Compare Pirates of Black Cove: Gold prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Nitro Games. Published by Paradox Interactive. Released on 8/2/2011. Available on PC. Genres: Single Player, Strategy. Metacritic score: 56/100.

A light-hearted Caribbean RTS that splits its time between open-sea naval combat and small-scale land skirmishes, wrapped in Monkey Island-style humour. More accessible than deep, but the Gold edition bundles every DLC for the full package.

Pirates of Black Cove: Gold is a bird's-eye real-time strategy game published by Paradox Interactive and developed by Nitro Games, set during the golden age of Caribbean piracy. The core loop splits cleanly into two modes: sailing the open sea, trading broadsides with rival ships and looting wrecks for blueprints, then docking at ports to switch into a light ground-combat layer where your hero leads squads of hired pirates through land missions. The Gold edition bundles the base game with the Origins DLC plus several smaller content packs including Colonial Navy, Pirate Treasure Chest, and Privateer additions, making it the definitive version to own if you are buying in today. The strategic layer, such as it is, revolves around three factions: Pirates, Buccaneers, and Corsairs. Grinding reputation missions with each faction earns you champion status, which unlocks that faction leader as a hero unit and expands your available ground forces. Hero selection at the start matters more than the game admits. Walker De Planc is a raw melee bruiser, Jolie Roger is the speed-and-precision swordfighter, and Longshot Jack commits to ranged combat. Ship loadouts add a second layer of early decisions, with special weapon slots offering choices like explosive mines or a catapult that launches crew members as living cannonballs to capture enemy ships. That ship-boarding mechanic is genuinely clever and naval combat does pick up satisfying momentum once you have a full broadside going. The Alchemist quest lines, which send you hunting ingredients to craft items like Wind in a Bottle or health-restoring Grog, give the open-world sailing enough secondary objectives to break up the main story progression. But here is where I need to be straight with you about the depth ceiling. This is not a strategy game that respects your spreadsheet. The faction reputation system is linear rather than branching, unit variety across the three strongholds is limited, and the land-combat AI has a history of pathfinding failures. The ground missions amount to hero-unit babysitting with squads of three to five troops each, which is functional but rarely produces the kind of decision pressure that makes RTS land combat memorable. Reviewers at launch and the Steam community since have consistently called out slow sailing pacing, repetitive mission structures, and technical issues including save corruption and random crashes that were never fully resolved. The Steam user review pool sits at roughly 64 percent positive across 118 reviews, which is honest mixed territory. There is no mod ecosystem and no multiplayer, so what you see at hour one is essentially what you get at hour ten. Who should still consider it? Players who bounced off Sid Meier's Pirates for being too freeform will find Black Cove's structured mission flow easier to track. The cartoon art style, colourful Caribbean environments, and genuinely funny (if relentless) pirate-joke writing give it a charm that more technically competent budget RTS titles often lack. If you can accept shallow decision trees, tolerate some older-build jank, and want a weekend-length pirate adventure rather than a systems-heavy simulation, the Gold package delivers reasonable content breadth. Go in without expecting faction diplomacy, tech trees, or late-game strategic pivots, and you will extract value from it. Go in expecting those things and you will bounce hard by hour three. Diego, Scout Team

Pirates of Black Cove: Gold
Single PlayerStrategy

Pirates of Black Cove: Gold

Aug 2, 2011Nitro GamesParadox Interactive
GamerScout Says

A light-hearted Caribbean RTS that splits its time between open-sea naval combat and small-scale land skirmishes, wrapped in Monkey Island-style humour. More accessible than deep, but the Gold edition bundles every DLC for the full package.

PC
ProtonDB Platinum
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €0.64

GamerScout Verdict

Worth a look for fans of breezy pirate adventure who want structure over sandbox, but strategy veterans will hit the depth ceiling fast.

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About Pirates of Black Cove: Gold

Pirates of Black Cove: Gold is a bird's-eye real-time strategy game published by Paradox Interactive and developed by Nitro Games, set during the golden age of Caribbean piracy. The core loop splits cleanly into two modes: sailing the open sea, trading broadsides with rival ships and looting wrecks for blueprints, then docking at ports to switch into a light ground-combat layer where your hero leads squads of hired pirates through land missions. The Gold edition bundles the base game with the Origins DLC plus several smaller content packs including Colonial Navy, Pirate Treasure Chest, and Privateer additions, making it the definitive version to own if you are buying in today. The strategic layer, such as it is, revolves around three factions: Pirates, Buccaneers, and Corsairs. Grinding reputation missions with each faction earns you champion status, which unlocks that faction leader as a hero unit and expands your available ground forces. Hero selection at the start matters more than the game admits. Walker De Planc is a raw melee bruiser, Jolie Roger is the speed-and-precision swordfighter, and Longshot Jack commits to ranged combat. Ship loadouts add a second layer of early decisions, with special weapon slots offering choices like explosive mines or a catapult that launches crew members as living cannonballs to capture enemy ships. That ship-boarding mechanic is genuinely clever and naval combat does pick up satisfying momentum once you have a full broadside going. The Alchemist quest lines, which send you hunting ingredients to craft items like Wind in a Bottle or health-restoring Grog, give the open-world sailing enough secondary objectives to break up the main story progression. But here is where I need to be straight with you about the depth ceiling. This is not a strategy game that respects your spreadsheet. The faction reputation system is linear rather than branching, unit variety across the three strongholds is limited, and the land-combat AI has a history of pathfinding failures. The ground missions amount to hero-unit babysitting with squads of three to five troops each, which is functional but rarely produces the kind of decision pressure that makes RTS land combat memorable. Reviewers at launch and the Steam community since have consistently called out slow sailing pacing, repetitive mission structures, and technical issues including save corruption and random crashes that were never fully resolved. The Steam user review pool sits at roughly 64 percent positive across 118 reviews, which is honest mixed territory. There is no mod ecosystem and no multiplayer, so what you see at hour one is essentially what you get at hour ten. Who should still consider it? Players who bounced off Sid Meier's Pirates for being too freeform will find Black Cove's structured mission flow easier to track. The cartoon art style, colourful Caribbean environments, and genuinely funny (if relentless) pirate-joke writing give it a charm that more technically competent budget RTS titles often lack. If you can accept shallow decision trees, tolerate some older-build jank, and want a weekend-length pirate adventure rather than a systems-heavy simulation, the Gold package delivers reasonable content breadth. Go in without expecting faction diplomacy, tech trees, or late-game strategic pivots, and you will extract value from it. Go in expecting those things and you will bounce hard by hour three.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Tags

steamLight RTSNaval CombatHero UnitsFaction ReputationOpen-World ExplorationCartoon Art StyleGold EditionSingle-Session Length

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
4 GB
Graphics
GeForce 8600
Processor
2.0 GHz Core Duo
System requirements
Windows XP / Vista / 7

DLC & Add-ons for Pirates of Black Cove: Gold1

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
56

Game Info

Developer
Nitro Games
Publisher
Paradox Interactive
Release Date
Aug 2, 2011

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What platforms is Pirates of Black Cove: Gold available on?

Pirates of Black Cove: Gold is available on PC.

When was Pirates of Black Cove: Gold released?

Pirates of Black Cove: Gold was released on 2 August 2011.

Who developed Pirates of Black Cove: Gold?

Pirates of Black Cove: Gold was developed by Nitro Games and published by Paradox Interactive.

Is Pirates of Black Cove: Gold worth buying?

Pirates of Black Cove: Gold holds a Metacritic score of 56/100, making it one of the standout Single Player titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.