Commander in Chief (video game)

Commander in Chief, also known as Geo-Political-Simulator is a government simulation game that allows a player to simulate being a nation's head of government. Players have a large amount of control over their nation, although this varies based on the form of government the player's nation has. The English version was released on July 25, 2008, and has also been released in French, German, Spanish and Russian versions. The French version has been named Mission-Président.[1]

Commander in Chief
PAL boxart, featuring a stylized derivative of the Barack Obama "Hope" poster
Developer(s)Eversim
Publisher(s)Interactive Gaming Software (IGS)
Platform(s)PC
ReleaseJuly 25, 2008
Genre(s)Government simulation game
Real-time Strategy
Mode(s)Single-player, Multiplayer

Gameplay

When starting a new game, players may choose between various scenarios, some of which have set objectives while others are more akin to a "sandbox" mode.

Similarly to other government simulation games like Democracy, the player assumes the role of the chief executive of their chosen nation such as the President of the United States of America or the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. Unlike in the Democracy series the player may amend the constitution of their chosen state and run it as a dictatorship.

Inaccuracies

The game refers to the position of chief executive as "Head of State" which is not true for all states—for example, the President of the United States is the Head of State, but the British Prime Minister or German Chancellor are not—and in the game, the player plays as the chief executive. In many states there is a distinction between the Head of Government and the Head of State, with the Head of State often being a ceremonial president or monarch. There is also no distinction in the game between any upper and lower houses of the parliament.

There are also inaccuracies relating to nations in the game, as many nations are misrepresented. For example, the Finnish are inaccurately portrayed as being culturally Scandinavian, all Finnish have Swedish names when Swedish speakers only constitute 5.5% of the population. Other inaccuracies relate to the religion. Certain minority religions, such as the Baha'i faith in India, are not represented in the game, nor are pagans of any kind. There are also mistakes relating to ethnicity. For example, all the people of Kyrgyzstan, as opposed to a sizable minority, are represented as being Caucasian rather than east Asian and also all have Russian names. Similarly, most Filipinos have Indian names.

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
GameZone5.0/10[2]
IGN4.5/10[3]

The game received mixed to negative reviews.[4] Jason Ocampo of IGN remarked that the game was "difficult to take as a serious simulation of global politics."[3] A reviewer for GameZone stated that the game was "a pretty hollow attempt to cash in on the recent Presidential elections."[2]

Sequels

gollark: <:rip:325680259120758784> all dragons killed in a misguided attempt to make zombies.
gollark: EEEEEVIL DRAGON MURDERERS!
gollark: At 34 generations you need more dragons than the age of the universe in years.
gollark: Anything above 10 runs into impracticality central.
gollark: Well, if you don't go to 56 generations it should be fine.

References

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