Pirate Hunting
1 May 2021
This is one of the newer Fighting Fantasy gamebooks, and not surprisingly it is also limited edition (which I suspect a lot of the other books are as well). Anyway, in this book you are some guy (which is generally the case in pretty much all of the books, though there is nothing saying that you can’t be some gal either) whose parents were basically murdered by a bunch of bloodthirsty pirates, so you set out to hunt them down and kill them. Yeah, a tale of revenge, which is basically one of the many other games books that deal with revenge.
However, there is a catch, somebody has beaten you to it, though it does turn out that even though he has been killed, he isn’t necessarily dead (which is generally the case with fantasy settings – the undead and all that). It turns out that nobody quite believes you, but I suspect there is more than meets the eye to that one considering that the city that you start off in also happens to be a pirate haven, so I suspect that there is a bit of a protection racket going on here.
The adventure is split into four parts – scouring the city for clues as to where the pirate is located, travelling to the island that the pirate is going to, searching the island for the pirate, and of course the end game. The third part is probably the longest, and also the trickiest, especially since there is one puzzle that involves you deciphering a code, and it isn’t all that easy either.
It was somewhat easier than a lot of the other ones though, however it does require you to record notes, usually in the form of words that are actually spelt backwards. There are some trickier ones though, such as hidden references to the next paragraph you have to turn to (such as turning the letters of a word into numbers and then adding them all up), or making a note of a number when you collect an item (such as the number of sides a crystal has). Yeah, it’s one of those books where if you see a number, especially in relation to an object, then it no doubt will be used later on (which I must admit is much better than having a key with a number stamped on it).
All in all, it was an okay book, though nothing particularly outstanding. That has probably something to do with the countless numbers of books that have come before it, though I do note that every few years they release a selection of books, and include a couple of new ones in it as well. This was one of them.