@Powster: See the thing is, until you start interacting, that really is all there is to the game. While it's a benefit for some with busy lives that cannot continuously sustain high levels of activity needed for a lot of interactive browser based RPG's, it turns off a lot of powers.
Once you become immersed in a community however (And doing so is easy in a small country such as Singapore), you begin to see the larger dynamics at play. The thing that makes politics so amazing in this game is that the players actually care for the well-being of the country, and by extension, care who's running things. By interacting with these players, you can find the more enjoyable part of the game not linked just to the mechanics.
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