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Tropico Mucho Macho Edition (Mac)
Platform: Macintosh
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List Price: $19.99
Availability: This product is not available from any Amazon merchant. Please check for New and Used availability below.
Edition: CD-ROM
Features: 
  • 80 different buildings including sports arenas, cathedrals, airports, and more
  • As the newly installed dictator of a Caribbean island, create a good life for your people
  • Various internal and external political facets and activities; follow a socialist or capitalist path
  • Build your population from a mere 35 to a bustling 500 unique individuals
  • More than 45 different characters with up to 50 separate attributes for each
Customers who bought this also bought:
1. Space Colony (Mac)
2. SimCity 4 (Mac)
3. Sim City 4: Rush Hour Expansion Pack (Mac)
4. Age Of Empires 2 Gold Edition (Mac)
5. The Sims Makin' Magic Expansion Pack (Mac)
Product Details
  • CD-ROM (May 12, 2023)
  • ASIN: B00008QWJO
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 Based on 6 reviews.
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: 5761

Customer Reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:

4Addictive SIMS-style game with a salsa flavor, Dec 13, 2022
I really don't recall my first week owning the game - except that my people seemed to always oust me after about 20 years. Unfortunately, I am just too nice a guy - and it is difficult to build an economy, ensure proper housing, keep job satisfaction high, etc. So I kept trying, honing my strategies, trying different scenarios, and then building my own islands. I've had the game for several months now and I'm still hooked. I often think about strategies in my off time. But why is the game so appealing?

There is the fantasy aspect. As compared to the SIMS (a game I find boring), where things occur in suburbia, or at least a place readily familiar, tropical islands hold appeal for the average poor soul trapped in (my case) the midwestern U.S. Tropical islands are sexy, otherwise we wouldn't spend so much effort and money vacationing on them. The game does a good job setting up a tropical feel (the music, the scenery, the accent of the narrator/assistant.

There is the lure of power. The association of your dictator with Castro is intentional. Here is you chance to either become the dictator that you know him to be, or to make up for his sins and shortcomings. Of course, many of the aspects of game-play are configurable, therefore, one can determine which of these shortcomings you wish your dictator to possess.

The level of involvement. Dictators, whether benevolent or not, are involved in the day-to-day lives of their people. Here you can monitor conversations, political beliefs, happiness, etc. There is a lot of information at your disposal, though you must discern the useful from the useless.

The historical edge. As mentioned previously, the association with Castro seems intentional - after all, he is the most familiar dictator to many Americans. However, the game includes histories of several other dictators in its instructional pamphlet. Thus, you feel that you are learning something as you while away the hours.

Overall, I found the game entertaining, at the top of its genre. If you like SIMS-style games, I recommend that you give this one a whirl.


4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:

5Addictive, inventive Sim, Jun 20, 2023
I prefer this type of game, as it's impossible to get stuck. I get frustrated with games where it becomes impossible to progress, either because of a glitch, or because some obstacle is basically impossible to pass, even with walkthroughs. This doesn't happen with Sims.

Tropico runs fine on my iBook G3 800 MHz with 640 MB, running Panther. I haven't had to adjust performance or anything.

The game sets you up as President of a small Carribean island, and you have to decide what to build, what to pay your workers, how much to embezzle, within a tight budget. There is a lot of complexity - more than in the Sims, for instance, and I am still exploring all the possible options, after a month of playing with the game. I haven't got into building TV stations, or imprisoning my enemies, for example, as I haven't had to fine tune to that extent.

Tropico is easy to learn, and there are three tutorial games included, which allow you to learn how some of the key parts of the game work. After that, you can either just run the sim as you want, or you can follow one of the 30 or so predefined challenges, where you have to build an airport, or embezzle a certain amount of money, or generate a particular level of tourist revenue, within a given time frame. These challenges are quite difficult, and require you to use all of the functions in the game.

I find it easy to get hooked on a game in the evening, and it's very hard to put the computer aside until I've run through a scenario. The good thing about Tropico is that there are varying levels, so relative novices can run through a game with no problems, but that doesn't mean you get bored, as there are plenty of features to explore at more challenging levels. Definitely a keeper!


0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:

5If you like the Sims ... you will like Tropico :), May 17, 2023
I was hesitant when buying this game because the graphics looked great, and I was not sure if my pc could handle them. Although my computer is pretty old, Tropico runs quickly and efficiently. I have never run out of new scenarios, and find something new every time I play this game. I would certainly reccomend this product, particularly at this low cost!


1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:

2Fun game, horrible port, Apr 18, 2023
This game is fun and addictive. However its performance leaves much to be desired. I have a PowerBook G4 667MHz, 768MB of RAM, with a Radeon 7500 32MB VRAM video card, and this game slows to a crawl when the population of the islands goes above 150 individuals.

Its performance is just ridiculous. My computer's specs are way above the system requirements listed on the game's box, yet I can barely play the game most of the time! I have tried everything to boost the software's performance. I've turned off all of the fancy graphics features (I've even turned off display of trees and vegetation, ground textures, etc.). Just to see if the game would run any faster, I've even reinstalled OS 9 (I am running Panther right now) to run the it. Under OS 9, it does perform a little better, but not much. The game would run well for a bit, then it would freeze for a couple of minutes to do calculations before I can get on with the game again.

This is unfortunate, because I really like the game play, but its performance is just not acceptable.


5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:

5With Tropico, You Rule!, Oct 21, 2023
Macsoft's port of PopTop's fabulous "Tropico: Mucho Macho Edition" is more game than you could imagine for such a low price. At under twenty dollars you get the original Tropico, plus the expansion pack Paradise Island.

Tropico puts you in charge of a Caribbean island circa 1950. Your job is to run your fledgling island nation - how you choose to do so is up to. Will you rule with an authoritative hand and build a strong army and policy force to squelch those Tropicans you dare speak against you? Will you fulfill the every need of your people or leave them wishing (or raging) for churches, schools, jobs, homes and entertainment?

The game is abundant with details, from the buildings to the people. In one easy click you can find out individual statistics on any Tropican, including age, family, job, home, likes, dislikes, education, and whether they will be voting for you in the next election.

You can play a free form game or choose one of the many scenarios included with the game. The scenarios, ranging from easy to ridiculously hard (and they mean it), will help to expand your horizons and push your limits, which will in turn enrich your free form game experience as your explore new goals.

My main gripe with this game is that it just plain won't run well enough to be worth the bother if you aren't running a system well past the requirements. It can run under both classic mode and OS X though I would advise booting into classic to run the game unless you have a top of the line machine.


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