President Elect: 1988 Edition

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President Elect: 1988 Edition
Publisher(s)Strategic Simulations
Release1987
Genre(s)Simulation video game, Strategy video game

President Elect: 1988 Edition is a 1987 video game published by Strategic Simulations.

Gameplay

President Elect: 1988 Edition is a game in which the 1988 Republican primaries and Democratic primaries, and the 1988 United States presidential election are simulated.[1] The player can choose from any presidential election from 1960 to 1988 inclusive. The election can be either historical or ahistorical (the latter effectively a custom scenario).

President Elect: 1988 Edition was released in

Richard Gephardt, Geraldine Ferraro, Jack Kemp, and Oliver North
.

Reception

Wyatt Lee reviewed President Elect: 1988 Edition for Computer Gaming World, stating that "President Elect 1988 Edition is a stimulating, educational, and challenging experience of American presidential politics. If you follow political events with any interest at all, you owe it to yourself to play this game, at least, once".[1]

President Elect author Nelson Hernandez—calling himself "the best predictor of presidential elections in the country"—claimed that, with the 1988 edition of the game, in July 1988 he predicted the electoral and popular votes of the election that year within 1% each of the actual results.[3]

Orson Scott Card favorably reviewed the 1988 edition of President Elect for Compute!. While he criticized aspects of the game's design, he noted that the game accurately simulated how "the strongest forces", like the economy, "are completely out of the players' control ... that's the way it works in the real world".[4]

References

  1. ^ a b Lee, Wyatt (September 1988). "Campaign '88: A Survey of Political Election Games for the Computer". Computer Gaming World. Vol. 1, no. 51. pp. 14–15.
  2. ^ Bobo, Ervin (October 1987). "President Elect: 1988 Edition". Compute! (89): 32.
  3. ^ Aycock, Heidi E. H. (November 1989). "Get Real". Compute!. p. 92. Retrieved 11 November 2013.
  4. ^ Card, Orson Scott (May 1988). "Do You Want to Change the World? Two Games Let You Try". Compute!. p. 9. Retrieved 10 November 2013.

External links