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Tropico (video game)

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Tropico
Tropico box
Tropico box
Developer(s)PopTop Software
Publisher(s)Gathering of Developers (Windows), Feral (Mac)
Designer(s)Phil Steinmeyer
Platform(s)Windows 95/98/2000/ME/NT4, Mac OS 9/Mac OS X
ReleaseCanada April 21, 2001
United States April 24, 2001
Germany Apr 27, 2001
Genre(s)Real-time strategy, Simulation
Mode(s)Single player

Tropico is a real-time strategy computer game developed by PopTop Software and published by Gathering of Developers in April 2001[1]. The game sees the player taking the role of "El Presidente," the ruler of an island in the Caribbean during the Cold War era from the 1950s onward.

Games based on Caribbean city-building have been created before, but Tropico was the first to be centered around Cuban Revolution and Cold War themes. The game is tongue-in-cheek in its presentation of banana republics, using a great deal of humor while still referencing such topics as totalitarianism, electoral fraud, and the interventions of powerful companies (United Fruit is implied) and the Cold War superpowers (the United States and Soviet Union).

Tropico features Latin-styled Dominican music, largely performed by Daniel Indart. The game won the Original Music Composition category in the 2002 Interactive Achievement Awards.

Tropico has several expansion packs and new editions, including Tropico: Paradise Island (released on February 3, 2002), plus a combined copy of the original and Paradise Island entitled Tropico: Mucho Macho Edition (released on June 27, 2002). A sequel, Tropico 2: Pirate Cove, was released on April 8, 2003.

Basic gameplay

Regardless of any other stated victory condition, the main goal of any Tropico game is to stay in power–if the island's populace disapprove of the player's actions, they may vote their leader out of office, or even stage a coup d'état. If either of the Cold War superpowers becomes unhappy with the player's regime, it may launch an invasion to overthrow it. A successful leader will have to either meet the needs of the populace and the wider political world, or establish and police a totalitarian military dictatorship.

The player is able to issue a number of governmental edicts, some of which require funding or the availability of particular buildings. Edicts are used to achieve various game effects, from appeasing one of the superpowers by openly praising them, to instating martial law, to giving a tax break to the populace. [2]

The game calculates a score for the player at the end of the game. This score is based on a variety of factors, including the happiness of the island's citizens, the health of the island's economy, how much money the player has set aside for his own retirement in a Swiss bank account, and the level of difficulty chosen at the start of the game.


Gameplay modes

Tropico can be played in three different gameplay modes: tutorial, scenario, or custom game/random map:

  • The tutorials are designed to help players learn how play the game.
  • Scenarios are predetermined game conditions with defined goals that must be accomplished in order to achieve a "win". The game includes several scenarios, each with a stated level of difficulty. Scenario goals are normally more complex than those available in a custom game.
  • Custom games allow virtually all starting conditions to be controlled. These include the elevation, vegetation and water coverage of the island, and the probability of random events during play. The custom game also allows the player to choose how many game years the simulation will run for, and what conditions will determine victory (if any).

Politics and factions

While "El Presidente" has absolute rule over the lives of the Tropican people, politics play an important role in gameplay. The player must decide whether to hold free elections, attempt to manipulate the election by intimidating voters, or to reject democracy and run the island as a dictatorship. These decisions will have direct effects on the Tropican people's happiness, liberty, and respect for the leader. Often the player is judged on "democracy expectations" versus "democracy results," which will influence the public's opinion of their leadership.

If pushed enough the Tropican people may choose to rebel against "El Presidente", conducting guerilla attacks against various buildings on the island, and if it grows strong enough will result in the overthrow of the player. A sufficiently dissatisfied military are likely to instigate a coup. Often threats to power can be measured based on a unit's leadership qualities and his courage. For example, a citiszen with poor leadership but strong courage may not be likely to start a rebellion, but may be willing to join it.

All Tropicans are aligned into several conflicting political factions, each citizen being a member of one or more such faction. The following is a list of the factions and their general demands:

  • Communists: Generally one of the largest factions, they are most concerned with housing, employment, and pay disparities on the island. They also prefer a pro-Soviet foreign policy. Their leader is generally a farmer or other laborer.
  • Capitalists: They stand in opposition to the communists and are a small, but influential faction. They are concerned with economic growth and higher quality housing on the island. The capitalists prefer a pro-American foreign policy and are often led by a banker.
  • Religious: One of (if not the) largest faction on the island. This is due to a high value that many Tropicans place on their Catholic faith. They often are concerned with access to and quality of religious institutions on the island, as well as the island's morality. Apeasing them can often result in major reductions in liberty as they are swayed by edicts such as "Book BBQ," "Prohibition," "Birth Control Ban," and "Inquisition." The religious faction tends to be led by either a priest or bishop.
  • Intellectuals: This is one of the smallest factions on the island and tends to have the most detractors. They are most concerned with access to education on the island as well as the level of liberty on the island. They can be one of the hardest factions to please and occasionally pose a threat to power, especially if the player is running an authoritarian regime. They are often led by a professor or teacher.
  • Militarists: This is a small but powerful faction mainly concerned with the size and well-being of the island's military. They are one of the biggest threats to power, as armed members of this faction may launch a coup against the player. Supporting the militarists will result in a decrease in liberty and can cause non-militarists to rebel. The militarist faction is generally led by a soldier or general.
  • Environmentalists: A very small faction they are most concerned with the natural beauty of the island. As such, they oppose logging and mining operations as well as most industry. Often they are in direct conflict with the interests of the capitalists or the communists. The leader can appease them by issuing edicts relating to the environment, such as pollution standards, but this will generally result in increased maintenance costs and decreased productivity.

Factions can be manipulated both positively and negatively mainly through edicts and buildings. For example, the player may chose to bribe the leaders of factions to attempt to curry their favor or, if the faction's leaders become too much of a threat he or she can have them assassinated or imprisoned. The island's media outlets can be directed to distribute propaganda for a particular faction, and schools can be either parochial or military in nature.

Character

Before starting a custom game, the player may either design their own "El Presidente" character or select one from a list of pre-made leaders. These include real-life figures such as Che Guevara, Fidel Castro, and Augusto Pinochet, fictional rulers such as Hernando Blanco and Sancho Baraega, as well as miscellaneous rulers and even a musician Lou Bega.

After the player has chosen a leader, the player can customize their profile by specifying the strengths and flaws of their character's personality, the means by which they came into power and their social background. These choices affect the attitudes of factions and superpowers towards the player, and can also alter the costs or consequences of in-game actions.

List of real life personas

The following lists real figures featured in Tropico, all of whom are associated with Latin American politics during the Cold War:

Lou Bega, who is a Latin pop musician commonly known at the time for the song "Mambo No. 5," is also available as a dictator persona. He was included as part of a licensing deal that also saw one of Bega's songs integrated into the German release of Tropico. [3]

Real world influences

Many of the player's actions reflect real-world Caribbean issues and events. This is most apparent in the available leader characters and the customisable aspects of their profile, but also appears in some of the edicts which the player may issue during the course of a game.

The player may issue the edict "Papal Visit" which references Pope John Paul II's trip to Cuba in 1998, or "Open the Jails" in which prisoners on the island are deported to the United States, reminiscent of the Mariel Boatlift (however, in Tropico all criminals are political prisoners, where as in real Cuba the prisoners tended to be common criminals).

The Cold War features prominently in the game. If the player pursues a strongly pro-Soviet or pro-American political line, those governments may install military bases on the island, reflecting the Cuban Missile Crisis or the US Navy base at Guantanamo Bay.

Trivia

  • If one is to go by the map that appears when the player issues the "Trade Delegation" edict, then Tropico would be in the Gulf of Honduras in the real world.
  • The game manual references the All Your Base phenomenon.

References

  1. ^ "Release Information for Tropico". MobyGames. Retrieved 14 August. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); External link in |work= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ "Gameplay Information". PopTop. Retrieved 14 August. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); External link in |work= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ Phil Steinmeyer (15). "Inside the Sausage Factory #21". Retrieved 2006-08-15. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= and |year= / |date= mismatch (help); Cite has empty unknown parameters: |accessyear=, |accessmonthday=, and |coauthors= (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)