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Step into the role of Christopher Columbus and chart a course to an unknown world of discovery, exploration, and conquest! The Commemorative Edition of Seven Cities of Gold is a remake of the 1984 classic, featuring enhanced graphics and sound.
As a fl...
Windows XP / Vista / 7, 1.8 GHz, 512 MB RAM, 3D graphics card compatible with DirectX 9.0c, 2GB HD...
介绍
不支持简体中文
本产品尚未对您目前所在的地区语言提供支持。在购买请先行确认目前所支持的语言。
Step into the role of Christopher Columbus and chart a course to an unknown world of discovery, exploration, and conquest! The Commemorative Edition of Seven Cities of Gold is a remake of the 1984 classic, featuring enhanced graphics and sound.
As a fledgling 15th century explorer you have been given a mandate by the Spanish Crown to set sail for the New World and establish new settlements for the fortune and glory of Spain. You will have complete control over every aspect of your expedition - from the initial provisioning of your voyage, to the construction of forts and missions on newly discovered continents. Key to your survival will be how you interact with the native population of the New World - negotiate with a tribe’s Chief to establish peaceful trade ties or wipe out entire villages and plunder their resources.
Fill up your coffers as you trade, loot, or mine your way to new resources and treasures. If you manage to haul back enough gold to the Old World to make an impression on the King and Queen of Spain, you may even be rewarded with a promotion and receive greater royal aid in financing your next conquest.
With your daring and skill, you will rise from unknown explorer to Viceroy of a new empire!
Command a series of daring expeditions to the New World - take control of mapping uncharted wilderness, building far-flung outposts, and establishing trade relations with over 8 different indigenous tribes.
Choose to explore a historically accurate map of the Americas in the 15th century or a randomly generated New World.
Hire men for your journey and equip your ship with food, animals, arms, and other items for trading.
包含内容
手册
原声音乐
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系统要求
最低系统配置要求:
推荐系统配置:
Please be advised that Windows 10 operating system will receive frequent hardware driver and software updates following its release; this may affect game compatibility
推荐系统配置:
Please be advised that Windows 10 operating system will receive frequent hardware driver and software updates following its release; this may affect game compatibility
Lost my ship I keep my game saved regularly. At one point my ship moved several degrees inland. It wouldn't sail out and the next time I saved the ships disapeared entirely.
a little glitchy but it brings back memories. its also authentic. no guaruntee your ship wiil be there when you get back.
I bought this back in my early twenties with fond memories of the first version. It was significantly easier, but the mission to create colonies, missions, and forts gave you something to strive for. After not playing it in years, it was fun to briefly come back to.
I can't believe I found this game. I played this as a wee teenage back when PCs used to come with a bunch of demo CDs. Yeah it's dated but at the time this was an amazing game with what seamed like an endless world.
I grew up in the 80s and played on all the system from back then - Atari 2600, NES, TRS-80, ZX Spectrum, CoCo, MSX. So I really have no prejudice against old games or games with primitive graphics.
7 Cities of Gold is one of those games I always wanted to play back in the day but, for many reasons, ended up not being able to play. So when I saw it here, it was an easy decision to buy it and give it a try.
What a disappointment! I can see why this game could have been considered special back in the day given the big world size (for 80s standards, that is), but this is NOT a fun game. I love exploration games like Starflight and Pirates!, but Seven Cities has very poor mechanics.
For instance, the manual doesn't tell you how many priests/soldiers you need for each type of settlement so you need to guess. You can find this out by taking very tedious steps (and then write it down), but this guesswork is an unfun part of the game mechanics. A similar aspect that takes the same unfun guesswork is figuring out how much your new world goods are worth.
Combat is also poorly introduced in the game. I actually beat the main goals without killing a single indian because it's just easier to do it this way.
Bottom line, this game is a train wreck, even for back in the day, and it was a huge disappointment. If you like the sailing theme, skip this one and go straight to Pirates! (the Sega Genesis and Amiga versions, not the broken Pirates Gold one).