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Model: Hegemony: Lead Your Class to Victory - Unique Asymmetric Card Driven Game, Political Economic Board Game, Ages 14+, 2-4 Players
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I really enjoyed this game. But it is extreme in terms of learning to how to play. The most asymmetric game I've ever played with a very high level of player interaction.
Each person is essentially playing their own game. The working class wants high corporate taxes and high wages with free health care and education. They are the weakest until they are upset. If too many are unemployed they can strike.
The middle class needs the workers from the working class but not so many that they force the middle class out of jobs. Keeping immigration down is important. Education needs to be expensive to keep the working class from taking their jobs.
Corporate wants money and lots of it. They love the working class as it provides them workers for their jobs. They dislike the middle class and government. If possible they want free education and healthcare up until they bankrupt the middle class and government and then lower the wages and jack up prices. Welcome to corporate America.
Government wants to be friends with everyone and their victory points is tied to that. But every choice is going to make one or more classes angry. It's a very delicate balance to play. In short, you want to keep everyone in the game and balanced so nobody gets to far ahead.
I really enjoyed it and highly recommend it if you have a group willing to learn it.
I really enjoyed this game. But it is extreme in terms of learning to how to play. The most asymmetric game I've ever played with a very high level of player interaction.
Each person is essentially playing their own game. The working class wants high corporate taxes and high wages with free health care and education. They are the weakest until they are upset. If too many are unemployed they can strike.
The middle class needs the workers from the working class but not so many that they force the middle class out of jobs. Keeping immigration down is important. Education needs to be expensive to keep the working class from taking their jobs.
Corporate wants money and lots of it. They love the working class as it provides them workers for their jobs. They dislike the middle class and government. If possible they want free education and healthcare up until they bankrupt the middle class and government and then lower the wages and jack up prices. Welcome to corporate America.
Government wants to be friends with everyone and their victory points is tied to that. But every choice is going to make one or more classes angry. It's a very delicate balance to play. In short, you want to keep everyone in the game and balanced so nobody gets to far ahead.
I really enjoyed it and highly recommend it if you have a group willing to learn it.
Damn. Nice depiction. Feels too real to be honest.
I played it with 3 others. After 4 hours of play, i still can't tell you how to play this game.
I was about to comment this game is fun, but it's extremely "heavy" in terms of rules and overall level of complexity. Be aware that if youre going to need a group of 3 or ideally 4 dedicated players who are willing to commit probably 4-5 hours minimum for a rules teach and first play through (and that's assuming you have someone who already knows the rules and teach them at least decently well). If you have a game where everyone is playing for the first time, expect it to take even more time with a lot of starting and stopping to double check the rulebook.
For me personally, I have one friend that owns this and I'm perfectly fine not owning my own copy because I know chances of me getting it played in a different group outside that one friend are basically zero.
Last edited by wildpygmy July 15, 2024 at 09:11 AM.
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Each person is essentially playing their own game. The working class wants high corporate taxes and high wages with free health care and education. They are the weakest until they are upset. If too many are unemployed they can strike.
The middle class needs the workers from the working class but not so many that they force the middle class out of jobs. Keeping immigration down is important. Education needs to be expensive to keep the working class from taking their jobs.
Corporate wants money and lots of it. They love the working class as it provides them workers for their jobs. They dislike the middle class and government. If possible they want free education and healthcare up until they bankrupt the middle class and government and then lower the wages and jack up prices. Welcome to corporate America.
Government wants to be friends with everyone and their victory points is tied to that. But every choice is going to make one or more classes angry. It's a very delicate balance to play. In short, you want to keep everyone in the game and balanced so nobody gets to far ahead.
I really enjoyed it and highly recommend it if you have a group willing to learn it.
Each person is essentially playing their own game. The working class wants high corporate taxes and high wages with free health care and education. They are the weakest until they are upset. If too many are unemployed they can strike.
The middle class needs the workers from the working class but not so many that they force the middle class out of jobs. Keeping immigration down is important. Education needs to be expensive to keep the working class from taking their jobs.
Corporate wants money and lots of it. They love the working class as it provides them workers for their jobs. They dislike the middle class and government. If possible they want free education and healthcare up until they bankrupt the middle class and government and then lower the wages and jack up prices. Welcome to corporate America.
Government wants to be friends with everyone and their victory points is tied to that. But every choice is going to make one or more classes angry. It's a very delicate balance to play. In short, you want to keep everyone in the game and balanced so nobody gets to far ahead.
I really enjoyed it and highly recommend it if you have a group willing to learn it.
For me personally, I have one friend that owns this and I'm perfectly fine not owning my own copy because I know chances of me getting it played in a different group outside that one friend are basically zero.
Leave a Comment