Here's something a little different for you: All Quiet in the Trenches recently hit Early Access on Steam, blending together a narrative turn-based strategy RPG with a first world war setting. It has Native Linux support but no Steam Deck rating just yet.
More about it: "In the game, you're playing as a German Unteroffizier - a sergeant - on the Western Front of World War One. You're responsible for a handful of soldiers and have to make meaningful decisions. You lead them in battle trying to strike a precarious balance between the ambitions of your superiors and the survival of your men. Your actions will not change the war. They will however change the lives of your soldiers. You cannot win, but maybe they can survive."
Direct Link
The developer, Totally Not Aliens, are based in Bamberg, Germany and say it's meant to be taken as an anti-war game. They plan to keep it in Early Access for 1-2 years as they expand it to cover up to the end of the war in November 1918 with it currently having from early 1915 to early 1916.
Check it out on the Steam page.
Quoting: Purple Library Guybig corporationsYes, I know where the money is coming from.
Quoting: CloversheenSocieties have always (and should continue to) fund culture and artsThat's fine and dandy when gold is money and thus limited. Not with fiat money, that's the root of the rot.
Quoting: DorritEhhh . . . there are various strains of economics. There's neoclassical economics, which is the mainstream, underpins most ideas about efficient markets, and is largely bankrupt, but has pretty math as long as you don't look at the assumptions too hard. There's Keynesian, which has some points. There's Marxist and other leftist flavours. There's "Modern Monetary Theory" which is in my opinion not entirely wrong, but much less important than its proponents seem to think--it just doesn't apply to very much and, even where it's relevant, makes less difference than it seems to.Quoting: Purple Library Guybig corporationsYes, I know where the money is coming from.
Quoting: CloversheenSocieties have always (and should continue to) fund culture and artsThat's fine and dandy when gold is money and thus limited. Not with fiat money, that's the root of the rot.
Then there's the kind of economics that thinks we should go back to the gold standard, AKA silly economics.
Quoting: Purple Library Guythere are various strains of economicsYes, and they're all frauds.
Quoting: Purple Library GuyThere's "Modern Monetary Theory" which is in my opinion not entirely wrongOh please.
Quoting: DorritThen inform us, oh great and wise one; how should an economic system work to be immune to the corrupting influences of reality?Quoting: Purple Library Guythere are various strains of economicsYes, and they're all frauds.
Quoting: Purple Library GuyThere's "Modern Monetary Theory" which is in my opinion not entirely wrongOh please.
Snark aside, this is not the place for discussing economic theory.
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