Compare This Is the President prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by SuperPAC. Published by THQ Nordic. Released on 12/6/2021. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Adventure, Simulation, Strategy. Metacritic score: 62/100.

Corrupt president, four years on the clock, one amendment standing between you and a prison cell. Worth a look if political satire scratches your itch, but strategy-heads should temper expectations.

My spreadsheet instincts told me to catalogue every cabinet member's stress threshold before finishing the first in-game month, and that impulse is precisely what This Is the President rewards, up to a point. The core loop is built around a four-year term with a single, mercenary objective: ratify Amendment 28, granting lifetime immunity to any former president, before your criminal past as a shady multi-millionaire businessman catches up with you. It is a heist movie wearing an Oval Office suit, and for the first few hours that framing is genuinely funny and sometimes tense. The resource management layer is the game's sharpest tool. You start with a small cabinet, a lawyer, a bodyguard, a hacker, and a communications director, and each one carries a stress meter. Assign them too aggressively across monthly tasks and they burn out, quit, or worse. The year-by-year escalation of objectives adds genuine pressure: year one demands raising millions to buy congressional votes, year two has you working to reshape the Supreme Court, and each stage asks you to juggle approval ratings, cash flow, and staff welfare simultaneously. For anyone who has ever min-maxed a Paradox campaign, the early rhythm of prioritising which crisis to tackle and which to let slide for rating-point reasons will feel familiar and satisfying. Where the game loses ground is in the depth, or rather the absence of it, beneath that surface. Many dialogue choices result in outcomes that feel arbitrary rather than consequential, with approval scores shifting in ways that resist logical prediction. The game does include a month-rewind mechanic, but using it reduces the whole thing to rote memorisation rather than genuine strategic reasoning. Filler events pile up as the term progresses, and several critics noted the same creeping sense that the game is stretching a tighter six-hour experience across ten hours of runtime. The satire, while pointed in its setup, rarely moves beyond the obvious joke that politicians are corrupt, which lands flat if you arrived expecting the moral weight of something like Suzerain. The presentation is a genuine bright spot. Hand-drawn 2D artwork, a jazzy soundtrack that makes bribery feel breezy, and occasional absurdist set-pieces, including a full Broadway musical mid-campaign, give the whole thing a personality that purely mechanical criticism undersells. The writing hits harder when it lurches into the surreal: gaslighting a foreign leader about reptilian conspiracies, or dispatching your hacker-drone team to neutralise a rogue astronaut before a Mars mission goes public. Those moments justify the price of admission on their own terms. The tone sits closer to House of Cards crossed with Tropico than anything resembling a West Wing earnestness, and anyone arriving with the latter expectation will bounce off it quickly. For strategy-genre veterans, be honest with yourself about what this is. There is no tech tree, no AI opponent worth studying, no mod ecosystem to extend longevity. The decision-making is closer to interactive fiction with resource guardrails than it is to a management sim. Players who have exhausted This Is the Police or who want a lighter political narrative between heavier sessions will find it a reasonable ten-hour diversion. Hardcore sim players who want modelled consequences and deep systemic play should look elsewhere. The Metacritic score of 62 is a fair centre point: the ceiling is higher when the writing clicks, the floor is lower when the padding sets in. Diego, Scout Team

This Is the President
AdventureSimulationStrategy

This Is the President

Dec 6, 2021SuperPACTHQ Nordic
GamerScout Says

Corrupt president, four years on the clock, one amendment standing between you and a prison cell. Worth a look if political satire scratches your itch, but strategy-heads should temper expectations.

PCMacLinux
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $1.59

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About This Is the President

My spreadsheet instincts told me to catalogue every cabinet member's stress threshold before finishing the first in-game month, and that impulse is precisely what This Is the President rewards, up to a point. The core loop is built around a four-year term with a single, mercenary objective: ratify Amendment 28, granting lifetime immunity to any former president, before your criminal past as a shady multi-millionaire businessman catches up with you. It is a heist movie wearing an Oval Office suit, and for the first few hours that framing is genuinely funny and sometimes tense. The resource management layer is the game's sharpest tool. You start with a small cabinet, a lawyer, a bodyguard, a hacker, and a communications director, and each one carries a stress meter. Assign them too aggressively across monthly tasks and they burn out, quit, or worse. The year-by-year escalation of objectives adds genuine pressure: year one demands raising millions to buy congressional votes, year two has you working to reshape the Supreme Court, and each stage asks you to juggle approval ratings, cash flow, and staff welfare simultaneously. For anyone who has ever min-maxed a Paradox campaign, the early rhythm of prioritising which crisis to tackle and which to let slide for rating-point reasons will feel familiar and satisfying. Where the game loses ground is in the depth, or rather the absence of it, beneath that surface. Many dialogue choices result in outcomes that feel arbitrary rather than consequential, with approval scores shifting in ways that resist logical prediction. The game does include a month-rewind mechanic, but using it reduces the whole thing to rote memorisation rather than genuine strategic reasoning. Filler events pile up as the term progresses, and several critics noted the same creeping sense that the game is stretching a tighter six-hour experience across ten hours of runtime. The satire, while pointed in its setup, rarely moves beyond the obvious joke that politicians are corrupt, which lands flat if you arrived expecting the moral weight of something like Suzerain. The presentation is a genuine bright spot. Hand-drawn 2D artwork, a jazzy soundtrack that makes bribery feel breezy, and occasional absurdist set-pieces, including a full Broadway musical mid-campaign, give the whole thing a personality that purely mechanical criticism undersells. The writing hits harder when it lurches into the surreal: gaslighting a foreign leader about reptilian conspiracies, or dispatching your hacker-drone team to neutralise a rogue astronaut before a Mars mission goes public. Those moments justify the price of admission on their own terms. The tone sits closer to House of Cards crossed with Tropico than anything resembling a West Wing earnestness, and anyone arriving with the latter expectation will bounce off it quickly. For strategy-genre veterans, be honest with yourself about what this is. There is no tech tree, no AI opponent worth studying, no mod ecosystem to extend longevity. The decision-making is closer to interactive fiction with resource guardrails than it is to a management sim. Players who have exhausted This Is the Police or who want a lighter political narrative between heavier sessions will find it a reasonable ten-hour diversion. Hardcore sim players who want modelled consequences and deep systemic play should look elsewhere. The Metacritic score of 62 is a fair centre point: the ceiling is higher when the writing clicks, the floor is lower when the padding sets in. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Interactive FictionPolitical SatireResource ManagementStaff Stress SystemBranching NarrativeCabinet ManagementReplayable EndingsDark Comedy

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Playable

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 64Bit or higher
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
6 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA/AMD dedicated graphics card, with at least 1GB of dedicated VRAM
Processor
AMD / Intel CPU running at 2.6 GHz or higher
Sound Card
Integrated or dedicated compatible soundcard
Additional Notes
AMD Athlon II X2 250 or Intel Core 2 Duo E6750 or newer is recommended. Nvidia GT 440 1GB or AMD HD 4870 1GB or newer is recommended.

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 or higher
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
6 GB available space
Graphics
AMD/NVIDIA dedicated graphics card, with at least 1GB of dedicated VRAM
Processor
AMD / Intel CPU running at 2.6 GHz or higher
Sound Card
Integrated or dedicated compatible soundcard
Additional Notes
AMD Phenom II X4 965 or Intel Pentium Dual-Core G620 or newer. Nvidia GTX 650 1GB or AMD Radeon HD 5750 1GB or newer is recommended.

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on This Is the President.

Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
62

Game Info

Developer
SuperPAC
Publisher
THQ Nordic
Release Date
Dec 6, 2021

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

Price History

2026-06-101.59(lowest)

Buy smarter: helpful guides

Looking for more? See games like This Is the President

Frequently asked questions about This Is the President

How much does This Is the President cost?

This Is the President pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock key and store offers across 50+ verified shops, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

Where can I buy This Is the President cheapest?

Compare This Is the President prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is This Is the President available on?

This Is the President is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was This Is the President released?

This Is the President was released on 6 December 2021.

Who developed This Is the President?

This Is the President was developed by SuperPAC and published by THQ Nordic.

Is This Is the President worth buying?

This Is the President holds a Metacritic score of 62/100, making it one of the standout Adventure titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.