For the people is genre casual, visual novel, strategy, point & click, management, simulation, adventure game where you act as mayor and make daily decisions towards policies, people grievances, plotting decisions on meetings with collagues and rivals. There are multiple endings based on your decision. You have to manage your budget too, there are high chaces of party overthrowing you if you go out of their hands. Game graphics and music is good. Game file size is 835mb after installation as it's visual novel, it's ok. I expected lower size. Overall, I will rate it 4/5 considering gameplay.
The people arguing about politics are missing the point, this game is not propaganda (and if you play it, you actually get to see that in game the party, the politicians, etc. mostly just get in your way and do not really help you without paying a price). It also not only makes it difficult to avoid shortages, but actually has you deal in barter with other cities in order to deal with them. The game is about playing a young character in an unusual environment (a fictional 1988s USSR-like country). There are references to leftist politicians and ideas, yes, but the game is about the decisions you make and the ideology portrayed is a fictionalized amalgam of many ideas, and you can play it without caring at all for the fictional ideology they created. You can be a good mayor and rid the city of corruption, or join one of the corrupt groups yourself. You can also of course fail or succeed at either of those things. It also has a strong visual novel element. Most of the action takes place in your office, but when your character actually goes out the scenes are decently hand-drawn, and there is even a romance component that does not get in the way. I had fun playing it. However the game is actually pretty short, about two in-game weeks which I finished pretty quickly. Oh, and this universe's Marx is called "Groot" like the Guardians of the Galaxy character.
You obviously have no concept of what communism is, it was an ideology before it was a system of government. And it doesn't matter what system of government a country has, if it's made by people, it will get torn apart by people. You're obviously, are one of those brainwashed fanatics who overstate the importance of government.
The government is very important. And it should be made far less so. Only governance over necessary to upholding the safety and potentially stability of a country type of stuff - let everything else be handled by private persons.
Only works if said persons does the jobs correctly...other wise we should live in a police state just like in china. Freedom came with responsibility after all...
Neither do 'capitalists' or whoever else. And if you actually somehow really are forced to do it in your good young'n 'Merica then all I have to say to this is:
Don't go to college, heard it's often fucking shit and can even be detrimental anyway.
Game graphics and music is good. Game file size is 835mb after installation as it's visual novel, it's ok. I expected lower size.
Overall, I will rate it 4/5 considering gameplay.
So simple.
The game is about playing a young character in an unusual environment (a fictional 1988s USSR-like country). There are references to leftist politicians and ideas, yes, but the game is about the decisions you make and the ideology portrayed is a fictionalized amalgam of many ideas, and you can play it without caring at all for the fictional ideology they created. You can be a good mayor and rid the city of corruption, or join one of the corrupt groups yourself. You can also of course fail or succeed at either of those things.
It also has a strong visual novel element. Most of the action takes place in your office, but when your character actually goes out the scenes are decently hand-drawn, and there is even a romance component that does not get in the way.
I had fun playing it. However the game is actually pretty short, about two in-game weeks which I finished pretty quickly.
Oh, and this universe's Marx is called "Groot" like the Guardians of the Galaxy character.
You're obviously, are one of those brainwashed fanatics who overstate the importance of government.
And it should be made far less so.
Only governance over necessary to upholding the safety and potentially stability of a country type of stuff - let everything else be handled by private persons.
And if you actually somehow really are forced to do it in your good young'n 'Merica then all I have to say to this is: