Pirates of the Caribbean (video game)

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Pirates of the Caribbean

Developer(s) Akella
Publisher(s) Bethesda Softworks
Platform(s) Xbox, Windows, Mobile Phone
Release date NA PC June 30, 2003

EU PC June 30, 2003
NA XBOX July 1, 2003
EU XBOX September 5, 2003

Genre(s) Action RPG
Mode(s) Single player
Rating(s) ESRB: Teen (T)

PEGI: 12+

Media CD/DVD
System requirements Windows:
Input methods Xbox Gamepad

Keyboard
Mouse

Pirates of the Caribbean is a 2003 video game for Xbox and Windows, developed by Akella and published by Bethesda Softworks. A Sony PlayStation 2 version was also originally in development, but was later cancelled.

An unrelated game by the same name was also released for mobile phones, as was a Game Boy Advance game.

Contents

[edit] Xbox/PC version

Pirates of the Caribbean is a action role-playing game in which the player, as Captain Nathaniel Hawk, goes on a series of quests for any one of the countries that control the islands of the Caribbean in the 17th Century. The player can buy new ships, recruit a crew and hire officers who will follow Hawk on his quest and help him in battle. The game features gameplay that takes place both on land and at sea, and allows the player to upgrade their character by earning skill points and gain new abilities.

The game was originally developed under the name Sea Dogs II, and was to be the sequel to Sea Dogs, which was released in the year 2000. Apart from the pirate theme, the setting and the presence of the Black Pearl, the game otherwise has few connections to the Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl film, which was released around the same time as the game.

The PC version of this game is one of the first video games with multi-threaded code that is optimized for the Intel's Hyper-Threading technology.

Actress Keira Knightley, who played Elizabeth Swann in the film series, voiced the narrator (a single cutscene at the beginning) in the game.

[edit] Plot

After a fierce storm, Captain Nathaniel Hawk arrives on the island of Oxbay. His first mate Malcolm Hatcher is retiring, and so Hawk must hire a new first mate and crew. As he leaves Oxbay, a French armada attacks the colony and captures it. Hawk manages to slip away and warn the English governor on Redmond Island that Oxbay was attacked. The governor sends Hawk on a series of quests, until Hawk meets an old inventor who aids him in finding a treasure that could defeat the ghost ship called the Black Pearl. There is also a large amount of side quests. For instance, in one such side mission Hawk is enlisted to help a Dutch colonist find several lost children.

[edit] The Black Pearl

The Black Pearl is in this game but it is unknown if Barbossa is the captain (although when one looks at the code for the game, Barbossa is set as the ship's default captain). It cannot be destroyed. At night you see the Black Pearl's crew as skeletons. It can only be seen during the middle of the game and the end of the game -- however, some people have reported seeing it at random points in the game.

[edit] POTC Build Modification

The PC version of this game was later modified by the PiratesAhoy http://www.piratesahoy.net community. This project eventually became the POTC Build Mod. At present this project is in its 14th Version. Visit http://www.potc.moddb.com for further information.



[edit] Game Boy Advance version

Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of The Black Pearl
Developer(s) Pocket Studios
Publisher(s) TDK
Platform(s) Game Boy Advance
Release date NA July 1, 2003

EU October 24, 2003

Genre(s) Action RPG
Mode(s) Single player
Rating(s) ESRB: Everyone (E)

PEGI: 7+

Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl is a 2003 video game for Game Boy Advance.

[edit] Plot

The game doesn't share storyline with the Bethesda game for Windows and Xbox, instead it tells the story of a younger Jack Sparrow and how he escaped from the island after being betrayed by his crew.

[edit] Reception

The reception for this game was largely mediocre. IGN gave the game a 5.5 claiming: "Though the game looks and sounds like a quality game design, the focus on graphics and sound just can't help along the fact that Pirates of the Caribbean on the Game Boy Advance just isn't that much fun to play."

The average review score for the game is 4.9 out of 10.

[edit] Mobile phone version

The mobile phone version was developed by Flying Tiger Development and published through Walt Disney Internet Group on July 25, 2003, in the United States.

[edit] External links

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