Treasure

What valuable wins or discoveries did we find?

We finally cracked the deployment pipeline — releases now take minutes instead of hours.
The new onboarding doc was buried gold; two new crew members got up to speed in record time.
Our customer demo landed brilliantly and the client signed off without a single change request.
Storms

What rough weather or challenges did we battle?

Unclear requirements left us tacking back and forth before we found a heading.
A surprise production incident swallowed two days of planned work.
Too many context switches made it hard to keep the ship on course.
Islands of Opportunity

What promising new lands or ideas should we explore?

We could automate our regression tests and free the crew for higher-value work.
Worth exploring a lighter standup format to reclaim time each morning.
An island of opportunity: documenting our architecture decisions for newcomers.
Rocks & Reefs

What hidden dangers could sink us if ignored?

Only one person understands the billing service — that's a reef waiting to wreck us.
Mounting technical debt in the legacy module is scraping the hull.
We're relying on a manual deploy step that someone keeps forgetting.

What is the Pirates on the High Seas retrospective

Ahoy, crew! Set sail on a metaphor-rich retrospective that turns your sprint or project review into a high-seas adventure. The Pirates on the High Seas retrospective invites your team to imagine the journey so far through the lens of a pirate voyage — celebrating the treasure you've discovered, navigating the storms you've weathered, watching for the islands of opportunity ahead, and steering clear of the rocks that threaten to sink your ship. This playful framing lowers defenses, sparks creativity, and helps team members open up about wins and challenges in a way a standard agenda rarely achieves. This format works by guiding the crew through four nautical themes, each surfacing a different dimension of team performance. As participants share reflections about their treasure, storms, islands, and rocks, patterns emerge that reveal what's driving success and what's holding the ship back. In TeamRetro, ideas are grouped, voted on, and converted into clear action items so your crew leaves with a concrete heading rather than a vague feeling. The result is an engaging, inclusive session that keeps energy high while still delivering the honest insight a retrospective needs. The beauty of a themed retrospective like this is variety — running the same Start/Stop/Continue format every sprint leads to fatigue and shallow input. By reframing familiar reflection prompts as an imaginative pirate voyage, you re-engage seasoned teams, welcome newcomers with an approachable structure, and uncover insights that more clinical formats can miss. Hoist the sails and discover what your crew has really been navigating.

Pirates on the High Seas retrospective format

Treasure

What valuable wins or discoveries did we find?

Treasure represents the wins, achievements, and valuable discoveries the crew uncovered during this voyage. Encourage the team to celebrate both big victories and small gems of progress. Ask them to think about what went well, what they're proud of, and what hidden value they found along the way — this sets a positive tone before tackling the harder topics.

Storms

What rough weather or challenges did we battle?

Storms are the obstacles, setbacks, and turbulent moments the crew battled through. Frame this as a chance to surface what made the journey difficult without assigning blame. Encourage honesty about blockers, miscommunication, and pressure points so the team can learn how to weather them better next time.

Islands of Opportunity

What promising new lands or ideas should we explore?

Islands of Opportunity represent ideas, experiments, and improvements worth exploring on future voyages. Invite the crew to dream a little and point to uncharted territory that could make the team stronger. Capture these as candidate experiments the team might commit to in upcoming sprints.

Rocks & Reefs

What hidden dangers could sink us if ignored?

Rocks and Reefs are the hidden risks and recurring hazards that could sink the ship if left unaddressed. Push the crew to name the things lurking beneath the surface — technical debt, single points of failure, or fragile processes. Prioritise these so the most dangerous hazards get steered around with clear actions.

When to use this retrospective

  • Your team has been running the same Start/Stop/Continue format for a while and energy is flagging — a themed voyage re-engages the crew.
  • At the end of a sprint or project milestone when you want to balance celebrating wins with surfacing risks and opportunities.
  • With newer or distributed teams who benefit from a playful, approachable structure that lowers the barrier to honest sharing.
  • When you want to surface hidden risks and technical debt alongside the usual reflections in a non-threatening way.

Suggested icebreaker questions

  • If you were a pirate, what would your pirate name and signature catchphrase be?
  • What's the one item you'd absolutely want stashed in your treasure chest on a long voyage?

Ideas and tips for your retrospective meeting

  • Lean into the theme — use nautical language in your facilitation to keep the energy playful, but don't let the metaphor obscure the real issues you need to discuss.
  • Timebox each section so the crew doesn't spend all their time on Treasure and skip the harder Rocks & Reefs conversation.
  • Use anonymous brainstorming in TeamRetro for the Storms and Rocks topics so quieter crew members feel safe naming sensitive risks.
  • Group and vote on ideas before discussing, so the team focuses its limited time on the items that matter most.
  • Always convert the top Islands of Opportunity and Rocks into concrete, owned action items — a voyage with no new heading was wasted.
  • Rotate the facilitator each session to keep the perspective fresh and share the helm across the crew.

Frequently asked questions

How long does a Pirates on the High Seas retrospective take?
A typical session runs 45 to 60 minutes for a team of five to eight. Allow extra time if your crew is large or if discussion of Rocks & Reefs surfaces complex risks.
When should I use a pirate-themed retrospective?
Use it when your team needs a refresh from repetitive formats, after a sprint or project milestone, or when you want a playful structure that still surfaces honest wins, risks, and opportunities.
How is this different from a Start, Stop, Continue retrospective?
It covers similar ground — wins, challenges, and improvements — but adds a fourth lens for hidden risks (Rocks & Reefs) and uses an engaging nautical metaphor that re-energises teams tired of standard formats.
What are the four topics in this retrospective?
Treasure (wins and discoveries), Storms (challenges battled), Islands of Opportunity (ideas to explore), and Rocks & Reefs (hidden risks that could sink the ship).
Is this format suitable for remote and distributed teams?
Yes. In TeamRetro the whole crew can brainstorm in parallel, group and vote on ideas, and create action items together, making it ideal for remote, hybrid, or co-located teams.
How do I keep the session productive and not just silly?
Enjoy the theme but timebox each topic, use anonymous input for sensitive risks, vote to prioritise, and always finish by turning the top items into owned action items.

New to retrospectives? Read our guide on how to run a retrospective →