You can determine how your group make decisions: you can have your movement be autocratic, meaning you conduct actions faster, or you can have it be consensus-democratic, meaning that your group is more motivated to do what you tell them to do. ![]() People may be more willing to join your cause because you compromised on your political platform. Despots can either be pragmatic people willing to compromise, or crazy kleptocrats. (One thing I do like though is the details. The premise of the might be interesting, but I never really got the hang of the gameplay. In this game, violence is bad, bad, bad, because you're not skilled enough to do it properly, and the government will use any excuse they can get to suppress your cause.so a major part of the game is trying to disciplined your movement and prevent them from going out of control and wrecking stuff. It's supposed to "train" people into becoming nonviolent revolutionaries, and some of the funding of this game comes from the United States. Had this heroic stand by the 300 Spartans never occurred, Western Civilization would not have flourished as we know it today.I have a copy of "A Force More Powerful", which is essentially a "non-violent regime change" simulator. Then on the 3rd day of the battle, when he found out he was being surrounded, he sent most of his troops away and covered their retreat with a last stand because, again, Spartans never retreated. The legend passed down is that Leonidas went to Thermopylae with a picked band of 300 Spartans to defend the narrow pass with units from other Greek cities. ![]() Or is it? But, putting aside the myths and legends surrounding the 300 Spartans, this documentary, which involves the most accurate, real-life ancient battle scenes ever filmed, takes a detailed look at The Battle of Thermopylae in 480 BC, leading to the last stand of the 300 Spartans, other Greeks and the Great Spartan King, Leonidas. This program is visually stunning with breathtaking dramatisations and graphics helping to bring the true story of the Spartans last stand to life and tell the real story behind what happened at the pass at Thermopylae, which is still used in military academies and by tactitians around the world today. Against impossible odds, the Spartans held the narrow pass, inflicting shocking casualty numbers on the Persians untill every last Spartan was slain. For seven days the King of Sparta Leonidas accompanied by just 300 Spartan warriors and a number of Greek regulars held off the Persian army at the pass of Thermopylae, so that the Greek army would have time to mobilise. But what awaited them was not to be anticipated. ![]() This is the real story of the most famous last stand in history.Īt the height of the Persian-Greek war, Xerxes, King of Persia, intent on conquering all of Greece, led his mighty army into battle. This spectacular two hour documentary tells the amazing true story of the 300 Spartan warriors who so selflessly defended their country against the mighty Persian army, estimated at being a million strong for almost 7 days. Discover what happened at the bloody Battle of Thermopylae. In 480BC, the Greek army, led by 300 Spartan warriors, awaited the onslaught of the Persian Empire's war machine.
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