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Politics, the Third Rail of Video Games

Designers behind some of this year's political games explain how their own views impact game development, and we ask a group of conservatives to play a (gasp) liberal-leaning video game.

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Games are not made by robots, they are made by people. People have opinions, and people are biased. What happens when people are tasked with making a video game about the taboo subject of politics?

Barring another painful recount, America will choose a new president tomorrow. The political season kicked off with the Republican primaries at the start of the year, and concludes with the choice between Democrat Barack Obama and Republican Mitt Romney on November 6. Political years tend to generate a few politically themed games, too, despite the industry’s near all-encompassing aversion to touching a topic that impacts so many of our lives.

You can run a robot for president in Political Machine, so obviously it's okay with lampooning the process of becoming our nation's leader.
You can run a robot for president in Political Machine, so obviously it's okay with lampooning the process of becoming our nation's leader.

Two such games are The Political Machine 2012, a long-running series simulating the general election between each party’s chosen candidate, and Strategery 2012, a tongue-in-cheek look at the election framed through Nintendo’s popular Advance Wars games.

The Political Machine debuted in 2004 from Stardock, a developer known for its work in the strategy genre, and published by Ubisoft. Stardock took over the publishing rights for the 2008 version, and also published the most recent edition.

Chris Bray joined Stardock roughly a year ago, and served as a producer and lead designer on the The Political Machine 2012. Bray had no problem admitting his own political leanings when we spoke.

“I’m liberal but I tend to be pretty independent--maybe everybody thinks this way. [laughs] I don’t know,” he said. “I tend to be pretty open minded to all sorts of opinions, and hearing people out.”

The goal of The Political Machine is to “poke fun at both sides” through a video game that's belief agnostic. That means a liberal, conservative and anything in-between or outside should be able to play it and have fun. Despite using real-life polling to fuel the underlying game data, it’s perception in the wild always changes, and Bray said Stardock’s received feedback from consumers that this version of the game skews democratic.

Stardock is filled with all manners of political beliefs, according to Bray, including conservatives and libertarians alike. Most importantly, however, is Stardock CEO Brad Wardell, who Bray described as “a pretty conservative guy.” When Bray joined The Political Machine 2012, the two discovered how their own political biases were bleeding into the design of a game ostensibly meant to be neutral.

“When he [Wardell] did some of the game balancing on previous versions, he tended to make the democratic candidates or liberal demographics of different states have much stronger views in favor or gains something,” said Bray. “I didn’t know that going into it, and my balancing and tweaking for 2012--new issues and that sort of thing--I ended up doing the exact same thing for the conservatives.”

Bray wasn’t hired to bring a certain political view to The Political Machine, but Bray said it was impossible to avoid certain conversations while working on the game. Big election issues are built into the game’s design, so by its very nature, developers working on the game need to make design calls on what should or shouldn’t be in the game.

Issues that were added to a recent patch of the game included “Chik-fi-let,” related to a flare up about the restaurant Chick-Fil-A’s position on gay rights; “Provide tax returns," a criticism from the Obama campaign about Romney’s limited release of his personal tax returns; and "Government builds business,” a meme from Republicans pulled from an Obama statement about the role of government.

The range of opinions at Stardock keeps Bray in check when his views could skew the game.

“When we were doing caricatures of all the different candidates, I had to hold myself back from making some of those,” he said. “Michele Bachmann had some really crazy eyes in the first art pass that I did. [laughs] Then the conservatives would jump in, and we’d get into the other side, too, or tone down the more extreme cases.”

Whereas Political Machine attempts to remain neutral, Strategery 2012, the brainchild of a former Firaxis intern, doesn’t pretend to hide its bias. Michael Silverman self-identifies as a liberal, and the Republican primaries prompted him to begin putting together what would become Strategery 2012.

Strategery 2012's name is derived from a popular SNL sketch criticizing former President Bush.
Strategery 2012's name is derived from a popular SNL sketch criticizing former President Bush.

Strategery 2012, both aesthetically and mechanically, will look familiar to Advance Wars fans. There are two modes: primary season and the general election. During the primaries, you play as Mitt Romney, but the general election gives you the chance to play as Barack Obama, too. Take control of campaign staffers, move ‘em around the map to earn votes, and occasionally unleash a super power. Romney can suppress votes, Bachmann says...well, stuff that would make most anyone raise an eyebrow.

“I’d admit that it’s slanted left, in my opinion,” said Silverman. “I wasn’t trying to stay perfectly neutral. But, like the SNL philosophy, they’re happy when they’ve poked fun at everyone. I wanted to try and make sure I got a shot in at everyone--even Obama, even though I’m on his side. The goal was to skewer the whole thing.”

Silverman’s interpretations of the candidates are based on their primary performances. Bachmann’s penchant for wild statements is balanced against “fact checks” after she deploys her special power, “Right is Right.” Based on the response to fact checkers this election cycle, to some, that itself may be picking a side. One man’s caricature is another man’s skewering of the truth, though Silverman claims the response hasn’t been particularly political.

“Don’t think that because I used real quotes that this is a totally unskewed, fair representation,” he said. “If you let someone take your quotes and mess them around and play with them, you can make anybody look all kinds of ways. [laughs]”

Prior to release, Silverman hadn’t asked a Republican-leaning player to check out Strategery 2012, and find out what other side thought of his characterization. To find out whether Silverman had painted an accurate picture of the Republican field, I asked for Republicans following me on Twitter to drop me an email. I’m surprised how many of them have put up with my own loud mouthing on Twitter throughout the election, so bravo to you brave souls.

“Well they made Obama seem like a ‘good guy’ and made everyone else seem either ruthless, out-of-touch, or clueless,” said longtime Republican Reid Spottswood. “Not that I think Bachmann or [Texas governor and former candidate Rick] Perry were geniuses, but everyone's character were basically caricatures based off of gaffes that blew up on the internet. [...] I do not think my political viewpoint is represented at all in this game, but I don't blame the game creator for this since that was obviously their intent.”

The broad characterizations of candidates bleeds into their overall perception, games or otherwise. In 2012, even Bachmann's eyes were a story.
The broad characterizations of candidates bleeds into their overall perception, games or otherwise. In 2012, even Bachmann's eyes were a story.

“Funny enough, the political setting of it didn't really affect any of what I played during the primaries portion of the game,” said Josh Williams, a former Republican who still votes conservative. “During the general election, I ended up saying to myself ‘I'm going to win without getting votes...I'm just going to kill everyone before the votes are there’. It was an interesting thought to pop into my head.”

“The Republican viewpoint in general throughout that game is a bit outlandish in its presentation, relatively over-the-top,” continued Williams. “Then again, looking at the party now, it's a bit of a big top circus show already. However, the game goes in a direction that is a bit more...simplistic...than what Republican issues are. It tries to nail them down as some basic essentials when many of the issues brought up on the Republican side through that game have far more parts to it than just ‘yeah, voter IDs’ and ‘yeah, cut funding to PBS.’ There are reasons beyond that, but it only shows what the media and social culture have decided to make those issues about.”

“I thought the game was a pretty good satire of a lot of what goes on in politics,” said Ben Vance, who’s already cast his vote for Romney. “The game's political stance certainly seemed to be more opposed to the GOP than I would have liked, but there were many critics that rang true. [...] Many of the jabs, such as Michele Bachmann's tendency to hurt her credibility through dumb statements, I feel were pretty accurate, and probably the feeling of many Republicans as well. [...] I felt like it left out much of the things I like about the GOP platform such as fiscal responsibility and limited government. However, I did like the idea of Mitt being more of a moderate. The ‘Moderate Mitt’ power was usually amusing, and it's in some way one of the big reasons I support him.”

It appears Silverman was mostly successful, insomuch as a liberal can with a conservative. Having an enjoyable game driving it probably helped. Several Republican-leaning players I asked to try out Strategery 2012 remarked how the game’s representation of their preferred party didn’t matter. They focused on trying to win the game.

Strategery 2012 and The Political Machine, whatever their leanings, are outliers. Games and politics aren’t a well-represented mix, though Microsoft has tried to engage Xbox 360 owners with political coverage via Xbox Live. The aforementioned games are pieces of entertainment, with creating an informed electorate hardly being the focus. The ReDistricting Game, on the other hand, was created to specifically teach individuals about an important but ignored process of redistricting, which has so much to do with the makeup of the House of Representatives and Senate.

Neither Silverman nor Bray are surprised there aren’t more political video games, though. It's a hard sell, and passions flare red hot, especially in today's polarized electorate. There's not a huge incentive to roll the dice.

“Game designers should try and talk about things that relate to the real world, whether it’s even allegorical and relates to the real world, or it’s a topical thing,” said Silverman. “To make games more relevant, it’s helpful to focus on things--personal insights you can give to the player.”

Patrick Klepek on Google+

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mike

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@mrpepin said:

Hey 2 cops got murdered in New York over things you guys have been promoting for the past few months. Any words on this at all or are you just going to ignore it because it makes you look bad.

I'm not sure what you are getting at, but this article is over two years old. If you have a point to make, please find a more current and relevant article to do it on, start your own topic, or reach out to the Giant Bomb staff via PM, email, Twitter, Tumblr, or smoke signal. Anything but this.

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Jazz_Lafayette

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@gakushya: I'll admit it's probably obnoxious to the majority of observers, but I always work from the standpoint that I enjoy being corrected because it expands my base of knowledge. In case it was bothersome to Patrick, I tried to go out of my way to be non-antagonistic in the initial post. Anyhow, thanks for the mental exercise.

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gakushya

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@Dark_Lord_Spam Okay, well I have no idea what sort of constituent configurations admit a dependency relation. But that is probably because haven't studied syntax yet. So, I'll concede and admit that you are right and that it is ungrammatical. I can't demonstrate otherwise. Although I do have to wonder why you don't refrain from indulging yourself in correcting people's grammatical errors. Personally, I think it's officious and obtrusive, but I guess if you actually know why something is ungrammatical then you do have a legitimate point to make, even if doing so is likely at your own expense. A Grammar Nazi that knows his grammar. Well, by all means then, I suppose.

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bunnymud

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@Bourbon_Warrior: I'm not sore. But throwing HUNDREDS of millions of dollars into shitty companies in the way of payola is not the way you promote green tech. And all those solar panels you speak of are made in China. More payola back to obamas masters.Now take a look at wind farms. All the liberals in congress gush about them but oh no, don't you DARE build them near my mansion. You think this regime is serious about green tech? Welp, if that helps you sleep at night.

And I can tell by your responses that you are trying to prod me on, but I can also tell that you are very young and again, not an American. So, in the end, you are as water on a ducks back.

P.S. I just feel bad for the load of bullshit obama inherited from the previous guy.

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@gakushya said:

@Dark_Lord_Spam said:

If Patrick doesn't specify a verb, the only way for us to understand his intended meaning is to exit the constituent, observe the piece as a whole, and make an educated guess. Which is what I did.

Okay, but we don't have to constrain ourselves to coordinate clauses. Ellipses can take place in environments other than conjuncts. Like "In the attic." as an answer ellipsis to "Where is Bob hiding?" Intuitively I feel that the elided verb is easily inferenced, though I guess you're right in that it couldn't be from the other clause. Why couldn't the verb be reconstructed from context eg one or more clauses previous in the discourse, as answer ellipses are?

That's why I tried to say "clause" instead of "conjunct" where applicable, and qualified any conjunct in which ellipsis takes place as a "dependent clause." In that sense, an answer ellipsis is dependent on the question clause for context even though they are separate constituents, while in Patrick's article both the independent and dependent clause were contained within the same constituent.
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gakushya

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@Dark_Lord_Spam said:

If Patrick doesn't specify a verb, the only way for us to understand his intended meaning is to exit the constituent, observe the piece as a whole, and make an educated guess. Which is what I did.

Okay, but we don't have to constrain ourselves to coordinate clauses. Ellipses can take place in environments other than conjuncts. Like "In the attic." as an answer ellipsis to "Where is Bob hiding?" Intuitively I feel that the elided verb is easily inferenced, though I guess you're right in that it couldn't be from the other clause. Why couldn't the verb be reconstructed from context eg one or more clauses previous in the discourse, as answer ellipses are?

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steve_borsuk

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no way!!!!!!

steve borsuk

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Jazz_Lafayette

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@gakushya said:

@Dark_Lord_Spam said:

From what I can tell, the neither Wikipedia article mentions the application of gapping in the case of two non-identical verbs. You could make the case that because "was" is an alternate tense of "be" the function is the same, but after some brief Googling I've found nothing to support such an argument.

Okay that's a good point. I'm not sure if gapped verbs have to be strictly identical, nor how strict the relationship of "identical" is. It makes sense that it would have to be identical. At least for the gapping process. But you're arguing that the elided [be] results in an ungrammatical construction. Could you explain why this is ungrammatical then? I'm trying to find an elliptical process where this [be] can be legally omitted, but my failure to do so doesn't prove that you are right.

My now-cursory knowledge of elliptical construction indicates to me that in order for the ellipsis to be applicable, some clause must provide enough contextual evidence that some portion of another, dependent clause is not necessary for full comprehension of meaning. Thus:

Charles fed Angus, and Angus fed Charles.

is valid, but

Charles fed Angus, and Angus loved Charles.

is clearly not, because we have no way of inferring the intended verb. In the case of Patrick's quote,

It appears Silverman was mostly successful, insomuch as a liberal can [...] with a conservative.

the first clause does not not provide enough context for us to naturally derive a verb for the second (non-definite terms like "naturally" serve us well here because so much of this is still theory). So something like

It appears Silverman was mostly successful, insomuch as a liberal can argue with a conservative.

is, grammatically speaking, just as valid as

It appears Silverman was mostly successful, insomuch as a liberal can be with a conservative.

even though their respective meanings are diametrically opposed. If Patrick doesn't specify a verb, the only way for us to understand his intended meaning is to exit the constituent, observe the piece as a whole, and make an educated guess. Which is what I did.

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gakushya

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well at least you are aware of which of your grievances are legitimate. to be honest i thought you were just gunna throw some scripture at me and call it a victory. i don't know if your being sincere, some people support the GOP or Romney because they honest to gawd don't know anything about politics or america, which is not a bad thing in itself. but you should be sceptical to the nth degree when people start telling you want to think.

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@bunnymud: LOL sore loser much, we should be investing in green technology, every house should have a solar panel on their roof.

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@gakushya said:

@bunnymud said:

@Bourbon_Warrior said:

@McGhee said:

I think you got a better choice than Bush\Kerry

@jony2shoes said:

What the fuck kind of idiot votes for Romney? Jesus christ.

A Racist or someone that treats their political party like a sports team.

I voted for Romney. Explain how I'm a racist? Because I didn't vote for the "Black guy"?

Liberals LOVE LOVE LOVE to throw the "racist" word around, but I do not think they know what it means.

Should I vote for my country or should I vote for "Revenge"?

no your not racist. you voted for Romney because you have no idea what is going on in the world or your country.

Record numbers of people going on food stamps. Minority unemployment(not to mention unemployment in general) skyrocketing, throwing away hundreds of millions of dollars on failed green tech that also happened to be HUGE donors, no budget from congress since the democrats took over, destroying millions of jobs and dividing this country like no one has ever done before.

What color is your sky or will you plead Bush Jr. Derangement Syndrome? But make no mistake, I will shrug and "Get mine" since now it seems the people that vote for a living were louder than those that work for a living.

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@rebgav said:

I think that it would be interesting to see a "Football Manager" style political management game which has broader scope and relies on pure math and statistics to influence its outcomes and flavor rather than embracing personal biases. It could be fun to guide a political party through decades or centuries of social change, managing the various campaigns and candidates and dealing with the shifting balance of power.

I find that The Political Machine just doesn't have any substance to the gameplay so I get tired of it quite quickly, you see all of its tricks in a couple of hours (perhaps less) after which I have no real compulsion to keep playing. Haven't tried Strategery but it sounds perhaps more limited in scope than TPM and more reliant on humor and presentation? I'd like to see some political games which are games or sims first, rather than amateurish commentary wrapped around simplistic mechanics - there's certainly a place for those games, it would just be nice if there was something with more depth and commitment to the simulation.

a game that relies on pure math and statistics? that's why I play Matlab! lolz

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@TadThuggish said:

@drakesfortune said:

Oh wow you mean the entertainment industry is making liberal leaning political games and forcing conservatives o play them. I challenge Giant Bomb to find a conservative leaning game and have one of he liberals at Giant Bomb, ie anyone working at Giant Bomb, to play that. Vote Romney, or you keep the hateful, racist left in the White House. The real racists, the dividers, like Obama are right before your eyes. Republicans are talking about fixing the issues we face as a country, and Obama is running a campaign of hater tearing Romney, accusing him of murder by cancer, then denied they had anything to do with it, only to proven wrong. Obama has lied, he has failed on every level. You have to be nuts to vote for more failure.

what

:

The GB guys seem pretty politically averse, especially Jeff and Alex.

And from living in the SF Bay Area, my experience is that the business/marketing departments tend to skew libertarian or right-wing while game designers and PR types self-identify as more liberal. No entire industry is dominated by one singular ideology.

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@thabigred said:

As a poli sci major I rather enjoy these dumb games. Put a good I think ~20 hours in The Political Machine. Y'all should try that one if it's on sale, it's dumb fun.

Same, the game helped distract me from this terrible entry level job market lol...

I guess I'm one of the few who actually likes seeing social commentary in my games.

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@Dark_Lord_Spam said:

From what I can tell, the neither Wikipedia article mentions the application of gapping in the case of two non-identical verbs. You could make the case that because "was" is an alternate tense of "be" the function is the same, but after some brief Googling I've found nothing to support such an argument.

Okay that's a good point. I'm not sure if gapped verbs have to be strictly identical, nor how strict the relationship of "identical" is. It makes sense that it would have to be identical. At least for the gapping process. But you're arguing that the elided [be] results in an ungrammatical construction. Could you explain why this is ungrammatical then? I'm trying to find an elliptical process where this [be] can be legally omitted, but my failure to do so doesn't prove that you are right.

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this thread is totally dinosaurs

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@MariachiMacabre said:

@FengShuiGod

@MariachiMacabre said:

@FengShuiGod

"and concludes with the choice between Democrat Barack Obama and Republican Mitt Romney on November 6."

Oh thanks, I didn't know there were only two candidates running for office.

Yeah because Roseanne Barr is sure to come out ahead. It's pretty obvious those two are the only ones with any hope of winning.

According to that logic Patrick should have said, "concludes with the election day victory of Barack Obama on November 6." If you want to go by who has any hope of winning then mentioning anyone other than Obama is pointless. But it's not. And it's not a simple choice between two candidates which are very much the same, or at least it doesn't have to be. Pretending there are only two candidates doesn't help anyone and furthers the woeful inadequacy of political discourse. There are plenty of legitimate third party candidates like Gary Johnson, Rocky Anderson, Buddy Roemer, and Jill Stein. But if you are content, no insist, on speaking only of the man who will win, the man who signed the NDAA into law, the man who brags about who drills more oil, the man who authorizes the killing of American citizens, the man who pioneered a kill list with no oversight, the man who allowed banks to get too bigger to fail, the man who nominated Geithner, the man who hardly talked about any substantive issue during the campaign, then yes, Nov. 6th and every election day for the rest of eternity will conclude with the non-choice between two very similar candidates bought by and therefore subservient to corporate money. I didn't know you liked your consent so manufactured. I hope it's not too bitter.

None of that explains your useless outburst. Should Patrick really be required to list every Presidential candidate to legitimize his article for you? Because that's kind of a needless and sad thing to get angry at him about. Nothing about my comment says I'm content with the current political system in the USA. Quite frankly, I find the fact that Jill Stein and Gary Johnson weren't allowed to participate in the debates pretty fucking gross, but attacking Patrick for not listing all of the candidates sure to get <3% of the vote is just ridiculous.

Uh, no. He could have just said, "and finally concludes on election day, Nov. 6th." He doesn't have to list every presidential candidate, I'm not that PC, but pretending like there are only two legitimate and deterministic choices continues the fallacy and bias of the standard media narrative that is out there. Or something.

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@gakushya said:

Intuitively, it doesn't even seem ungrammatical.

On the contrary, had my intuition not indicated a fallacy in grammar, I wouldn't have included it in my post.

@gakushya said:

@Dark_Lord_Spam said:

Hooray, I've arrived in time to catch very superficial errors in grammar!

“The game's political stance certainly seemed to be more opposed to the GOP than I would have liked, but there were many critics that rang true. [...]”

to

“The game's political stance certainly seemed to be more opposed to the GOP than I would have liked, but there were many critics [sic] that rang true. [...]”

(surely, he meant "critiques"?)

and

It appears Silverman was mostly successful, insomuch as a liberal can with a conservative.

to

It appears Silverman was mostly successful, insomuch as a liberal can be with a conservative.

At least I think that's what you meant, .

I disagree with you, and I would very much like to see you make a case as to why second is ungrammatical if you don't mind.

The first isn't an issue of grammar, so I'm not sure why you claim it is, but I'm just interested in your rational of the second item. I've used the PENN Treebank POS tag set to analyse the sentence. You can parse the sentence yourself here http://text-processing.com/demo/tag/ which is a demo of the Natural Language Processing Toolkit, a Python program. Focusing on just the clause in question:

insomuch/JJ as/IN a/DT liberal/NN can/MD be/VB with/IN a/DT conservative/JJ

This is not 100% correct, but it needs only minimal fixing. First conservative/JJ should be conservative/NN, no doubt about that. Secondly, the POS of [insomuch] is not /JJ but that is immaterial, we only need to recognize [as] as a subordinating conjunction, so that

a/DT liberal/NN can/MD be/VB with/IN a/DT conservative/JJ

is a non-initial conjunct of a coordinate structure. This is what makes it eligible for certain types of elipsis, mainly gapping (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gapping). The Penn POS tag identifies the verb in question, [be], as a base verb. Which means it is a finite verb. Now wikipedia has all the statements that I need so I'll cite with wikipedia URL's, but you're welcome to refute with any source and I'll take a look at it:

[quote] ellipsis refers to the omission from a clause of one or more words that would otherwise be required by the remaining elements. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellipsis_(linguistics) [/quote]

[quote] gapping is a type of ellipsis that occurs in the non-initial conjuncts of coordinate structures. Gapping usually elides minimally a finite verb and further any non-finite verbs that are present. This material is gapped from the non-initial conjuncts of a coordinate structure. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gapping[/quote]

In other words, the logic above explains why [be] can be elided and the result is not an ungrammatical construction.

From what I can tell, the neither Wikipedia article mentions the application of gapping in the case of two non-identical verbs. You could make the case that because "was" is an alternate tense of "be" the function is the same, but after some brief Googling I've found nothing to support such an argument.

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gakushya

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@Dark_Lord_Spam said:

Hooray, I've arrived in time to catch very superficial errors in grammar!

“The game's political stance certainly seemed to be more opposed to the GOP than I would have liked, but there were many critics that rang true. [...]”

to

“The game's political stance certainly seemed to be more opposed to the GOP than I would have liked, but there were many critics [sic] that rang true. [...]”

(surely, he meant "critiques"?)

and

It appears Silverman was mostly successful, insomuch as a liberal can with a conservative.

to

It appears Silverman was mostly successful, insomuch as a liberal can be with a conservative.

At least I think that's what you meant, .

I disagree with you, and I would very much like to see you make a case as to why second is ungrammatical if you don't mind.

The first isn't an issue of grammar, so I'm not sure why you claim it is, but I'm just interested in your rational of the second item. I've used the PENN Treebank POS tag set to analyse the sentence. You can parse the sentence yourself here http://text-processing.com/demo/tag/ which is a demo of the Natural Language Processing Toolkit, a Python program. Focusing on just the clause in question:

insomuch/JJ as/IN a/DT liberal/NN can/MD be/VB with/IN a/DT conservative/JJ

This is not 100% correct, but it needs only minimal fixing. First conservative/JJ should be conservative/NN, no doubt about that. Secondly, the POS of [insomuch] is not /JJ but that is immaterial, we only need to recognize [as] as a subordinating conjunction, so that

a/DT liberal/NN can/MD be/VB with/IN a/DT conservative/JJ

is a non-initial conjunct of a coordinate structure. This is what makes it eligible for certain types of elipsis, mainly gapping (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gapping). The Penn POS tag identifies the verb in question, [be], as a base verb. Which means it is a finite verb. Now wikipedia has all the statements that I need so I'll cite with wikipedia URL's, but you're welcome to refute with any source and I'll take a look at it:

[quote] ellipsis refers to the omission from a clause of one or more words that would otherwise be required by the remaining elements. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellipsis_(linguistics) [/quote]

[quote] gapping is a type of ellipsis that occurs in the non-initial conjuncts of coordinate structures. Gapping usually elides minimally a finite verb and further any non-finite verbs that are present. This material is gapped from the non-initial conjuncts of a coordinate structure. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gapping[/quote]

In other words, the logic above explains why [be] can be elided and the result is not an ungrammatical construction. Intuitively, it doesn't even seem ungrammatical. I'm sure I don't have to spell it out any further than this point. But as it seems,

It appears Silverman was mostly successful, insomuch as a liberal can with a conservative.

is absolutely 100% correct. And I have a thorough rational and so far you do not. Care to explain yourself?

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gakushya

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@bunnymud said:

@Bourbon_Warrior said:

@McGhee said:

I think you got a better choice than Bush\Kerry

@jony2shoes said:

What the fuck kind of idiot votes for Romney? Jesus christ.

A Racist or someone that treats their political party like a sports team.

I voted for Romney. Explain how I'm a racist? Because I didn't vote for the "Black guy"?

Liberals LOVE LOVE LOVE to throw the "racist" word around, but I do not think they know what it means.

Should I vote for my country or should I vote for "Revenge"?

no your not racist. you voted for Romney because you have no idea what is going on in the world or your country.

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Bourbon_Warrior

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@Pulledabrad You sent me to a conservatives website I got my info from Wikipedia, its not secret America has borrowed 3 trillion plus from China for war on terror alone at crazy interest, I can never see the USA paying it off. Lets be honest America is a shitty country, no free healthcare, terrible public schools, overcharging university's, sends most of its manufacturing jobs to China and will forever be in debt. None of these candidates will help thT

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gakushya

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My kind of political game:

1)Press X to drone strike and murder an entire Pakistani family. Hold X to fly over and just terrorize innocent citizens without releasing missiles.

2)Press Y to detain American citizen without trial. Make sure you open your inventory and activate the NDAA device beforehand.

3)Press Z to violate constitution with impunity. Press R1+Z to violate international law and defy the UN (double points).

4)Press W to assassinate Julian Assange. Must posses invisibility cloak to enable this quest.

5)Press E to bomb defenceless country that poses no threat. To minimize backlash, convince public that such country has nuclear missile capability.

6)Press U to ouput propaganda on FoxNews, CNN, MSNBC, ABC, etc. Press L2 to monitor internets.

now I would play this kind of game.

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LegendaryChopChop

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Awesome read, as always, Patrick.

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granderojo

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As a poli sci major I rather enjoy these dumb games. Put a good I think ~20 hours in The Political Machine. Y'all should try that one if it's on sale, it's dumb fun.

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Darth Paul

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Seriously? This kind of crap actually exists? Man they really will make games out of anything! LOL!

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@SathingtonWaltz said:

@Bourbon_Warrior said:

@PulledaBrad said:

@Bourbon_Warrior said:

@PulledaBrad said:

@Bourbon_Warrior: FFS. It wasn't just the regs on Wall Street. Its the mindset of the US citizens. We all want to live beyond our means. A couple with a combined income of 60k trying to buy a house worth 300k is commonplace, and its no wonder that after the interest rates went up, they couldnt afford the mortgage note along with living on credit and trying to make the monthly minimum wilst also trying to pay for a brand new car payment. Its that that fucked this economy. Its whats fucking Washington as we speak. Spending more than we take in. How anyone can, at this point and time say "Yep time for Gov't subsidized healtcare!" and be oblivious to the follow up question of "How you gonna pay for it?" or deflecting with "Gay rights!" is out of their mind. The way I see it, the most important thing to be focusing on is the economy. The answer dosen't lie in taxing the "rich" more. That wont cover it. Its cutting spending and giving powers that the Fed has taken away from the states back to said states. The "equal rights" business can wait till we have some solvency and not depending on China when we need to fund another dead beat social program.

Yes but this was the banks lowering their regulations so anyone could pretty much get a house way out of their affordability that caused this. You could pay for healthcare without spending so much on war, pretty simple its how every other country does it. Every US citizen not just tax payers have spent 8000$ on the wars in the middle east since 2002, probably more once\if America ever pays off China and their interest rates.

Problem there is scale. Most European countries and Canada have a smaller population than that of the US. With gov't subsidized healthcare peoiple would treat the ER as their family doctor and they burden it would put on the taxpayer is untenable. And 8k over 10 years? Im ok with that seeing as our debt has us somewhere around 218k per person. LIVE BEYOND THE MEANS!

Thats crazy, US was in surplus in 2001, W. Bush really ruined the country.

Wow you literally have no clue what you're talking about at all.

Some supporting evidence? Ok sure! But be careful it has numbers and graphs and not some Jon Stewart soundbite you can parrot back.

http://www.craigsteiner.us/articles/16

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SathingtonWaltz

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@Bourbon_Warrior said:

@PulledaBrad said:

@Bourbon_Warrior said:

@PulledaBrad said:

@Bourbon_Warrior: FFS. It wasn't just the regs on Wall Street. Its the mindset of the US citizens. We all want to live beyond our means. A couple with a combined income of 60k trying to buy a house worth 300k is commonplace, and its no wonder that after the interest rates went up, they couldnt afford the mortgage note along with living on credit and trying to make the monthly minimum wilst also trying to pay for a brand new car payment. Its that that fucked this economy. Its whats fucking Washington as we speak. Spending more than we take in. How anyone can, at this point and time say "Yep time for Gov't subsidized healtcare!" and be oblivious to the follow up question of "How you gonna pay for it?" or deflecting with "Gay rights!" is out of their mind. The way I see it, the most important thing to be focusing on is the economy. The answer dosen't lie in taxing the "rich" more. That wont cover it. Its cutting spending and giving powers that the Fed has taken away from the states back to said states. The "equal rights" business can wait till we have some solvency and not depending on China when we need to fund another dead beat social program.

Yes but this was the banks lowering their regulations so anyone could pretty much get a house way out of their affordability that caused this. You could pay for healthcare without spending so much on war, pretty simple its how every other country does it. Every US citizen not just tax payers have spent 8000$ on the wars in the middle east since 2002, probably more once\if America ever pays off China and their interest rates.

Problem there is scale. Most European countries and Canada have a smaller population than that of the US. With gov't subsidized healthcare peoiple would treat the ER as their family doctor and they burden it would put on the taxpayer is untenable. And 8k over 10 years? Im ok with that seeing as our debt has us somewhere around 218k per person. LIVE BEYOND THE MEANS!

Thats crazy, US was in surplus in 2001, W. Bush really ruined the country.

Wow you literally have no clue what you're talking about at all.

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oraknabo

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alexe0506

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@rebgav: the game you are looking for is cald Zivilication

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jesterroyal

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I hope everyone who is doing the typical political thing in this thread at least voted (or is voting) for someone today. If not the president but the numerous state and local laws likely to be on your ballots as well.

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ManMadeGod

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@jsnyder82 said:

@PulledaBrad said:

@Puddlesworth: Seriously, tell me how having a valid government ID to vote is racist. Please, I'd really like to know the logic that this way of thinking stems from. Are you saying that having proof that you are a US citizen to vote in an election for US leadership is racist somehow? Or is it the fact that the only ones that focus solely on race happen to be liberals "we need to get out the black/hispanic/whatthefuckever vote!" Its disgusting to me that the opposing party tries to denigrate the other party with terms like "racist" and "bigot" with no real backing other than some uninformed emotional reaction. So yes, again, please enlighten me to the reasoning behind keeping illegal aliens from voting.

These new voter ID laws affect low income, minority, and elderly voters. And a substantial chunk of these people vote Democratic. These laws require the purchase of an ID, which can cost upwards of $30. And to a low-income family or an elderly person on a fixed income, that can be quite a lot of money. Which may disenfranchise these people from voting at all.

Compound this with the fact that there are so few cases of voter fraud reported (how many people are really going to take the time to try and vote as somebody else just for an extra vote?), and it doesn't really take a genius to see that these laws are being set up to give Republicans the edge. Because the more people who vote, the better chances Democrats have of winning. I'm not calling them racist, but they are trying to cheat their way to a victory in this election.

Keep in mind that most states do require some form of identification anyway. They just never had to be government issued.

There are ways to satisfy both sides. Georgia offers free ID cards with weekend hours for pick up. They also have public transportation to the pick up locations. No excuses.

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patrickklepek

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@TadThuggish said:

@drakesfortune said:

Oh wow you mean the entertainment industry is making liberal leaning political games and forcing conservatives o play them. I challenge Giant Bomb to find a conservative leaning game and have one of he liberals at Giant Bomb, ie anyone working at Giant Bomb, to play that. Vote Romney, or you keep the hateful, racist left in the White House. The real racists, the dividers, like Obama are right before your eyes. Republicans are talking about fixing the issues we face as a country, and Obama is running a campaign of hater tearing Romney, accusing him of murder by cancer, then denied they had anything to do with it, only to proven wrong. Obama has lied, he has failed on every level. You have to be nuts to vote for more failure.

what

If you can point me towards a right-leaning video game, I'd be happy to play it and tell you what I think.

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ConnorHallTheMighty

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Now's your chance to choose between a giant douche and a terd sandwich

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@lazerbot: exactly, it's endless and even pedagogical. About political feelings, I'd like it more if citizens didn't have political feelings like: "I'm unhappy with the way you spend my taxes, you should not do X" (biased), but something more simple: "I'm unhappy with how high taxes are" (liberal) or "I'm unhappy because I expect to get X from my taxes" (socialist).

And to make it unbiased, people should be happy with any one of the two, I mean, lowering their taxes should make them happy even if they are socialist and giving them free services they want should make them happy even if they are liberal, because in the end people are not liberal nor socialist, all that they want is to get the most out of their money. They see how much do they pay with taxes and how much do they get, the more they get (as far as it is what they want) or the less they pay (so that they can pay by themselves for whatever they want) the happier they are.

Political feelings are just a way to approach this, people think it will be more likely they will get what they want in one way or another depending on those political feelings. But in the end the only thing that matters is how happy they are, and that depends mostly (if not exclusively) on what they get and how hard it is to get.

I'm not sure if I'm being clear here.

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@NorseDudeTR said:

Takes balls to write a piece like this on a video game website. Enjoyed reading it!

How does it take balls? It barely even discusses actual politics. This is complete softball territory.

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ThatPrimeGuy

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I thought I could escape politics for just an hour by going onto GB today...guess I was wrong.

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norsedudetr

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Takes balls to write a piece like this on a video game website. Enjoyed reading it!

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@Bourbon_Warrior said:

@bunnymud said:

He isn't a liberal, he's a radical liberal. Never the less, how am I a racist for voting for Romney?

P.S. accidental PM

Never said you were, you must fall into category B a gullible idiot or someone than treats the RNC like a sports team!

"@jony2shoes said:

What the fuck kind of idiot votes for Romney? Jesus christ.

@Bourbon_Warrior said:

A Racist or someone that treats their political party like a sports team.

But then again, you also said that you are not an American, thank God, so your opinion is moot.

Also I voted with logic. This guy did a shitty job as president and thus needs to go.

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@Dan_CiTi
@TruthTellah: Or they do like 5 campaigns and it is like this huge game like Age of Empires 2 but Advance Wars and also time travel. Fuuuuck yeah let's call Nintendo. 
How about Advance Wars throughout history with XCOM themes? Like, you choose which battles to fight and what resources to allocate, leading to different outcomes to conflicts like WWII or the US Revolutionary War, with countries falling and succeeding thanks to your chosen path of engagement.
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Dan_CiTi

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@TruthTellah: Or they do like 5 campaigns and it is like this huge game like Age of Empires 2 but Advance Wars and also time travel. Fuuuuck yeah let's call Nintendo. 
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TruthTellah

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@Dan_CiTi said:

I would love a Advance Wars game that was about politics but not modern politics, like it would be Assassin's Creed but Advance Wars art style and gameplay. Also Sengoku Rance.

A 1930s-1960s American Politics Advance Wars game.

Followed by an American Civil War Advance Wars game.

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I would love a Advance Wars game that was about politics but not modern politics, like it would be Assassin's Creed but Advance Wars art style and gameplay. Also Sengoku Rance.  
@Phished0ne: I believe it is BOPS2, not unlike Sock 'Em Boppers, which have been known to be significantly more enjoyable and enthralling than something like a pillow fight.  
 
Also, stuff like this makes me realize how I can't stand anything ever. And this article wasn't so bad, but bad for Patrick though. 

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Skanker

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I hate it when Americans are put up to the vote. It's all the internet can write and talk about, I was surprised that even Giantbomb had to shoehorn an article in. Shrug!

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Incapability

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@TadThuggish: Confirmation bias and propaganda. This unfortunate soul here is either a troll, or has been reading blogs that confirm his point of view.

BILLY, HAVE YOU DONE BEEN READIN' THEM BLAWGS AGAIN?

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@EuanDewar said:

I can't believe you wrote this

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TadThuggish

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@drakesfortune said:

Oh wow you mean the entertainment industry is making liberal leaning political games and forcing conservatives o play them. I challenge Giant Bomb to find a conservative leaning game and have one of he liberals at Giant Bomb, ie anyone working at Giant Bomb, to play that. Vote Romney, or you keep the hateful, racist left in the White House. The real racists, the dividers, like Obama are right before your eyes. Republicans are talking about fixing the issues we face as a country, and Obama is running a campaign of hater tearing Romney, accusing him of murder by cancer, then denied they had anything to do with it, only to proven wrong. Obama has lied, he has failed on every level. You have to be nuts to vote for more failure.

what

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EuanDewar

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I can't believe you wrote this

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outerabiz

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American debating is all about hating people with different opinions?