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PYRATES.TXT
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2006-10-19
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ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED IN LIMA NEWSLETTER JANUARY 1992
Review of "DISK O' PYRATES"
By: Andy Frueh, Lima UG
Ken Gilliland strikes again, or so it would seem, with Asgard's offering
"Disk O' Pyrates." For the sake of common interest, no, that is not actually a
mis-spelling. Nor is it meant to deter people from thinking it is a disk of
pirated software. The reason for the spelling "PYRATES" is that the author
chose to spell it as it would've been in old English times.
Some of you may remember "Disk of Dinosaurs" also by Gilliland. It is a
two disk set full of dinosaur pictures and great animation sequences. There
was also a "hunting licence", prehistoric backdrops and a dinosaur font. All
in all, it was definately worth the $9.95 price and was well advertised.
Not to say that "Pyrates" is no good. Far from it. You get four disks
for $9.95 as well. However, I feel that the advertising may be a tad
misleading. Definately if all you want is pictures, this is THE package for
you, otherwise, I suggest actually looking at a copy before you buy it.
"OK Frueh, what's the problem THIS time?" Well, before I turn this into a
negative review, let me state what I love about this package. First of all,
the artwork is superb. All of it is claimed to be hand drawn. That surprised
me. It's so good it LOOKS like it was digitized. Some of it may be too dark
or contain too much black to print into a small sized picture, so you may want
to balloon the pictures up a tad. Included are several "Pyrates in action"
type scenes, different flags of different captains, a neat diagram of a Twenty
gun ship (I assume that it was the standard pirate vessal), and also includes
some neat borders and an old English font. There are also several smaller
instances, and a converter program that takes the instances and turns them into
a runable Extended BASIC program.
How about the animation? Well there are two of them. One features a
crewmen who is left to die on an island, the other is just a typical wild rum
drinking, gun shooting pirate. I think the man on the island is done up a
little better, but both are incredible. There are more realistic than the
cartoon style of "Dinosaurs", but again are very well done. The fact that
these can be done on a machine first thought of in around 1978 and with 32K of
memory is incredible!
Sore points? One of my biggest beefs is with the manual. Frankly, it was
a little thin, but then again, extensive documentation isn't necessary.
However, there is on page where the Zerox machine didn't reproduce the first
column of letters. It is hard to follow a manual when you can't see the first
character of every line.
Also, the advertising suggests I will be getting a "veritable cornucopia
of...Pyrate games, Pyrate music..." Wrong. You get one game and one song.
Hardly a cornucopia. The music is "Yo Ho (A Pirate's Life for Me)" by Xavier
Atencio and George Burns. Authentic pyrate music? But it IS GOOD music. I
would've liked another song. The only sore point with the music itself is that
I couldn't follow it very well to "sing along." Words are printed on the
screen, but often not in rythm to the music.
The game is a rehash of an old BASIC (I think) game, "Treasure Island."
The game as it was first released wasn't really great. Ken Gilliland did a
good job at improving it, but it's still the same game. Again, one game is not
a cornucopia. It's not even assembly.
So does this reviewer think that this is worth the price? How can any
four disk package of anything not be worth $9.95? The artwork is purely
wonderful. True, the other aspects of the package are a little skimpy, but
worth the price you pay. Of course, hardcore Pirate affecianados will eat this
up. From an entertainment standpoint, the value is shaky. I was disappointed
with the "game" and "music". From an education standpoint, it has got the be
the best (maybe the only) source of Pirate information I have ever seen on the
TI, or any other computer. The 100% accurate, factual information makes good
reading, and the inclusion of the "Pyrates Code" is neat. "Disk O' Pyrates" is
just one of those cases where the advertising isn't false, but a little
misleading. If you know in advance what you are getting, this package really
won't disappoint you.
////////////////////////////
A Second Opinion of DISK O' PYRATES
by Charles Good: Lima UG.
Andy Frueh's main complaints about DISK O' PYRATES relate to Asgard's
promotional advertising and the documentation that comes with the disks. Since
Andy wrote his review, Ken Gilliland has been selling his software under the
name NOTUNG SOFTWARE. Asgard is no longer in the picture, nor are Asgard's
past advertising claims. I showed the latest documentation to Andy in November
1991 and he was really impressed.
I think DISK O' PYRATES is one of the best bargains in the TI software
marketplace. Look what you get:
--4 disks, FULL of stuff!
--8 pyrate pictures in TI Artist format.
--A couple of TIA fonts.
--A reasonably entertaining game.
--A pyrate song.
--Some VERY imaginative animated graphic sequences containing additional TIA
pictures.
--A REALLY USEFUL software utility: an instance converter that transforms any
instance into a mergable XB subroutine that can display the instance on screen
from within an XB program. Our user group's software library has lots of disks
full of instances. However if you don't own TI ARTIST there is little you can
do with all this free artwork, UNLESS you have the DISK O' PYRATES instance
converter.
--A scholarly on screen textbook about pyrates. That's right, I said
"scholarly". The author has done a lot of searching in libraries to dig up the
history of pyrates in general and the specific pyrates that are described in
the text files that are part of DISK OF PYRATES. The extensive on screen text
segments are interesting, informative, and sometimes gruesome. All library
sources are cited in the documentation.
DISK OF PYRATES is a labor of love and a 100% TI99/4A product. It is a
labor of love in the sense that Ken did a supurb job researching his subject.
I am an academic myself, and I recognize good scholarship. It is a 100% 99/4A
product in the sense that there are no other computers involved anywhere in the
creation of or production of the DISK OF PYRATES disks and documentation
booklet. All the artwork is hand drawn by Ken, not digitized from other
sources. Converting Ken's art into TI disk formats and the composition and
printing of the documentation booklet (which is excellent) was all done with
the TI software listed at the end of the documentation booklet.
Where else can you get so much for just $10 + shipping?
Notung Software
7647 McGroarty St.
Tujunga, CA 91042
.PL 1