SHOUT OUT - Just when you think you’re done, Rare drops yet another Sea of Thieves update and hooks you back in

Well played, Mr. Rare.

By Jonathan Garrett
16/01/24

NOTE: thatHITBOX Shout Out’s are not sponsored content. They’re games, developers, individuals, or issues that we want to highlight and share purely out of interest.

There have been numerous revisits to the Sea of Thieves in our sessions ever since Rare first dropped their beautiful, at times clunky, but still charming pirate adventure. However, despite its tendency to encourage a “just one more try” approach, we very much believed that our time fighting skellies, bemoaning the terrible first person shooting, and marvelling at their selection of instruments was over.

Then, Season 11 gets unveiled, with a streamlined quest system, and get this: fast travel. Although there’s a penalty of losing any untraded loot if you dive underwater and head straight to the desired island, if your intention is to make meaningful progress in a session when time is at a premium then Rare now finally has your back.

It’s a testament to their ongoing commitment that they’ve ensured the game continues to evolve and fans are satiated. Now that there’s rumblings of a multi platform release (which for an online title multiple years deep makes much more sense to me than Starfield going to PS), it looks like the Sea of Thieves will be open for the foreseeable. Congratulations to Rare for listening to the community and making meaningful changes.


TARPS?

At the bottom of some of our articles, you’ll see a series of absurd looking images (with equally stupid, in joke laden names). These are the TARP badges, which represent our ‘Totally Accurate Rating Platform’. They allow us to identify specific things, recognise positive or negative aspects of a games design, and generally indulge our consistent silliness with some visual tomfoolery.

Previous
Previous

REACTION - The Last of Us: Part 2 is still attracting trolls, and that’s stupid

Next
Next

REACTION - Yet more Embracer layoffs point to an increasingly uncertain path forward