Tropico
Description official descriptions
Tropico is a real-time strategy game that mixes elements of Sim City, the various Tycoon games, and even a little of the Sims into a city-building, managerial type game in a unique location.
You are the recently elected/installed/victorious (depending on how you achieved office) president of a small Caribbean island named Tropico. Before you lies a small community of people and a lush, rich island to improve or exploit at your will. You can become a benevolent ruler who brings this third world country into the realm of economic superpowers or you can be a ruthless dictator whose sole goal is to leech as much personal wealth as he can from the populace before they get the courage to rebel.
Using a modified engine from their previous game, Railroad Tycoon II, PopTop Software utilizes isometric graphics on a 3-D terrain to represent the island. Clouds float overhead, sometimes throwing lightning down, people walk from their homes to their chores, and hills and forests get leveled in the name of progress. All this happens at the user-specified speed and its the main user interface as players specify new construction, lay down edicts, and keep tabs on their citizens.
Each citizen is his or her own entity, with their own names, relationships to other citizens, wants and desires. Some feel the need to excel in studies, others seek religious enlightenment, some just want a good time. They even take political affiliations and work towards those ends. The citizens of Tropico do not blindly follow orders, they must be persuaded through meeting their desires, or just pure greed or terror. If you wished, you could follow the life of a citizen from childhood through his/her teenage years, through the course of several jobs, all the way to retirement and death.
A single-player only game, there are both set scenarios and random islands to play through, with various difficulty levels including a sandbox mode that allows you to play around without worrying about money or political ramifications.
Spellings
- Тропико - Russian spelling
- 热带岛国 - Simplified Chinese spelling
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Credits (Windows version)
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[ full credits ] |
Reviews
Critics
Average score: 82% (based on 38 ratings)
Players
Average score: 3.9 out of 5 (based on 68 ratings with 4 reviews)
It would have been better if there had been more scenarios to play on
The Good
The music was certainly good and the graphics were excellent.
There was also a lot of information about the people on your island. Each person had their own name, country of birth, house and family. When I first saw this amount of detail, I thought that this game could be worth the £30 I paid for it. However, I was wrong.
The Bad
The limited number of maps available. You can either create your own island are play one of the ingame scenarios. I played a couple of the scenarios (there are only six in total) and created a couple of my own islands and after this I got a bit tired.
The Bottom Line
Overall, the idea for the game was good: run a small Carribean island for anything up to 70 years. The information available for each person was also outstanding.
However, the limited number of game worlds meant that the replayability of the game was relativley low. Perhaps I should have payed £20 instead of £30 or perhaps I shouldn't have bought it at all.
Windows · by James Walter (271) · 2001
The Good
This game is rich in environment. The music is sublime and sets the mood. The graphics are a treat to watch, and match form and function. There is a tremendous amount of personality and charm imbued in gameplay.
The challenges of laying out a city will draw you in and force you to really think about how to accomplish what you need to do. The game is engineered to make you observe and think about how to lay things out.
The Bad
Its fairly easy in the beginning, but it starts to get really difficult as you approach the the 30 year mark. You can only stay in power as long as you are elected or maintain a force to stave off an attack. Even if you're doing a great job, the people will start looking at the things you may have failed and still vote you out of office.
There are a handful of missions, but hardly more than the ones that came as the demo.
The Bottom Line
Super tough, but addictive.
Windows · by Scott Monster (986) · 2006
The Good
I loved the setting for the game. Your a Latin American dictator and its all up to you. Music was outstanding and really boosted the score that I gave it.
I really wanted to like tropico, the Latin music, a refreshing concept, great graphics, and generally lots of potential. However.......
The Bad
....Well if the music had been cheesy then this would have to be rated at about 52%. Tropico just gets old very fast. Once I played a couple of the scenerios, and tried to design my own island I quickly ran out of challenges. Really there isnt much difference between the scenarios and the regular game. After a very short time Tropico just goes flat. There was so much potential to this game its a shame that did use its license better.
Another example of what I mean is that I downloaded the demo of this game from the net. After playing a few hours, I felt that if this was half the game, then tropico would be fantastic. The only problem was that there is almost no difference between the demo and the full game! Only a couple of options are excluded and frankly you can live with out them. So it was a surprise when I started playing the full version and found almost no difference at all! I hoped that in the full version that there would be more options and lots more fun. However much to my sadness there wasn't. <br><br>**The Bottom Line**<br>Save yourself 40 bucks download the demo. The demo is just as enjoyable as the full version. Plus you can save your money and buy something else.
Windows · by William Shawn McDonie (1131) · 2001
Trivia
Cover
The European version of the cover has a Castro-ish dictator standing on the island.
Designer diary
Tropico designer Phil Steinmeyer contributed a running series of articles to Computer Games magazine throughout the game's development. His topics ranged from play balance to determining and managing system requirements. He even mentioned designing the box and the reasons for the general/no general versions.
Dictators
The game comes with a collection of biographical sketches of (in)famous world leaders such as Fidel Castro and Eva Peron.
Lou Bega
Lou Bega, a German musician and songwriter, appears as playable dictator. He also contributed a song which is exclusive to the German version.
Title
The game was meant to be named Banana Republic (in reference to the real life Banana Republics), but it had to be changed to Tropico since there is a clothes brand named Banana Republic. Tropico means Tropic in Spanish (duh).
Awards
- Computer Gaming World
- April 2002 (Issue #213) – Best Music of the Year
Information also contributed by ClydeFrog, Jiguryo and Scott Monster.
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Related Sites +
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Official Webpage (Mac)
The official product page for the Mac version of Tropico on the publisher's website, which provides a profile of the game, as well as ordering information, among other such details. -
Tropico
Official game website
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Contributors to this Entry
Game added by Ray Soderlund.
Macintosh added by Jeanne.
Additional contributors: Kasey Chang, Kic'N, Unicorn Lynx, Sciere, Zeppin, Klaster_1, Patrick Bregger, daniel celtic.
Game added February 19, 2020. Last modified February 28, 2024.