
President for a Day - Corruption
Four scenarios, binary choices, and a Steam review split almost down the middle - this is a classroom discussion tool wearing a strategy game's jacket, not a night-in for genre fans.
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About President for a Day - Corruption
I keep a mental shelf for games that exist to provoke thought rather than test skill, and President for a Day - Corruption lands squarely on that shelf. Serious Games Interactive built this as an educational title first, a game second, and the product is honest about that priority in a way that is both its main strength and its ceiling. The structure is turn-based event management spread across four fixed scenarios, each locked to a preset difficulty. Topics rotate through the kind of crises that fill political-science syllabi: famine driven by climate change, foreign intervention from neighbouring states and western donors, ethnic conflict, the slow rot of institutional corruption, and the fragile mechanics of democratic consolidation. Each turn drops a dilemma in front of you and asks which lever to pull. The decision trees are not deep - you are rarely choosing between more than two or three options - but the framing of each dilemma is considered, grounded in plausible recent African history rather than invented fiction, and the downstream consequences are visible enough to generate a genuine moment of pause before you click. That is exactly what the format is designed to do. From a pure strategy standpoint, though, the depth gauge bottoms out fast. There is no resource curve to manage across multiple turns, no faction reputation system that compounds over time, no meaningful mod support, and no procedural variation to give a second playthrough a different texture. A player coming in expecting the decision weight of something like a Reigns or the branching consequence chains of a Crusader Kings event chain will find the experience thin. The visuals are functional at best, and the overall run time, even if you replay all four scenarios to chase the Steam achievements, sits well under four hours. The mixed reception on Steam (sitting around 64 percent positive across 64 reviews) reflects that gap between what the game promises by genre label and what it actually delivers. Where it does earn its place is in a specific, narrow context. Teachers, students, or curious players who want a low-friction way to sit with genuinely uncomfortable governance questions - do you accept foreign aid with conditions attached, do you suppress ethnic tensions through force or negotiation, do you let corruption persist to maintain political stability - will find the scenarios useful and the writing earnest. It is structured more like an interactive case study than a game, and if you approach it on those terms, the short length becomes a feature rather a flaw: one scenario fits inside a lunch break. No tutorial is needed because the mechanics are self-evident, which means newcomers are not penalized - but experienced strategy players will not find anything to master either. There is no AI opponent, no build order, no late-game crisis to stress-test your early decisions. The trading cards are the only long-term hook for completionists, and even those resolve quickly. This is a buy for the topic, not the genre. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
Steam Deck & Linux
Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows Vista
- Memory
- 1 GB RAM
- Storage
- 100 MB available space
- Graphics
- Intel Graphics / 512MB VRAM
- Processor
- Intel Core 2 Duo
- Sound Card
- Compatible with DirectX®: 9.0c
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Reviews & Ratings
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Game Info
- Developer
- Serious Games Interactive
- Publisher
- My Way Games
- Release Date
- Aug 5, 2015


