FreeCol [Freeplay]

25 octobre 2007 près Peter Berger

En 1998, directeur Gus Van Sant a refait Alfred Hitchcock Psychopathe d'une façon particulièrement peu commune : il a filmé tirer-pour-a tiré refont. L'opinion critique a été divisée dessus si le travail de Van Sant's était un hommage, une escroquerie, ou simplement un exercice dans l'inutilité.

Dans le monde des jeux vidéo, l'équivalent au travail de Van Sant's sont les versions libres des jeux classiques. FreeCiv est le plus bien connu, mais il y a des efforts aux versions libres de X-COM, Maître d'Orion, et le sujet de la colonne d'aujourd'hui, Colonisation.

Il est assez facile d'être snide à ce sujet. « Il ne serait pas grand d'avoir un jeu qui est juste comme ce autre jeu brillant, seulement I n'a pas dû payer lui? » Sincèrement, bien que, ces jeux n'existent pas juste hors d'un désir d'économiser l'argent. En grande partie, ils commencent parce que les réalisateurs ont voulu jouer les jeux sur une certaine plateforme de non-Windows.

Comme son cousin FreeCiv, FreeCol suffers from a user interface that is somewhat clunky, unattractive, and only minimally planned out. A slightly more central problem, however, is that the original Colonization wasn’t that great a game to begin with. Most of its charm was in its graphic design and implementation, very little of which makes it into FreeCol’s implementation. So in this case, it’s as if Gus Van Sant decided to remake Herbie The Love Bug.

The game is a faithful remake of Colonization, and so it clearly met its own objective. From my perspective, though, the tragedy is that they didn’t take the opportunity to move beyond a simple reimplementation, and actually improve on its inspiration.

If you’re one of the seven people who were addicted to Colonization in the mid-1990’s and want to play it on a modern system then FreeCol is the answer to your prayers. For the rest of us, however, it is more of a curiosity than a work of art. But then, I didn’t like Gus Van Sant’s Psycho very much either.

FreeCol, for Windows, MacOS X, Linux, and any platform that supports the full Java 1.5 VM. Free download from http://www.freecol.org.

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Comments

2 Responses to “FreeCol [Freeplay]”

  1. FreeCol Developer on October 27th, 2007 4:49 am

    First I would like to say the review was well written. The comparison with Gus Van Sant’s movie is quite appropriate for the current state of the game. I feel, however, compelled to comment some of the statements concerning the future development of the game. The article might seem to be based on information from the game’s authors or website, which is clearly not the case.

    > “Largely, they originate because the developers wanted
    > to play the games on some non-Windows platform.”

    Wow, I didn’t know that was the reason for my work on FreeCol. I always thought that hopeless outdated graphics and no plans for a sequel was the main reasons… Thanks for enlighting me!

    > “FreeCol suffers from a user interface that is somewhat clunky,
    > unattractive, and only minimally planned out.”

    Well, the interface will be improved. The game is not nearly ready, you know. Try reviewing an alpha-version of commercial software :-P
    http://www.freecol.org/roadmap.html

    > The game is a faithful remake of Colonization, and so it clearly
    > met its own objective.

    That’s not our objective at all. We will extend the game to contain new features and gameplay. This is clearly stated on:

    http://www.freecol.org/about.html

    And for any visitor - try comparing screenshots of FreeCol with Colonization:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sid_Meier’s_Colonization

  2. Juno on February 8th, 2008 10:18 am

    I would dare to say not just outdated graphics and no sequel but new features based on the community ideas!

    “If you?re one of the seven people who were addicted to Colonization in the mid-1990?s and want to play it on a modern system then FreeCol is the answer to your prayers”

    One of the seven? Just tell me where you get that?

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