
Here you can also see the economic disparity that exists in a capitalist society. In Prussia, the tooling workshops are run by German protestant capitalists, 600 of them, who also have 1,400 dependents-all of whom can be affected by your tweaking. So instead of looking at every individual tooling workshop, you get an overview of the lot of them. Like pops, businesses are grouped together. "You are providing job opportunities for your population and taxing the economy to get your income." "So you're not, as a country, making money directly," says Andersson. It still means you want to make sure they're all ticking along nicely, of course, because effective businesses can, in theory, pay higher wages, which you can then get a piece of downstream. Instead, you'll be relying on various taxes, depending on your economic system. "The pops are the atoms of this simulation." Mikael Andersson, lead designerīusinesses will be crucial to an industrialised economy, but you won't be making cold, hard cash from them most of the time. Your economic system, naturally, opens and closes a lot of doors when it comes to earning you dosh. Communist countries, meanwhile, aren't that into private property, so the businesses will be state owned, giving you more direct control. If you're in a liberal democracy, you'll see a lot of privately owned businesses that will be managed by their owners. Your government and policies will also have a big impact on these buildings, too. Paradox describes Victoria 3 as a management game, and like a lot of management games you can expect to be up to your neck in buildings, which will in turn affect your economy, your capacity for trade and a whole host of other things. As ever, clicking on one thing takes you down the rabbit hole, making you dig deeper and deeper to find a solution to your problem, and at the same time revealing just how interconnected everything is. In this case, then, making changes that pleases monarchists will also create more support amongst the capitalists. In the hands-off demo we're watching Prussia, where the head of the capitalists is very much pro-royal, and these leaders exert a great deal of influence over their block. A lot of capitalists are industrialists, naturally, who generally like low wages and screwing over pensioners, but others might be devoutly religious or staunch monarchists as well. There are also a variety of interest groups with different ideologies that people can belong to, beyond their pop designation. But capitalists are not a homogenous group.

Just looking at their page reveals information about their literacy, how radical they are and how loyal they are, giving you an overview of how they're getting on. Maybe you've ruined the economy, and now you need to make the angry capitalists happy again.
