CHARACTER. This just doesn’t happen very often in computer games. Nice graphical touches include rats and lizards that are dynamic and react to your presence.
The skills in the game range from sailing, boarding, melee fighting, commerce, and leadership, to expertise in guns, swords, bad weather, cannons, and other specialized skills. This again enriches the “play the game as you see fit” game model. The game also has an interesting main quest, with a good story and varied missions. However. For every admirable
quality in
Even worse is the unforgiving learning curve. This is a complicated game, in that there are several distinct playing modes: exploring and conversing on land, shopping, hiring, fighting, sailing, cannon-firing, boarding, etc. etc. The game has only the flimsiest tutorial, and that’s only for the land part. Here’s the worst part. The very first time you put to sea, you’re immediately beset by a horde of ships that sink you in about thirty seconds. So instead of giving you a couple of minutes to learn a completely new (and clunky) interface, you’re frantically trying to learn it in the few seconds before you’re sunk. Topping off the horror is that each time you reload, you must sit through the long (and admittedly beautiful) cut scene again – nope, no clicking through it is allowed! It’s enough to make you toss in your captain’s stripes before the game has even begun. Again, I can’t figure out how this kind of bad game design decision made it past any responsible test players. Baffling.
Which brings me to the saddest news I have to report. It’s not rats or lizards or interface issues that bring this game to its knees, it’s BUGS. Despite the interface, despite getting killed sunk twenty times before I figured out how to run the hell away and survive, I began really enjoying this game. Like I mentioned before, the main quest is quite interesting, and I was enjoying buying bigger and better ships, becoming a better trader and a more skilled captain, and becoming absolutely hell on wheels with a dueling sword. I was even pleasantly surprised that little bits of the plot of the movie were actually worked into the game! I began hearing rumors of a ship of cursed pirates, and even had an initial encounter with them, and with the Black Pearl as well. A few quests into the main plot, I hit a quest-killing bug in which two characters were simultaneous standing in the same spot. This made them both impossible to speak to, which was a problem, as one of them was the quest character. Fortunately, I reloaded a save and it didn’t happen again.
Hoping it was a fluke, I painstakingly replayed the difficult battle again, but the bug happened again in the exact same place. My repeated requests for help on the issue have gone unanswered by Bethesda. So I can’t tell you if I’m the only person in the universe that this has happened to, or if it happens to everyone, or if Bethesda is working on a patch for it, or what. Therefore, I’m going to give this game two grades. One grade assumes the bug is fixable, the other assumes it’s not. Because if it’s not, then of course I can’t in good conscience recommend this game to anyone. But if it is, it’s certainly worth a look if you can overcome it’s significant problems. Final Grade (with bug
fix): C+ System Requirements:
Also available on Xbox This review is copyright Ray Ivey and Just Adventure and may not be republished elsewhere without the express written consent of the author. Republication of said review must also contain a link back to Just Adventure. |
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