Heart of Africa

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Heart of Africa
Title image from the game
Game No. 178
Voting 7.86 points, 29 votes
Developer Dan Bunten
Company Ozark Softscape
Publisher Electronic Arts
Musician Dave Warhol
HVSC-File MUSICIANS/W/Warhol_Dave/Heart_of_Africa.sid
Release 1985
Platform C64
Genre Strategy, Trading, Adventure
Gamemode Single player
Operation Icon Port2.pngJoystick Keyboard
Media Diskette Datassette
Language Language:english Language German
Information from the same team as the similar game Seven Cities of Gold


Description[edit | edit source]

From the inlay[edit | edit source]

"The Heart of Africa" marks Dan and Bill Bunten's fourth computer collaboration. Their first, Cartels and Cutthroats, set the standard for Business Simulation games way back in Apple II plus days. Their second, M.U.L.E., is the first computer game that's a true rival to classic multi-player board games like Monopoly and Risk, their third, The Seven Cities of Gold, invented a whole new category: games played on a geographically and historically accurate dynamic map. Their work has already won them a wall full of "Best Game of the Year" awards. We think they're going to need a bigger wall."


The game[edit | edit source]

In 1890, the explorer Mr. Primm disappears in Africa and leaves his whole riches to the one who finds the legendary "Heart of Africa" until 1985.

To reach this aim, the player has to gain the sympathies of the tribes of the five regions, on the one hand to get the descriptions to smaller treasures and on the other to get new hints to the location of the tomb of the pharao. In every region the most valuable items are different and so the player has to cross the continent several times to get enough treasures and hints.


Design[edit | edit source]


... the first diary entry - the adventure begins ...
... some images from the game ...



Free-scrolling charset graphics windows and texts put over the whole world of the game. Also the sound is limited to a few noises except for the start and end tunes ...

There are no more loading times after the start of the game, however, the game permanently accesses the floppy and an extra disk is needed for saving the up to 10 game scores.

Hints[edit | edit source]

Controls[edit | edit source]

Use the joystick to move on the map. When you stop, you can change the joystick controls by pressing the fire button. Now you have four icons available next to the action window: use the joystick to move the frame around the icons, the corresponding function is then shown below the icon. By pressing the fire button you can choose the framed icon. If there are further options to choose from after that, you can use the joystick again to move the coloured mark. To choose a marked option press the fire button.

The diary icon can be used to flip through the entries: The information from the tribal chiefs contain important hints.

The direction icon gives you a quick overview about how much of the region you have already explored. In the towns and villages you reach the sketches that the natives have drawn you by using the direction icon (natives swap goods against gifts. To purchase just stand next to a native in his hut; then you will know what goods he trades. You place yourself on the items: confirm the ones you want to buy by pressing the fire button. Note the price information on the screen. In each town there is a tradesman, who buys and sells items. If you fulfill a tribal chief's desire, he tells you where valuable items are buried).

The options icon offers three possibilities. Two of them serve to find out the location and health (if you have problems to find your way, use the location query often). The third gives you the possibility to create hideouts, these are then marked with an X on the map. Most of the time you will still find everything that you have hidden at your return.

The object icon (hand) is there to take out items from your luggage, view the map or take medicine. The behaviour of natives towards you, your movability in different surroundings or whether you find buried treasures or not depends on what you carry in your hand.

Two important experiences: First: If you get crazy, the joystick input gets unreliable. It requires patience to choose the option that reorganizes your senses. Second: If you lose your eyesight while searching for healing and therefore cannot differ between wrong and right, you should be prepared to bear the consequences.

To save your game status and continue playing later, go into the pubs of the harbour towns. If you have no data disk prepared you can also choose the format option. To save follow the instructions on the screen. You are asked to enter a number, so that you can ban 10 different savegames on the data disk.

To continue a saved game, just enter the corresponding number, when you are asked to do so.

Building types and their meaning[edit | edit source]

HvA-Laden.png HvA-Laden-icon.png Shop: medicine, gifts, map
HvA-Reise.png HvA-Reise-icon.png Travel agency: sale of tickets to travel to another harbour town
HvA-Basar.png HvA-Basar-icon.png Basar: sale and purchase of treasure troves
Weapons Weapons Weapon hut: gun, cutlass, whip
HvA-Pub.png HvA-Pub-icon.png Pub: save game
HvA-Tools.png HvA-Tools-icon.png Tool hut: shovel, rope, water bottle
Market Market Market hut: canoes, food
HvA-Chef.png HvA-Chef-icon.png Chief hut: only in the village

Solution[edit | edit source]

The first five months[edit | edit source]

AHeartOfAfrica-mapFX.png

My journey began in Cairo, where I first looked for a shop, to buy gifts, which I kept in my hand and stopped a native on the street. In exchange for a gift, he drew me a sketch of the place, with which I could find the other shops more easily and I avoided looking into each and every house.

Then I went to the tool hut and bought me a shovel and in the weapon hut a gun and a machete. Now I only needed a canoe and supplies, which I bought in the market hut. When I left Cairo to the north, I suddenly found a hideout, where I found a map and a rope.

Now I went to the Nile to finally try out my canoe. It was well steerable upstream and soon I was at the village of the Nubian, my first discovery for which I would later get money.

Further up the Nile and behind the water mouth of the "Blue Nile" started the White Nile; at its edge lay already Khartoum. There I bought new supplies and, as I had some money left, I bought expensive ivory at the bazaar. With this, the further direction was given, as I had heard that the chiefs in the west are especially happy about these.

I paddled further on the White Nile to Lake Albert, and laboriously dragged the canoe to Lake Edward in the southwest. In March I crossed it and a bit further to the southwest there was already the Congo, which I then navigated downstream.

This was a mostly convenient and easy way to travel, only for the Stanley and the Livingstone Waterfall I had to go to the waters edge.

In May 1890 I already reached Boma - not bad, I had crossed half the continent in 5 months time, that gave me hope to reach my aim within the five-day period.

From the money for my previous expeditions I bought supplies and gifts, as I wanted to concentrate fully on the new expedition and in the villages you can only swap supplies with gifts. I left my canoe and the rope at the northern edge of the Congo and headed forward to explorer the first village in the west.

The treasure in the west[edit | edit source]

The moment had already arrived in June, I reached the village of the Fang and the chief was so happy about my ivory, that he told me that smaragds can be found "where I can watch the sunrise from the great, childless waters." That sounded like the western side of a lake without a river... I left the village into the direction of south and looked at the map in my luggage. Northwest of the Congo I could not find a lake, but I was sure, that the chief was talking about a lake, that lay inside the western region. So I proceeded further to the north with my machete in the hand and fought my way through the jungle. That way I did not only proceed rather fast, I could also fight a python without getting hurt. At the mountain Cameroon I took another look at the map and now there was finally a lake to be seen in the direction of north. In July I reached the Lake Chad and at the western edge there was indeed the smaragd dump. These were very sought-after in the east and so I marched back to the Nile again through the far plain at the rim of the central region. As I had my gun in my hand during this trip, I could also dispel the wild rhino without getting stamped down.

The eastern region[edit | edit source]

In August I reached the Nile again and in the village Uganda the chief told me about an ivory hideout, which lies where the Ukambi-waters Uba, 'Ka-Uba, Relolo and Dethame are. So a place which is surrounded by lakes from the east, weast, north and south...

I left the village into the southern direction and discovered the Lake Victoria. Lake Albert and Lake Edward were also close to there, now there was one lake in the south missing ... At the eastern edge I found the village of the Masai, but the chief there only new old lores from Ankh Ankh ... As I still had smaragds, I decided to search for other villages and, in case I would not receive more information, to sell the rest of the smaragds in Sansibar.

In Somali I could only hear from the chief, that I was further away from my target than ever. I then turned towards the south to Zanzibar, where I only purchased supplies.

On the way along the east coast I got hurt by a fire and reached with my last strength the village of the Suaheli, the chief also knew nothing new but named me an honorable friend and had me treated by the medicine man and I could also take with me some supplies and a canoe as a present ...

So I navigated on the Ruvuma to the west again and discovered the Lake Nassa and at its northwestern end also the Lake Tanganyika. Now I knew where the four lakes in sight lay and I discovered also the elephant cemetery when the turn of the year came. I took the tusks and made my way to the east.

The jungle in Central Africa[edit | edit source]

In March 1891 I was in Boma again and received new money for discoveries and could swap the ivory against silver at the bazaar, which was great luck, as this was very popular with the tribes in the central region. Furthermore, I did not reckon with finding another treasure in the western region at that point of time...

Paddling upstream on the Kasai, I passed the village of the pygmies and heard of the next treasure: "I would find gold in the middle of Thkgrunda, exactly two weeks to the right of Utomba, where Mongdamara bends back." south of a bend of the Congo...

This did not tell me much - so I navigated up the Sunkuru and in the village of the Bambudu I heard from the chief that I am nearer to the grave than in the previous village. So the tomb of Ankh Ankh must lie in the southern region, I had already explored the east. Furthermore I remembered that the Congo bends to the north after leaving its well and then flows south after the Stanley falls ... I instantly went there and first found the village of the Mongos in July and another days march south west, I only could guess where the village had been, there was also the gold dump...

The waste north[edit | edit source]

I went back to the Nile, to either make a discovery of copper in the north or swap the gold against copper in Khartoum... When I arrived in Khartoum in October, there was only gold to be bought on the bazaar, so I navigated the Nile downstream to revisit my "first discovered" village. In Nubia I heard that copper can be found "where Tamanrasset is as far away as Emi Kousi " - these were clearly mountains in the northeast ...

As the second year was not over yet, I decided to make a small side trip to Cairo, maybe I could spare myself the hike through the desert, if not I needed a water bottle.

Also in Cairo I did not get any copper offered, so i just bought a water bottle and supplies and I was already at the Berber in December. It was no surprise that the chief had never heard anything of Ankh Ankh, I already assumed the tomb to be in the south anyway... At least I became honorable friend and didn't have to pay my supplies.

In January 1892 I discovered the Emi Kousi, owing to the water bottle I didn't mind the desert hike. In March I visited the Tuaregs and discovered the Tamanrasset.

The treasure search was more difficult than I had thought: in the desert everything looks the same and distances are hard to estimate. Therefore I left a lump of gold where I assumed the middle between the mountains and searched the area around that going in growing spirals - I succeeded! The hideout lay a bit south of the unnamed mountains, which you could only assume to be there from the place where I found the treasure. Without the gold as a reference point, I probably would have missed that place or would have got lost...

The friendly south[edit | edit source]

Back to the Nile I navigated directly to the south where I heard in the village of the Bantu, that the silver is "one week away from 'Krashuntu's smoke to spring". Krashuntu is the river Oranje, "wet smoke" is often the name for a waterfall and to spring means into the east...

But first I wanted to know where the tomb is, so I went to the next village. The Bemba assured me, that I am on the right way and so I navigated further into the west on the Zambeezi. The Batwa said, I was further away than the last time, so the tomb had to be further in the south. At the Victoria waterfall I abandoned my canoe and marched further to the south.

Unfortunately, the bushmen did not know the exact place, but they assured me that I was closer again. The chief of the Zulus could give me the following description of the location of the tomb as a Christmas present: "Between the mountains of the winter" So this meant in the southern mountains... As I did not find anything at once, I wanted to get a rope in Kapstadt, so I would not fall in the mountains. Fortunately, I passed a small ridge and kind of stumbled upon the tomb of the Pharaoah Ankh Ankh - I had found it, the Heart of Africa! I will go down in history!

so long FighterXXS, the discovering pirate (;

Cheats[edit | edit source]

  • As the hideouts are placed at the start of the game, it is enough to save the game right at the beginning in Cairo to avoid the 5-year limit.
  • It is easier with the VICE monitor. For this you enter the following line: > 8e21 62
    The 62 stands for 90 (out of 1890). So after 4 years just turn down the year.

Voting[edit | edit source]

Voting of the C64-Wiki users (10=the best vote):
7.86 points at 29 votes (rank 139).
You need to be logged in to cast a vote.
C64Games 8 3rd June 2010 - "super" - 5900 downs
Lemon64 8,6 04th January 2011 - 49 votes (EN)
Happy Computer 81% Games Special 2/86
Kultboy.com 8,63 15th October 2010 - 8 votes



Reviews[edit | edit source]

FXXS: "Despite the (too) small game area and the minimal sound, does the game entertain rather well, by the new allocation of the hideouts and the random events it is still fun if ypu had already found the pharao once. Unfortunately, you cannot buy any camels at the nomads in the desert, canoes are very illogical if you are a hundred miles away from the next water... 8 points."

Miscellaneous[edit | edit source]

  • Text error
    A hideout is faultily described by the natives: The hint
    ... at the midpoint of a journey from Emi Koussi to the Death of Nivera, seeking waters.
    actually refers to Mount Djebel Mara.

Cover[edit | edit source]


... Front cover (German version) ...
... Back cover (German version) ...



[edit | edit source]


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Highscore[edit | edit source]

  • As far as it is known there is no highscore possible in this game.


Links[edit | edit source]

WP-W11.png Wikipedia: Heart_of_Africa