Trade with your neighbors for the goods or raw materials that your population owns is lacking however. As their economy improves pioneers become settlers, then citizens, then merchants and aristocrats. Your population starts out as pioneers, then as more uplifting commodities become available, as well as access to faith and culture, they'll pull themselves up by their own bootstraps and upgrade. In the beautiful 3D environment you establish settlements and then work the land for the crops that grow best. Set-up options give you control over many aspects of the campaign, from the size of the islands to whether the map is revealed, to choosing the very victory conditions themselves. This one allows concentration on a building and trading approach over the rushing and the fighting, although the aggressive means of expansion is certainly available. Two main modes for the single player include ten story driven scenarios, rated for difficulty, and a correctly labeled "continuous play" mode which amounts to what other publishers call Real Time Strategy. Historically it may gloss over all the controversy inherent in colony building and plantation operating in that earlier unenlightened era, but the result is strategy game that may intrigue many, while offending nobody. Graphically gorgeous, the game is an oddly addictive trading and economy building game where nearly every ethnic group is represented as a fairly equal trading partner. There are no mainlands and no Old World to travel to or from. Geographically the maps simulate chains of islands in the Caribbean. This one is set roughly in the time of high New World colonization and exploration, the early 18th century. Despite that, it ranks as one of the most challenging and addictive city-builders we've played this year.ġ701 AD is the follow-on to two predecessor empire-building titles, 1503 AD and 1602 AD. Granted, Anno 1701's not a renaissance in anything but graphics you have to question how much replay value there is once you've built everything, while irritating design decisions such as only letting you build or demolish one thing at a time will grate. The cannons and infantry war stuff is mostly voluntary, but even then it's better-organised than the piss-poor efforts of Civilization: City Rome or Caesar 4. Yes, you have to defend your ships against pirates but that's as far as it goes you're more threatened by the wonderful-looking tornadoes and earthquakes. The naval combat's relatively simplistic, especially compared to Pirates!, but the same can be said of Medieval II: Total War.
Thankfully, there's less emphasis on war than in the previous two games. Then you work out the problem and learn from your mistake, without having to restart. Here, thankfully, the game gradually stabilises back at a lower settler level. Too often in these city games, that's the point at which you lose, as everything collapses around you. If any of the resources, anywhere down the chain, start to fail or don't match the demands of your growing population, then revolution fills the air, houses start getting burnt and your income plummets. Each island only has a limited selection of resources, so you find yourself establishing smaller vassal colonies to support your central town and enable it to expand, and setting your ships complex trade routes as they attempt to get resources to the right locations at the right times. However, to advance they'll need more resources, so step forward the usual Venn diagram of overlapping spheres of influence from churches, doctors, theatres and so on. It all seems easy at first, when you just need to keep your pioneers fed and housed. Off you sail into a non-specific Caribbean clime to establish settlements. You start with a ship and some cash from good Queen Mary. However, the continuous play mode with its mass of alterable start-up conditions is where you'll spend your time. There are ten scenarios to try out and a heavily-simplified sandbox, as well as the four mostly excellent tutorials. Like its predecessors, the surprisingly-named Anno 1602 and Anno 1503, this is a city-building game with an economy spread over several islands.
They are: "Wasn't itĭaytime a second ago?" "Why do my legs hurt?" and "Where did all my friends go?" But none of these questions are really important when the fate of There are three questions you'll ask yourself when playing Anno 1701.