Sea of Thieves Developers Organize Scavenger Hunt for Father-Son Duo

One of the joys of Sea of Thieves is how it replicates the childhood fantasy of being a pirate, being able to sail the seas while solving riddles to locate buried loot and treasure. It’s fair to say that developer Rare is quite skilled at crafting its in-game scavenger hunts, and now it turns out it’s just as good at making them in real-life too.

Back in November, a father by the name of Trent tweeted at the official accounts for Rare and Sea of Thieves, asking if they could help him make a similar treasure hunt for his six-year old son, who is a massive fan of the game, to the point where he apparently goes looking for treasure whenever they take a hike.

RELATED: Sea of Thieves Update Adds 120Hz Mode for Xbox Series X

Speaking with GamesRadar, due to the lockdown brought about by the coronavirus pandemic, Trent’s son was isolated from his friends and could only really spend time with other kids online via virtual schooling. Trent had already bought a treasure box to bury but wished for assistance with coming up with the riddles to lead to it, similar to Sea of Thieves.

More recently, it transpired that Rare did get back to him and the studio’s own Gregg Mayles and Mike Chapman came up with some riddles based on locations around Trent and his son’s home in Madison, Wisconsin. Trent sent information about the locations to them and they sent back not just a box of riddles to hide at each step of the hunt but also loot for Trent’s son.

Specifically, it was a goodies bag containing a special edition Xbox controller, a beanie, a pirate mug, the Sea of Thieves role-playing game (not to be confused with the Monopoly set Rare is selling on its website), and a signed letter from Mayles and Chapman. Judging by the video shared online, Trent’s son seems more than happy with how it turned out.

Recently, Rare has been making some major changes to the game itself. The main one being the new seasonal content structure, which works similarly to games like Fortnite and Apex Legends, where each season has 100 levels of progression to play through, which will unlock more content like cosmetics and such. The first season kicked off only last week.

Rare has also removed voice and text chat from the game’s multiplayer Arena mode due to a rise in toxic behavior. Rare hopes that its removal will help prevent such toxicity, though players that are part of the same crew can still communicate with each other.

Sea of Thieves is available on PC, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X/S.

MORE: The Best Pirate Games, and Why There Needs to Be More

Source: GamesRadar

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