Pirates: Of The North Sea

Today, the legacy lives on. Whether you are pushing wooden cubes on a board game table or watching a drakkar sail across a stormy fjord on a documentary, the allure remains. In the freezing spray of the North Sea, there is no romance—only the clang of steel and the promise of silver.

| Feature | Historical Vikings (Real) | Board Game Pirates | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Survival, land acquisition, wealth | Victory Points (Reputation) | | Weapons | Swords, axes, round shields | Dice, cards, wooden cubes | | Famous Figure | Erik the Red | The "Chieftain" cardboard token | | Risk | Death by drowning or arrow | Losing your turn or resources | | Legacy | Colonized Iceland & Greenland | Named "Best Strategy Game" 2015 | pirates of the north sea

When most people hear the word "pirate," their minds immediately drift to the tropical waters of the Caribbean—eye patches, parrots, and the Jolly Roger fluttering in a hot Gulf wind. However, long before the Golden Age of Piracy (1650–1730), a far more dangerous and successful breed of sea wolf terrorized the cold, choppy waters of Northern Europe. These were the Vikings , and their era represents the true story of the Pirates of the North Sea . Today, the legacy lives on