Overview of Tropico 3. "Revolution as a National Sport"

content auto translated from {from}

It’s hard to find a more meditative genre than city-building simulator. Soft music plays in the background, little houses grow, and the residents smile at the screen. Occasionally, there might be a hurricane causing trouble, and pensioners grumble about high taxes, but soon everyone is smiling again... However, after Tropico 3, it’s hard to just doze off and enjoy the lovely view of a thriving town. The soul craves revolution! Change! Freedom! I’m fed up living in this hole, Viva la Revolution! Where's Che?! We need him on the barricades. Call Fidel, we can't manage without him! So, what are you staring at? Don’t understand anything? Then here’s a crash course for you, and then straight to the islands, we need more revolutionaries there. And the first lesson is — learn to shout Viva la Revolution. Come on, syllable by syllable: vi-va...

In the game, you won’t be creating revolutions; the coups have already happened before us. We arrive with everything ready for us. Except for one exception: this