I’ve decided to start a new little mini-series here where I talk about games that I really love and try to explain why they work for me and (maybe) give some attention to titles that I think deserve more love.
One of these is definitely Suzerain which is by no means unknown but, I feel, is probably more niche. So what is this game and why do I love it?

Suzerain is a 2020 political simulator from German publisher Torpor Games, available on Nintendo Switch, Mac, Android, iOS and Windows. You play Anton Rayne, the fourth president of the fictional nation of Sordland in the equally fictional continent of Merkopa. After a choose-your-own-way recounting of your early life which functions as a character creation session you get to choose Anton’s socio-economic and political background. The game takes you from his election to president to the end of his first term, with you facing various political crises and scandals while you try to shape the country to your own political ideology.
Suzerain teaches you very, very quickly that politics is hard, messy and often deeply morally compromised. On my first play through I just tried to rule according to my conscience, funding health and education, avoiding military conflicts, pouring money into welfare, trying to reform the constitution and advancing the rights of women and ethnic minorities.
President Rayne’s first term ended with him strapped into an electric chair and the bastards didn’t even wet the sponge.
That said, the lesson is not that you should just give up. It’s that you need to be smarter, make compromises, be occasionally ruthless and make peace with the fact that you can feel good about yourself or help the country, but rarely both at the same time.
The game’s other great strength is in its world-building. Every country, political party and individual has a rich and detailed backstory and the game balances being different enough from our own world while still being recognisable enough for us to relate to. For example, you will frequently hear the word “communism” but never “Marxism” or “Leninism” because while communism arose in this world, neither Marx or Lenin existed.
Some nations and institutions in the game have close paralells to our own world. Arcasia is a capitalist superpower and the founding member of the military alliance A.T.O. which stands in opposition to the communist superpower United Contana. All pretty straightforward, and if you just want to think of them as the own-brand USA, Nato and USSR that’s a perfectly decent schema for understanding them and their relationships. But, dig into their history and you will find many ways in which they differ from their real world counterparts. Complicating matters is G.R.A.C.E., a third superpower that espouses neither capitalism or communism but monarchy, which is a fascinating addition.
Sordland itself, while bearing some obvious similarities to real world Turkey, feels like a real, unique nation and has its own native political doctrine; Sollism, a socially conservative but economically progressive politics propounded by the nation’s former quasi-dictator who you can choose to embrace or try to break free of.
This makes for a political universe that busts open simple left-right binaries and chooses nuance and complexity over pat, reassuring answers, aided by a fantastic cast of rich characters who refuse to conform to simple stereotype. Your defence minister might be a xenophobic bully, but he’ll be defending your family with a gun in each hand if an enemy army takes the capital. You may agree with your education minister on just about every point, but find her so personally obnoxious you almost want her to fail out of pure spite.

Be warned, this is a game you play with the novel-reading part of your brain. Most of the time your screen will look like this:

This is a densely text heavy game, with the total word count being greater than Lord of the Rings. Now, that’s not to say that you need to read all of it (and, indeed, it’s impossible to do so on any one given playthrough) but be warned, this game will expect you to pay attention.
If you do though? Suzerain’s modest, text heavy visuals can offer some of the greatest emotional highs and lows I have ever experienced in gaming. Watching your constitutional amendment go down because you lost by one vote? Heartbreaking. Soul destroying.
On the other hand, on one play-through I ran as a staunchly pro-Blud president (the Bluds being an ethnic minority who’ve been having a pretty shitty time for most of Sordland’s history). I vetoed every piece of anti-Blud legislation, I granted them greater autonomy, I protected them from the absolute racist dickhole governor who’d been running their region and I was bleeding votes because of it.
But then I call my teenage son and he tells me he has a girlfriend (my in game son I mean, my actual son is more into dinosaurs than girls) and he says that she’s Bludish.
“Oh, and her family? They love you.”
And, I swear to God, I had a grin on my face for the rest of the day.
Nice, love games with a good narrative. Never played this one, but I’ll definitely take a look at it.
Love you doing game reviews, feels like a great fit for the blog, can’t wait for more.
Thanks Lupin!
Never heard of this, but now I have to check it out. Political simulation games that aren’t based around warfare are something of a rarity.
Though I do have to ask, was there ever a moment that you decided to throw away all rationality and did a full dictator run?
I don’t do villain runs as a general rule, I just don’t find them satisfying. In a game like this, the idea of hours and hours of characters I love being appalled and disappointed at me feels like the opposite of fun.
That said, during my last run my constitutional amendment failed and failed HARD. The progressive opposition party leader who I’d been working hard to win over (and whose links to foreign powers I’d overlooked) betrayed me and then publicly blamed me for the motion failing. I was also betrayed by the conservative speaker of my own party. The new constitution would have curtailed my powers as president and in that moment I was SORELY tempted to show them why they should have done that while they had the chance. But by then it was too late. The choices I would have needed to make for a dictator run (like funnelling money into Law and Justice to create a secret police force) were in the rearview mirror by that point. The most revenge I could get was laughing in the speaker’s face when she asked to become my vice president.
It’s not a game where you can just snap your fingers and say “I’m a dictator now” and everyone goes along with it. You have to work within the system. That’s why you can’t make Sordland communist. Communists don’t get elected and then peacefully dismantle the system. They come to power in a bloody revolution or not at all. Even if your Anton Rayne is a full blown communist, the centre-right Sollist party he leads absolutely isn’t and you can’t have communism without a communist party. Rayne’s just one man and four years isn’t long enough to enact that kind of radical structural change.
Wow, your own party opposed amendments that would curtail presidential powers? That would make me anxious about what would happen after leaving office.
Your description of his execution reminded me of the Campaign Trail (also a text heavy game, but not this much). If you actually try to impose modern values on historic elections you are getting crushed, so you must compromise to win.
Careful Mouse, remember that your trial for the Abominable Crime of xenophilia must be held in a Court of Law judged by Claude Frollo HERO OF THE IMPERIUM (Truly a minister who understands the importance of applying the Cleansing Fires of HOLY TERRA to hideous mockeries of the human form AND the inconveniently-sexy alike on an elemental level).
<SIGHS>
It’s been far too long since I crushed the mis-shaped skulls and the false, fleeting hopes of Humanity’s foes under my armoured feet – it’s been a while since I played videogames on the regular, but mostly they were ASSASSIN’S CREED, ARKHAM, RED DEAD REDEMPTION, UNCHARTED and suchlike (So my body count is sadly measured in human lives).
…
On an actually-serious note, this SUZERAIN game sounds quite interesting, but the immortal line “I was elected to LEAD, not to read” occurs to me: I admit that my own taste in videogames tends towards the escapist, though I’m looking forward to learning more about yours.
Oh, the guy who replaced me was just to the right of Atilla the Hun.
Just downloaded it there for the Switch. Got it for a fiver! I’m enjoying this more than I expected. So far, my guiding mantra is “what would Jesus do”?
Crucifixion Impending…
There are worse ways to go!
Pretty sure there isn’t. I think that was the point.