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  <title>asgaard</title>
  <description></description>
  <link>https://blog.asgaard.co.uk/2013/03/11/tropico</link>
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    <title>Tropico</title>
    <link>https://blog.asgaard.co.uk/2013/03/11/tropico</link>
    <pubDate>Mon, 11 Mar 13 22:47:06 +0000</pubDate>
    <guid>https://blog.asgaard.co.uk/2013/03/11/tropico</guid>
    <description><![CDATA[
<p>
<img class='float-right width-25' src='/assets/media/11-03-13/tropico-flag.png' alt=''/>
<p>
With the recent SimCity debacle, and Valve&#039;s not so subtle decision to put Tropico 4 on sale for a week, you might be wondering if Tropico is any good. It looks fairly good, but it doesn&#039;t seem to have the marketing that AAA titles do, so maybe it&#039;s rubbish, yes? 
<p>
The answer is a resounding no. Tropico is <strong>great</strong>. All your suspicions demonstrate is how vulnerable you are to exploitation by marketers in an industry saturated with misleading advertising. Which, ironically enough, is a property that would make El Presidente value you as an co-inhabitant of his little spot of paradise.<h2>Tropico is a real gem of a game.</h2>
<p>
<img class='float-left width-33' src='/assets/media/11-03-13/tropico-volcano.jpg' title='To be fair, that volcano might improve things around this dump.' alt='To be fair, that volcano might improve things around this dump.'/>
<p>
Tropico has <em>character</em>. Not just your character, El Presidente, a strangely lovable Banana Republic dictator, the magnitude of whose ambitions are matched only by the magnitude of his facial hair. No. There are many other characters too. Like Penultimo - your hapless second in command, Sunny Flowers - the resident hippy radio host, and Antonio Lopez - a man so serious about capita[...]]]></description>
    <content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p>
<img class='float-right width-25' src='/assets/media/11-03-13/tropico-flag.png' alt=''/>
<p>
With the recent SimCity debacle, and Valve&#039;s not so subtle decision to put Tropico 4 on sale for a week, you might be wondering if Tropico is any good. It looks fairly good, but it doesn&#039;t seem to have the marketing that AAA titles do, so maybe it&#039;s rubbish, yes? 
<p>
The answer is a resounding no. Tropico is <strong>great</strong>. All your suspicions demonstrate is how vulnerable you are to exploitation by marketers in an industry saturated with misleading advertising. Which, ironically enough, is a property that would make El Presidente value you as an co-inhabitant of his little spot of paradise.<h2>Tropico is a real gem of a game.</h2>
<p>
<img class='float-left width-33' src='/assets/media/11-03-13/tropico-volcano.jpg' title='To be fair, that volcano might improve things around this dump.' alt='To be fair, that volcano might improve things around this dump.'/>
<p>
Tropico has <em>character</em>. Not just your character, El Presidente, a strangely lovable Banana Republic dictator, the magnitude of whose ambitions are matched only by the magnitude of his facial hair. No. There are many other characters too. Like Penultimo - your hapless second in command, Sunny Flowers - the resident hippy radio host, and Antonio Lopez - a man so serious about capitalism that he made extra space under his chart to show you how quickly the markets were collapsing.
<p>
But that&#039;s not really what I meant by character...
<p>
It&#039;s not really a sandbox city simulator, although town planning certainly plays a big part, it&#039;s much more a story driven game. The plot unfolds throughout each mission in comically ridiculous ways with comically ridiculous racially stereotyped characters with silly accents. <em>&quot;El Presidente, the mighty Chinese dragon is hungry for your goods&quot;.</em> It&#039;s all very very tongue in cheek and adds a wholly different and entertaining view onto a solid management game. And the well made and fairly long story campaign adds much more focus over a more sandbox oriented game.
<p>
<img class='float-right width-40' src='/assets/media/11-03-13/tropico-one-thousand-greetings-el-presidente.jpg' title='A calamity befalls Presidente&#039;s good friend Sheik Sallim.' alt='A calamity befalls Presidente&#039;s good friend Sheik Sallim.'/>
<p>
It&#039;s rare that I&#039;m entirely positive about a game, but there&#039;s not a lot you can criticise Tropcio for; it&#039;s well made, it&#039;s stable, it&#039;s original, and it&#039;s really enjoyable. Oh yes, and the music is top notch.
<p>
Possible downsides are that it&#039;s a bit complicated to start off with (although the campaign eases you in, if you pay attention, and there are tutorials, and a <a href='http://cdn2.steampowered.com/Manuals/57690/T4-manual-EN.pdf?t=1355948688' target='_blank' rel='external'>PDF manual on Steam</a>).You also need a (free) Kalypso account, but once done it&#039;s unintrusive and there&#039;s no additional DRM beyond Steam.
<p>
To put it in perspective, I bought Tropico 4 in a Steam sale over the summer, and 9 months later I still boot it up sometimes. Now that all the DLC are on sale too, I&#039;ve bought them also. You get a lot of value for money with Tropico. As an extra bonus, it&#039;s graphically unintensive while not being ugly, and should therefore run on most non-ancient PCs.
<p>
I can&#039;t recommend Tropico 4 enough. It&#039;s great.
<p>
<strong>By the way</strong>, if you missed the Steam sale and don&#039;t want to pay full price, wait a bit. It seems to go on sale every few months.]]></content:encoded>
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