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Democracy

Balance Real Needs, or Cynically Work to Reelection?
Game Tunnel's 2005 Sim Game of the Year

Books can be important; movies can be important. Games, however, are the degraded purview of violent male adolescents. Democracy cannot exist.

Except that it does, of course. It is not without flaw; but it's a game that every citizen of a democracy should play, to get a better gut understanding of the pressures faced by they leaders--and every citizen of a tyranny should play, to get a better gut understanding of why democracy, whatever its flaws, is better than the alternatives.

Disney's Aladdin Chess Adventures

In this game, the player--we won't say "you", because "the player" in this instance is ideally your 9-13 year-old child or nephew (probably not niece--after all, Chess is a boy's game)--visits various sites portrayed in the Disney flick, and at these sites meets a variety of NPCs who engage him in conversation, pose puzzles and challenges for him, and teaches him the rules to Chess.

When you leave the "Chess Adventures" bit and start to just play "a quick game against the AI", the AI doesn't totally suck.