Hey /g/ are there any simulations / video games to teach my son about economics, strategic resource allocation, and thinking outside the box.
>>58944978
Starcraft
>>58944978
Nice Soon you will have another authist in your family
>>58944978
chess
no other strategy game ever beats it or comes close to it.
civilization series is also good for the things you ask
>>58944978
factorio
dwarf fortress
hearts of iron 1-3
>hearts of iron 1-3
This and other grand strategy games
>>>/vg/gsg
>>58944978
why are you asking the technology board about advice on video games related to economics?
>>58945121
Yeah Vicky 2 would be good
>>58944978
Team Fortress 2. It's simple to get rich but also to lose all your ref.
Get him a single key on the market and tell him to trade his way up to an unusual.
>>58945670
>tfw went from weapons to unusual without ever putting money in beyond The Orange Box
>tfw the game itself is no longer any fun at all
>>58944978
The third is more "abstract" than the fourth.
>>58944978
sim city 4 requires you to resource manage and budget a city so it can grow
but until they're a certain age, they probably won't care if they play it properly or not
>>58945010
/thread
>>58944978
Civ 3-5
chess
Minecraft
Vicky 2
sim city 4
>>58944978
The Ultimate Doom. It features a very realistic economic system where you trade shotgun cells for bloody imps. It also teaches you that if you waste your most powerful resources, you become bloody yourself, so be sure to save up. You often wander around in box-like environments, but if you spam enough walls you might find one that opens and allows you to get out by thinking about being outside the box!
>>58944978
Let a, b, c = 1, 2, 3.
a2 + b2 = 5
c2 = 9
They're not equal (a2 + b2 ≠ c2).
>>58947685
>>58947745
OP stated restrictions on x, y being members of a Hilbert space in the third example.
He stated no restrictions on a, b, c in the first example so I'm assuming it should hold for all real numbers.