We've had politicians playing Civilization in (Swedish?) parliament, and now there's more from Brad DeLong:
Another doctor of economics, Bryan Caplan, follows up:
How soon before we have first head of state admitting he used to play Civ?
I would certainly agree that lottery tickets are a very low-quality diversion, and that the computer game Civilization packs at least fifty times the diversion-per-buck of a scratch lottery ticket. (Indeed, I find it so powerful and diverting that I have no copies: There was a time when I had to decide whether to be a Civilization addict or an economics professor.]) But I don't want to get onto the moralist's slippery slope any more than Greg Mankiw wants to get onto the regulator's slippery slope.
Another doctor of economics, Bryan Caplan, follows up:
I've played for hundreds of hours, mostly during my first year of graduate school.
P.S. If you've got an early version of Civilization II, I wrote some fun scenarios for it, including a version of World War II where Hitler and Stalin begin as allies, and - for readers with cast-iron stomachs - a horrifying take on World War III...
How soon before we have first head of state admitting he used to play Civ?
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