An Atlas Shrugged video game?
In this month's issue of Reason Magazine, the cover story deals with America's addiction to video games, including more adults than ever. The most intriguing item in the story was about how an economics professor had been hired by a video game company, and the former economics professor illustrated how these multiplayer gaming environments are outstanding models of microsocieties. As several of us are talking about putting together a physical Atlantis, perhaps we could simulate the Gulch as a video game as a "dry run" before actually building Atlantis. Moreover, could you imagine the number of teenagers who would line up to watch Who is John Galt? if the video game were released just before the movie?
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Or you could play "classes" based on the characters in the book. You could be an industrialist, like rearden, or a miner like danagger or d'anconia (more accurately, a "resource aquisition expert", someone who harvests raw materials), or you could be a transportation tycoon, or a scientist (Stadler or Daniels style, your choice), or you could be a political operative, like Mouch,
"Money is the material shape of the principle that men who wish to deal with one another must deal by trade and give value for value."
"“When you accept money in payment for your effort, you do so only on the conviction that you will exchange it for the product of the effort of others."
"Those pieces of paper, which should have been gold, are a token of honor–your claim upon the energy of the men who produce."
They don't need money because they trade value for value... and anybody who tries to mooch or loot gets shut out of the system til his only options are starvation or suicide.
Kind of like playing Thermal Nuclear War (In the movie War Games.)
That people play video games too much is a different, but important, subject than the one I was talking about.
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