That large soldier ship is the only good thing lego produced for pirates since the mid ninetees though.
Lego pretty much ruled the pirate theme from 89-96 or such, but then it was gone again while Playmobil stayed quite steady through the years, not as innovative perhaps, but they did keep a pirate theme.
Downfalls being appearantly the ghost pirates, the ship with plastic rolled up sails, and the new upcomeing theme which has a ship thats a huge downgrade from anything before (no cabin!) and an island that has little to it, and overally basicly no accesoires other than weapons and treasure in the entire theme. No food, no compass, no shovels, nothing.
A shame since the previous pirate theme was so strong from playmobil, at least in my opinion. The treasure island is beautifull, the clickies are often inspired, and the pirateship was the most beautifull one they ever produced.
The only thing the upcomeing pirate batch has going for it is the clickies, and nothing else. Its one big disappointment to me. But I am sure they will learn from this and may just as well release a strong pirate theme again in the future.
As for what they could learn from lego:
-Have a trade post and traders. Lego actually had this, something for pirates to actually plunder.
-Larger soldier presence. Playmobil pretty much throws a few soldiers in as an afterthought whereas lego seemed to pretty much keep both sides equal in amount of sets. Sadly they also neglected giving the soldiers a bigger ship untill the earlier mentioned ship of the line. They also always gave the soldiers a smaller ship.
-Pirate hide outs. Lego had many, big and small. I wish to see more of that since PLaymobil could do this better. Little look outs, hiding spots, island camps with rope bridges.. please give us that.
-Islanders. Got to agree about this yes, would be a good addition and might add to the treasure hunting theme. Could have this instead of soldiers.
-Large soldier fort. Lego did it, Playmobil only gave us small forts. While some nice ones, I would like to see them make something as big as a small castle.