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Tropico Reloaded

in der Bibliothek

4.3/5

( 48 Bewertungen )

4.3

48 Bewertungen

Deutsch, English & 3 weitere
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Tropico Reloaded
Beschreibung
Tropico verbindet Echtzeitstrategie und Simulationselemente mit einer gehörigen Portion politischer Intrigen und karibischem Flair und schafft so eine einzigartige und mehrfach preisgekrönte Spielerfahrung.Werde zum alleinigen Herrscher einer entlegenen Bananenrepublik. Kämpfe gegen Armut, Korruptio...
Nutzerrezensionen

4.3/5

( 48 Bewertungen )

4.3

48 Bewertungen

{{ review.content.title }}
Details zum Produkt
2003, PopTop, ESRB-Einstufung: Teen...
Systemanforderungen
Windows XP or Vista, 1 GHz, 256 MB RAM, 3D graphics card compatible with DirectX 7 (compatible with...
Beschreibung
Tropico verbindet Echtzeitstrategie und Simulationselemente mit einer gehörigen Portion politischer Intrigen und karibischem Flair und schafft so eine einzigartige und mehrfach preisgekrönte Spielerfahrung.

Werde zum alleinigen Herrscher einer entlegenen Bananenrepublik. Kämpfe gegen Armut, Korruption und Rebellen, führe dein Volk in eine glückliche Zukunft – oder herrsche mit militärischer Stärke. Und lege auf jeden Fall einige Dollar für den Ruhestand auf deinem Schweizer Bankkonto beiseite! Und vergiss die Naturkatastrophen nicht, wie beispielsweise tropische Stürme.

Oder werde Piratenkönig – und halte sowohl Freibeuter als auch Gefangene unter Kontrolle, während du deine Schiffe auf Kaperfahrt schickst.
  • The pack includes Tropico, the Paradise Island add-on and Tropico 2: Pirate Cove
  • Become El Presidente of a banana republic or the King of a pirate island
  • Win the trust of your people or crush them under the yoke of oppression
Extras
Handbücher (127 Seiten) Soundtrack
Systemanforderungen
Mindestsystemanforderungen:

Bitte beachte, dass Windows 10 nach seiner Veröffentlichung regelmäßige Aktualisierungen der Hardware- und Softwaretreiber erhalten wird; dies kann die Kompatibilität mit einzelnen Spielen beeinflussen.

Bitte beachte, dass Windows 10 nach seiner Veröffentlichung regelmäßige Aktualisierungen der Hardware- und Softwaretreiber erhalten wird; dies kann die Kompatibilität mit einzelnen Spielen beeinflussen.

Warum bei GOG.COM kaufen?
DRM-FREI. Keine Aktivierung oder Internetverbindung zum Spielen erforderlich.
Sicherheit und Zufriedenheit. Kundendienst rund um die Uhr und volle Rückerstattungen für bis zu 30 Tage.
Spieldetails
Läuft auf:
Windows (7, 8, 10, 11)
Veröffentlicht:
{{'2003-04-11T00:00:00+03:00' | date: 'longDate' : ' +0300 ' }}
Größe:
1.9 GB
Bewertung:
ESRB-Einstufung: Teen (Violence, Suggestive Themes)

Spielfunktionen

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Insgesamt hilfreichste Rezension

Posted on: December 1, 2009

strstrep

Bestätigter Besitzer

Spiele: 206 Rezensionen: 2

Interesting premise for a game.

I've always enjoyed playing a good simulator game. However, to make most of them fun, you have to take a few liberties with the mechanics of the game to make it work. For example, most city simulators let you place roads, power plants, zones, etc. under the pretense that you're the mayor. However, in the real world, a mayor doesn't have nearly that much power. Games tracking the rise and fall of civilizations have you ruling a civilization ... for dozens of times as long as you'd actually live. This game makes no such leap of faith. Why are you able to exercise such control over your island of tropical paradise? Because you're a corrupt dictator, that's why! I never played the second game, but it followed soon after the first with what seems to be a similar style, but pirate-themed. This review will primarily deal with the original game, from my own experience. The game runs on the same engine as Railroad Tycoon 2, and it shows, primarily from the interface that is presented to you. You get mostly the same fonts, the same style of buttons, and the same annual-report-in-a-book-format that you get from the Railroad Tycoon series. Heck, the citizens of your nation sometimes ponder, "This place would be better if it had a decent train simulation." At the beginning of the game, you get to select a ruler, each of which has a bunch of positive and negative traits. These can really make some of the scenarios more interesting, and playable more than once. Certain characteristics make you more popular with some and less popular with others. Also, each character has two flaws, both of which can be pretty severe, causing you to plan your strategy around them. For example, the cheapskate flaw, besides making you less appealing to some, also sets the maximum wage you can pay people. It can be difficult attracting the right talent to the jobs you need with that firm cap on wages. The game comes with a sandbox mode as well as a bunch of scenarios. The scenarios have some twists to them, but the game plays out pretty much the same both ways. For sandbox mode, you get to pick your victory conditions, as well as some difficulty-setting parameters. A typical game starts with you and a bunch of unskilled workers on your tropical island. You start out with a dock (for exporting goods as well as immigration and eventually tourism), a palace (for some initial military), and a workplace for each of builders and teamsters (they transport stuff). You need to build some farms for food, some houses for living (they live in shacks if you don't build them houses, and they aren't happy about the shacks), and some farms or mines to export goods to start off. Early in the game, you'll rely mostly on foreign aid for cash, later moving to exporting raw goods like iron ore and tobacco, and still later switching to processed goods like cigars and lumber and service for tourists. Each of your villagers is tracked by the game individually, and has a name, desires, and some factions. There are several factions, each somewhat at odds with each other, though there are some natural rivalries, like capitalist vs. communist and religious vs. intellectual. Each faction has different desires, and you'll want to try to satisfy the majority of your population by pandering to the wants of the largest factions. Every few years, your villagers will want elections. You can refuse to hold elections, but that can anger people, especially if they are already displeased with your performance. Keeping the military strong and pleased is especially crucial if you go this route, as they can help to keep everyone else in line. Get the military mad at you, however, and they'll stage a coup d'etat. If you do hold elections, you get a year to fix up your act against a single opponent with real-time polling data. If you address the biggest concerns of the population (or use a well-timed tax cut), you can sway the results of the election. If, when the election is drawing near, you fear that you may lose, you can rig the election, swaying the results significantly. It can't guarantee a win, but it's much more difficult to lose a rigged election. The rigged elections, though, cause you to lose favor with people, making the next election even harder if you don't have a plan to improve. Over the course of the game, you will hopefully be able to grow your treasury, making your island empire rich. You'll typically want to siphon some funds off the top to your Swiss bank account for your eventual retirement (the game has a finite length). Your final score is based on the happiness and number of people on your island, the size of the treasury, and the size of your Swiss account---dollars in your Swiss account are worth much more than treasury dollars, however. The game has a fairly complex economic system that drives everything. While you control which buildings get built where, what wages each job pays, what rent costs in each apartment, etc., you don't get to order the villagers around directly. Getting them to do what you want them to do is all about creating incentives for them. Pay higher for the jobs that they don't otherwise want to do (whether they're too far away, or require too much education, or just aren't satisfying enough), and they will switch over. Charge higher rent for the nicer accommodations, and you will be able to satisfy the communist faction (passable housing for everybody) and the capitalist faction (nice housing for the rich). I haven't gone into a lot of the systems for the game. There's an education system to get skilled workers. There's an electric system for increasing productivity and luxury. There's a health care system to prevent premature death, increase people's lives, and increase the birth rate on the island. There's a diplomacy system where you have to balance your relations with both the US and the USSR. These continue, and the whole thing is interrelated, but still pretty natural to understand. You can speed up or slow down the game to whatever pace you're comfortable at. There are piles of data in the yearly reports to pour through (or not), so you can try to pinpoint exactly what is going wrong with your little corrupt republic. You can also just click on people and examine their thoughts to get a good idea of where you're succeeding and where you're failing. I had a lot of fun with this game, and keep in mind, I've only played the first (without the expansion). The expansion adds several new scenarios as well as a bunch of other stuff, and then there's the sequel with it's wildcard of a pirate theme. The demo said about the game "there should be more than 50 hours in this game to spend at your keyboard, smoking a cigar." While I wouldn't recommend smoking at your computer (the tar makes the insides nasty), I'd agree with their assessment---and I found it fun, too.


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Posted on: December 2, 2009

darth_careful

Bestätigter Besitzer

Spiele: 526 Rezensionen: 9

Strategy on a knife-edge

Tropico hates you and wants you to lose. Not my words, but those of PCzone in a recent review of Tropico 3. But, in the case of Tropico 1, they are so, so true. Even if you wrote them in 50-foot high letters and illuminated them with twinkly lights they couldn't be more true. It's all due to balance. Tropico is a political game with all the trappings of an economic simulator. And it's here where the balance thing comes in. In Tropico, to succeed, you have to do stuff. Quite a lot of stuff. But the inhabitants of your island are picky, and --everything-- you do will annoy some of them. It's dead easy to set up a glorious communist state, but the capitalists will get angry and vote you out. Are you a pacifist? The watch out for the military. And don't even think about annoying the revolutionaries! It's strategy on a knife edge. Tropico 1 comes with loads of scenarios, even before you add in sandbox mode or start thinking about the Paradise Island expansion. Some are easy, most are hard. But in all of them need you to run a successful economy, keep everybody happy, and think about a little extra on the side for your Swiss Bank Account. Add in some great music and tons of detail about your Tropicans(which you can ignore if you want to) and you have an involving, entertaining - and sometimes even tense - strategy classic. The Paradise Island expansion adds in a few more buildings and loads more scenarios - trust me, you'll never finish them all - and patches the game. The patch was a big deal back in the day, as the original release was just too punishing. Now, it's just about possible to build an airport on your island if you plan for it. Before the patch, you could forget it. Incidentally, my retail copy of Tropico will only run from the expansion disk, so if you're after trouble free-gaming, I'd say the GOG version is the one to go for. Which just leaves Tropico 2: Pirate Cove. Replace Tropicans with Pirates, remove the politics and what do you have? A scenario-based economy builder. It's good, but lacks the superb balance and nail-biting elections of the original. I've not got a bad word to say about it, but I prefer the cut and thrust of political life. Tropico 1 for me. So, Tropico hates you and wants you to lose. And my Tropicans are an ungrateful rabble. But I love them all the same.


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Posted on: December 1, 2009

PH

Spiele: 14 Rezensionen: 3

Top notch political sim.

Oh my god. The GOG catalogue is starting to rock big time. Tropico 1 is, simply said, the best political sim you will find anywhere. Let me stress that it is a political simulation, and not a "sim city" type game. That is, if you start building things without caring about what your citizens think of you, you won't last long. Basically, you're the ruler of a small island in the Caribbean sea in the '50 era. From here, choices and strategies are endless : the game let you do everything you want to do, from sheer evil fascist (or communist) regimes to open-minded, social democracies. Each of your citizen has his, or her, own political stances, demands, competences and professional abilities, that will evolve with time like in a RPG. There are six political parties in the game : - capitalists want a thriving economy (industry, tourism, banking... it's your choice). - communists want a "fair," egalitarian regime. - environmentalists want a clean island (which is compatible with tourism, but not industry) - the theocratic party wants churches. - the militaristic party wants a strong, manly regime (either fascist or commie) - the intellectuals want a fair democracy. At the beginning of game, you decide the background of your leader (that's you) as a combination of various ideologies -- here again 100% freedom. And then, you try to stay in charge, avoiding military coups, bankruptcies, food shortages, partisan activity, US invasion, Soviet invasion, and many other issues including an opponent beating you at the next election. Election that you can, by the way, decide to cheat or to refuse, if you think you have enough power to face the consequences. The strategic possibilities are endless, the factors that you must deal with manifold. Keep an eye on your generals : the guy probably thinks he will be a better leader than your are. Build all kinds of buildings. Ensure that your people are happy -- or rule them by fear. Welcome tourist dollars or try to avoid foreign powers meddling with your affairs. Welcome migrants or refuse them. Allow your citizens to leave the island or close the door. Allow fair elections and convince you're the best candidate, or put your opponent in jail under false pretext. Or bribe him. Or ask to Pope to excommunicate him, if the religious party likes you enough. Govern a green paradise or a steamy, polluted, tropical North Korea. And so on, and so on. Everything is up to you. Here again (very important for beginners), in this game, the buildings are nothing without the manpower to make them run. You must focus on people, not buildings. If you forget that, the game will be very difficult to play. Once you know how to put people at work -- accepting their demands, paying them better or/and proding them with AK47s -- things will run smoothly... ... or not, if Professor Sanchez, the intellectual candidate, happens to gain some popular notoriety. Maybe it's time to explain to Professor Sanchez how things work in the real world, no ? A little time in a cell will cure him of his idealism. PS : I'm far less impressed by Tropico 2, which is a mediocre game. The sequel isn't as good as the first one. But then, you have them all for 10 bucks, so who cares ?


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Posted on: December 12, 2009

Hypoborea

Spiele: 1 Rezensionen: 1

Best Political Sim Ever Made

Tropico 1 places you in the role of the president of an island. You have to develop the island in order to keep all the inhabitants happy. There are several factions in the game that each want different things. The Capitalists want luxuries, the Communists want good living conditions for the working class, the environmentalists want low pollution levels, the Religious want churches, the Intellectuals want good education and low corruption and the Militarists want a stronger army. Each inhabitant has their own needs and wants, and weight of each need is determined by the faction that they belong to. You need to keep them happy while skimming a little off the top for your retirement. I can't emphasize enough how easy it is to get into the game and yet how much strategic depth if offers. Tropico 1 and it's expansion by themselves are worth the price. With even the sequel Tropico 2 thrown in, it's a real steal. If you don't get any other game, be sure to get this one.


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Posted on: January 6, 2012

ucfalumknight

Bestätigter Besitzer

Spiele: 605 Rezensionen: 3

A True Gem

This review is of Tropico 1. Tropico 2 is a much more simplistic game with the theme of Pirates. The addition of Tropico 1 + 2 to the GOG library is reason to celebrate. This is a unique game and in the commercial mainstream, unique tend to be dismissed. Tropico is a combination of several strategy genres. Combine equal part Political Sim, Civilization Sim, economy sim, and "The" sims and you end up with a unique, complicated, and satisfying experience. Tropico has flavor, and it is muy caliente. You begin Tropico as the new dictator of a small Caribbean island. At this point you can choose from historical Caribbean leaders like Fidel Castro, Papa Doc Duvalier, or Juan Negron. Or, if you so desire make your own dictator. But, choose wisely as your traits have a major impact on the game. Once decided, it is time to begin the simulation. You have a wide variety of buildings to choose from. But, this is not Sim City. Tropico doesnt care if you built the Pub next to the church. There are no pretty districts to lay out your buildings. What matters is what the people want/need. Do you fellow Tropicans yearn for religious inspiration? Build a church. Perhaps it is their decision that watching grass grow is no longer fun. Build a Cabaret. It is the needs of the people that should guide your decisions in building. Perhaps your people are dying too young. You need to build a clinic! Oh, and don't forget, you need to staff those buildings. Do you have an education system where Tropicans have graduated college and can run the clinic? Or do you have to pay major bucks to import a specialist? Only have one banker employed? Sure, he can siphon off some money to your Swiss Bank Account. But with 5 more, you can pad your retirement at a much faster pace. Of course, you need money to build those fine buildings. The economy on Tropico can be brutal. You can rely on resource gathering (Mines, Farms, and the like) But the people will eventually want more. Planning on becoming the next Cuba with your cigars? Remember, you will need to rotate your tobacco crops with corn so the fields don't go barren. Planning on Tropican Rum empire? Sugar is very picky where it grows. Perhaps you would like to take money from the fat Yanquis! Hope you have the motels and hotels to accommodate them. And make sure they have a great experience or you will see less and less turistas show up on your shores. So, you've managed to get your economy and infrastructure up to speed and everything is going along splendidly. Well, that is until your industrial juggernaut ticked off the environmentalists. Or perhaps all of those shacks are making the communists down right bear like. Now you have to deal with the politics of Tropico. Which is no easy task. Remember, you won a revolution to become el Presidente! So, through building and managing resources you can tend to appease one of the many factions on Tropico, but most likely annoy others. Holy Frijoles! Tropico is hard. It is unique, and it is one of the best games in the GOG library. This game has many layers and intricacies that you may never notice them until you 3rd or 33rd game. Always changing, always making you pay for mistakes, Tropico is truly one of the best Simulation games ever created. To call Tropico a city sim is a crime and should be punished.


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