nullspace

nullspace

Joined Member # 668637
6 Posts 11 Replies 2,373 Reputation

The closest you can come to that right now is to do "Fantasy Play" and use the world settings to simulate the conditions during the election, this changes what issues are important. You can unlock or edit in the candidates you want, but you'll be stuck with the 2004 US map, or a totally randomized map. Historical campaigns would be cool, but they'd require some changes. Depending on what time-period you're in, you might have to get rid of

1 Replies 2,976 Views

You can't start them yourself, but every once in a while, two TV cameras will appear on the map. Just go to the state that has your camera (blue for democrat and red for republican), and you'll be given the option of going on the show.

7 Replies 6,343 Views

I just tried it out, and it is super-easy to edit the candidate data and give your guy above 10 in every category. I'd call that cheating because the way it's supposed to work in the game is that you only have 75 points to spread among the 14 traits. Anyway, the questions in my first post still stand, and I've got another one: How exactly do the running mate's stats add to your candidate's?

4 Replies 6,694 Views

When I first started playing campaign mode, I picked Al Gore because he seemed to have some fairly good stats: good intelligence and nothing very low except for charisma (also, I think his caricature is hilarious). But I found myself having a really hard time getting past the middle republican candidates, and decided I'd try the campaign again as a custom republican. I tried to figure out what the most importatant traits are, so I could make the bes

4 Replies 6,694 Views

I played a fantasy election and messed with the world settings and randomized everything. When I went back to playing campaign mode, all those settings carried over, so I had randomized state populations, unusual issues, etc. Is this supposed to happen? I guess this is a nice feature, to add variety to the campaign. But didn't realize you could do it, and I've already played all the way through the campaign as a republican. If this is a feature,

1 Replies 4,756 Views

Left-click on them when they appear on the left side of the screen, then right-click where you want to place them. It shouldn't be difficult unless there's some bug I don't know about.

1 Replies 3,204 Views

You can't change the difficulty in campaign mode. The first opponents are on the easy difficulties, and the later opponents are harder. So it should just get harder as you advance though the campaign. Winning the whole thing would't be much of an accomplishment if you could set the best candidates to the easiest difficulties.

2 Replies 4,591 Views

Newspaper ads are the most cost-effective type of ad, if they run for a long time. They're useful if you put them in a battleground state very early in the campaign. TV ads are very expensive, but they give you a big up-front boost, and a boost across the whole country. But after the initial boost, they are expensive to maintain and only help their own state. They're bestl later in the campaign. You really want to use them with a webmast

61 Replies 47,668 Views

As far as I can tell, speeches do almost the exact same thing as advertisements. Speeches cost no money, but lots of stamina, and they othey give you a one-time boost. Ads cost money up front and cost over time, but in thelong run they have greater effect. They're almost always a better use of your stamina. Speeches seem to increase the importance of an issue more than ads. The only times I use speeches are at the beginning of the campaign

8 Replies 9,100 Views