Democracy: 3
His final turn was a desperate gamble. He installed CCTV on every corner and armed the police with submachine guns to restore order. But it was too late. He had ignored the most critical rule: you can't please everyone, and those you "piss off" eventually come for you.
For a moment, it worked. The Treasury's coffers began to fill, and his cabinet of hand-picked loyalists nodded in approval. But on the Big Board, other icons began to flicker. High taxes triggered "Capital Flight," and the middle class grew restless. Democracy 3
As he clicked "Next Turn," a shadowy figure appeared on the screen. The secret spy network he’d funded so heavily had failed to stop a radical group of religious extremists. His final turn was a desperate gamble
Elias, the newly elected leader, stared at the red pulsing circle labeled To fix it, he did what any "logical" leader would: he slashed state pensions and raised the Capital Gains Tax to the moon. He had ignored the most critical rule: you
Seeking a quick popularity win, Elias legalized everything: cannabis for the tax revenue and even some questionable "freedom" laws to appease the liberals. The budget surplus was massive—he even started a Space Program—but the streets told a different story. Inner-city riots broke out, and a group of "Angry Facebook Commenters" began plotting his downfall in the shadows.
In the glass-walled office of the Chancellor, the "Big Board"—a glowing network of interconnected icons—hummed with the pulse of the nation. This was , where every policy was a thread in a massive, fragile web.

