a game about smuggling opium? sign me up.
Actually, this game sounds like it needs a reboot. To kickstarter!
On 04/14/2013 at 07:47 AM by Ranger1 See More From This User » |
Recently, Leeradical42 wrote a blog about some pirate game that I will look up later and it reminded me of an old game I played on the Apple IIe back in college. I worked in the Learning Resource Center as a peer tutor and pulled a six hour shift on one of the weekend nights, I think it may have been Sunday. Sometimes the LRC was busy that night (midterms, finals, etc), but more often than not it was dead. My friend Ed took pity on me and gave me box of 5 1/4" floppy disks of games. I had Risk, some arcadey sorts of games, and Taipan, which is what the Pirate game reminded me of.
Taipan was a very simple trading sim. You started out by naming your company, then deciding if you wanted to start the game with cash and a debt or five guns and no cash (but no debt, either). Then you proceded to sail between your home port of Hong Kong and six other East Asian ports, buying and selling (hopefully at a profit) merchandise, and fighting off enemy ships. And that's pretty much it, just a resource management game, with some blobby pics of ships when you'd get attacked. As the game went on, you might get offered the chance to buy a bigger ship and more guns, you might get busted trading in opium and your cargo confiscated, the head of the local pirates was always after protection money and you had to decide whether it was worth it to keep paying him off.
For such a simple game, it really was quite addicting. But with the obsolescence of 5 1/4" floppy drives, I was sure that my days of trading in the south seas was over. Not so, as I found out when I went looking to make sure that the game really was Taipan and that I was remembering it correctly. I found it here, faithfully ported to the internet for all to play for free. Go on, give it a try. It's an entertaining way of wasting a few hours and what have you got to lose?
I must have missed Taipan I do remember a game I think it was on the snes where you controlled Airlines and had to strategicaly place airports set up flight routes etc and it was a buisness sim and for the life of me I cant think of the name of it. Oh and the blog your talking about was Port Royale 3 which sets its emphases on Trading , and buying low and selling high, and has one of the best economics models I have ever played. but back to the subject had hand Taipan was it only on pc or did it release on any other system. Oh and thanks for pointing out that issue on my site I do beleive I have resolved it.
I played a lot of games on our old Apple ][+ when I was little. While everyone else was complaining about the crappy port of Pac-Man on the Atari 2600, I was happily playing a near arcade perfect version on my Apple. Seeing how much of a console-only gamer I am now, it's hard to believe that I started out as a PC gamer! My favorite Apple ][ games were Aquatron and Spare Change.
Oh, man. I remember Tai-Pan. I played it on our old TRS-80 computer, and I wrote a version of it for the Atari 130XE in BASIC. I play the browser-based version every once in awhile. The game still hold up, for what it is. It'd be interesting for someone to do a modern graphical update of the game and release it via Steam/PSN/XBLA/Nintendo eShop (the Wii U gamepad would work well with it.)
I never played Tai Pan. I had a hand me down apple II c. I did play a lot of a game called lemonade stand though. That was a simplified version of what Tai Pan sounds like. Manage buying supplies and how much lemonade is made based on weather and trying to turn a profit.
Somehow, I feel this game's premise might help me with that MBA, if I pursue it, in some vague way. lol Might just try it out.
I forget what games I used to play on Apple IIe. Those floppy disks were huge, though. And flimsy. And I know from my age you wouldn't think I'd have gamed on an Apple IIe, but mom being the computer teacher, there was one lying around at school. I think I played a racer of some sort? I'd have to search through the thing's library to figure out what it was, and I'm not sure I'm up for that kind of "research" right now.
Sometimes the simplest of games are the most entertaining.
Which is probably why I played Oregan Trail to death whenever I was younger. It doesn't get any more complicated than travel, rest, and deciding whether or not to forge that river and risk your oxen! lol
Darn you! I clicked that dastardly link and now I'm hooked. I got ships under fire as we speak! My first Apple IIe love was Super Bunny. You can play a ton of old Apple games here: http://www.virtualapple.org/ Some of the controls are hard to figure out but Super Bunny plays fine.
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