Rafael Lázaro · 2026-01-29T00:00:00.000Z

SimElection is a turn-based political simulation where you take control of a political party and face the entire road to election day.
Manage your strategy, respond to media pressure, survive televised debates, control your finances, and decide how far you are willing to go to win.
Every decision matters.
Every turn can change the course of the campaign.
In SimElection, players experience a full political term from the inside.
Unexpected news, uncomfortable interviews, rumors, internal tensions, negotiations, and major media events will shape the pace of the game.
Winning is not just about making promises. You must manage resources, protect your public image, control your party, and read the social climate to avoid losing support.

Take part in different types of elections:
General Elections
Regional Elections
Municipal Elections
Each election type has its own rules, rhythm, and consequences.
Vote counting unfolds progressively, territory by territory, recreating the tension of a real election night.
The game is played in turns, where you will:
Respond to political and media events
Manage your party headquarters
Deal with lobbies and pressure groups
Make key economic decisions
Face televised debates and interviews
Organize campaign events and final rallies
Nothing is ever completely safe — even good decisions can have unintended consequences.
You can play with existing parties or create your own party from scratch, defining:
Ideology
Political positioning
Territorial strategy
Communication profile
The system adapts to major parties, small movements, regionalist groups, and emerging political forces alike.

Turn-based political simulation
Full political party management
Dynamic events and campaign news
Interactive electoral debates
Interviews and media pressure
Economic and reputation systems
Territorial strategy with interactive maps
Progressive and realistic vote counting
Multiple election types
High replayability — every campaign is different
Management and strategy games
Political and social simulators
Decision-making with real consequences
Emergent narrative experiences