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'''SimHealth''', released by [[Maxis]] in [[1994]], is a simulation of the U.S. healthcare system. Produced with assistance from the Markle Foundation, it is virtually unknown and difficult to find. | '''SimHealth''', released by [[Maxis]] in [[1994]], is a simulation of the U.S. healthcare system. Produced with assistance from the Markle Foundation, it is virtually unknown and difficult to find. | ||
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An incredibly complex simulation, it was generally regarded as difficult and dry. Armed with none of the tongue-in-cheek humor famous for Maxis games, the only real link to the franchise was the [[SimCity 2000]]-inspired user interface. Some also claimed that the game was unfairly biased towards more liberal healthcare programs. It was produced only for [[MS-DOS]], and is almost impossible to locate on the market today, let alone play on a modern operating system. | An incredibly complex simulation, it was generally regarded as difficult and dry. Armed with none of the tongue-in-cheek humor famous for Maxis games, the only real link to the franchise was the [[SimCity 2000]]-inspired user interface. Some also claimed that the game was unfairly biased towards more liberal healthcare programs. It was produced only for [[MS-DOS]], and is almost impossible to locate on the market today, let alone play on a modern operating system. | ||
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[[Category:Thinking Tools]] | [[Category:Thinking Tools]] |
Revision as of 15:33, 24 October 2007
SimHealth, released by Maxis in 1994, is a simulation of the U.S. healthcare system. Produced with assistance from the Markle Foundation, it is virtually unknown and difficult to find.
Template:Continue Nav An incredibly complex simulation, it was generally regarded as difficult and dry. Armed with none of the tongue-in-cheek humor famous for Maxis games, the only real link to the franchise was the SimCity 2000-inspired user interface. Some also claimed that the game was unfairly biased towards more liberal healthcare programs. It was produced only for MS-DOS, and is almost impossible to locate on the market today, let alone play on a modern operating system.