Download Rulers of Nations Free for PC Torrent Rulers of Nations, also known as Geo-Political-Simulator 2, is the second installment of the Geo-Political series. This government simulation game, like its predecessor, puts the player in the role of any nation's head of state.
Originally posted by:This is how the two game differ:Geo-Political Simulator: Rulers of Nations1. War is a last resort effort that will essentially cause you to be ousted unless you motivate your people to this dreaded action.2. Your military units are based upon 5 different stars.
That's about it.3. Your economy is a multi-faceted mix of private and public sectors of industry that you can subsidize, privitize, and funnel money into job programs to train your people into skilled labor for those jobs.4. Your domestic policy is a complex system of setting and funding state sponsored cultural events, athletic subsidies, religious affiliations, syndicates, unions, and the construction of buildings to facilitate all of the above.
It also includes meeting with the leader of all of the above and trying to make them all happy so that they don't riot, protest, and blockade your roads. You then have the options of declaring a police state or martial law.5. You set your police and military based on quotas of personnel, security cameras, traffic cameras, and such.6. Diplomacy is a very risky situation of trying to buy and sell from other countries in a hope of not crippling your economy and trying to stimulate your electronic goods manufactorers by buying loads of bauxite at cheap prices.7. Espionage is a very risky, calculated process of funding a security department and setting their funding priorities. Next is establishing a number of people (0-500) to form espionage rings in other countries.
From here you can do a large number of things from funding specific terrorists to just supporting unwanted unions in their cause or just funding political leaders to blackmail the head of state or assassinate them.8. Taxes are a very complex system which has to be approved by the house and parliament and can even be part of larger bills.Supreme Ruler Ultimate:1. War is pretty much what everyone does. Your people will temporarily hate you but so long as your military likes you, you can just proclaim a dictatorship.2. Your military units can be anything from WWI infantry divisions to the latest in Japanese tanks and any and all in between.3. Your economy is a 3rd graders math homework.4. Your domestic policy is looking at your low GDP and seeing people emigrate.5.
Your police forces are a slider in a menu that stops partisans.6. Diplomacy is a simple system of set treaties. Slightly more complex than the standard 'War and peace' from earlier RTS games.7. Espionage is kind of lame and consists of recon, stealing tech, and sabotaging industries.8. Taxes are some slides that affect GDP and the rate at which your people will inevitably die from your horrible war mongering.All in all, Supreme Ruler is not a bad game. It's actually quite fun. But if you're looking for a good government simulation I'd turn away.
This game's main focus is war, influencing other countries onto your side of the war, and researching technology to have better units to win more wars. Though if you're looking to play something a bit more simple without going into Command and Conquer territory, this is definitely your game.Also. Originally posted by:if you have played Cold war then you know how it is, there is just minor changes to menu and other things to make the game play better, what I remebered of ruler of nations is incredibly slow between turns until it was totally unplayable otherwice a good gameWhat game are we playing here? What is this turn-based game?Brilliant thoughtful reply to my questions.thanks for taking time out to respond so well!!!just wating now until its slightly more stable and then will jumop in.again, thanks.
Yes theres not a lot of competition or money in these types of games, battlegoat does a pretty good job with a smal ldev team, more sales would probably enable much more work on supreme ruler ultimate. So if u like it spread the word amd a reasonable review around the interwebs.Another difference is masters of world no dev support at all. No response, no forums no nothingBattlegoat SRU, dev replys, dev flexibility and regular game updates ahead of the launch, they do appear to listen, not always make changes but they do at least take the time to put some development work into the bigger bugs and stuff. Originally posted by:yes theres not a lot of competition or money in these types of games, battlegoat does a pretty good job with a smal ldev team, more sales would probably enable much more work on supreme ruler ultimate. So if u like it spread the word amd a reasonable review around the interwebs.Another difference is masters of world no dev support at all.
No response, no forums no nothingBattlegoat SRU, dev replys, dev flexibility and regular game updates ahead of the launch, they do appear to listen, not always make changes but they do at least take the time to put some development work into the bigger bugs and stuffAgain - Many thanks for the response. My pet hate about ruler of nations was the lack of support and also zero dev replies etc.I will jump in just awaiting a couple more patches based on the bugs reported.thanks again.
Hi,I am trying to run Microsoft's Rise of Nations on my Windows 10 PC.The game played fine on Windows 7 and on Windows 8.1.I have upgraded to Windows 10 and this is the first time I have tried to play the game since the upgrade.I get an error message saying ' Please login with administrator privileges and try again'. The game is being run under a child account with Family Safety the same as it was on Windows 8.1, but the game has never neededadmin rights before.
What has changed?The game has already been fully installed so no changes need to be made to the system, I just want my son to be able to play it?I am unable to grant him admin privileges so I am stuck.Why has Windows 10 suddenly imposed this restriction?Please advise as to how I should resolve this issue?Many thanks,Barry. Suvarna,Thank you for your response. I have looked at the comment you have suggested and have already gone through this process.Both of my boys, (15 & 13), have their own email addresses, which are registered as Microsoft accounts and we're used to sign in to their Windows 8.1 PCs. These accounts were 'moved', (removed and 'asked' to join the family under Win 10). I had tonnes uptheir times and filters again, but this was not a major issue.The problem I have now is why they are unable to play this game under their child accounts when they could before??Has Microsoft decided to 'outdate' the software to encourage users to purchase newer software?
Or is this an update issue. I, as an administrator, can still play the game without any issue.Please help. 'login with admin.Has Microsoft decided to 'outdate' the software to encourage users to purchase newer software? Or is this an update issue.I, as an administrator, can still play the game without any issue.' EDIT: Oops, sorry - I missed the part about you being able to play as Admin.(I think I noticed yesterday, but didn't when re-reading today).I've been getting a bit overzealous about Win10 and it's dictatorial DRM blocking.Previous comments about DRM blocking (in this instance) have been scrapped.It should be possible to give admin permissions to specific programs/games on the kids account though. Until Microsoft admit and correct the issue, there is no immediate solution, unless you want to spend another £14.99 and buy the game again on Steam.I would like to see Microsoft offer a discount code or a refund option to existing game owners who purchase a new version on Steam, if this is the only way forward.I don't like the way the end user is having to pay out for a second time, for an existing game, due to a decision Microsoft have made.
In any other business world, this would be considered an act of fraud.Come on Microsoft, get your act together!! We all know Microsoft does this as a money grab. This way, they force you to purchase their products via planned-obsolescence. One must remember, corporations actually tell people they do not 'OWN' the software they purchase, that they are only 'renting'them. I beg to differ.
I own my copy of 'Rise of Nations', therefore I should be able to run it on any Windows machine.My copy (that I OWN) worked fine on Windows 8.1. I then upgraded to Windows 10.
Now, the game no longer works. It denies me access to the game. I know it is not the game itself, but Windows 10. Microsoft's Windows 10 has already destroyed my laptop'scard-reader. I would suggest Microsoft is responsible for that destruction and should pay me for a means of replacing it immediately, AND for a copy of RON that will work on my computer. You see, you have my money, but I have no game.
I do believe this isthe definition of THEFT.Good day.P.S. Microsoft are crooks. They know it.
Everyone knows it. I do hope Microsoft collapses as a company. Why should he have to 're-buy' a game he already owns? The 'compatibility' issue is not his problem. It is Microsoft's problem. This is precisely why Microsoft made Windows 10 'free' to begin with. This was all planned.
This way, they destroy all of yourprevious purchases, forcing you to purchase all over again. It is how these corporations become wealthy beyond belief, because we are stupid enough to allow them to keep reselling us items we already own.Of course it is the 'security check'. This was done on purpose. It prevents the consumer from accessing. they own, forcing you to replace it, thus awarding Microsoft more of your cash.