Additionally, you can’t choose what your character looks like. Granted, the unfairness is probably the point, as the corporation is basically made up of selfish Elites. But on the other hand, that’s unfair to you, since you’re trying to run a city and keep your job simultaneously. On one hand that’s understandable, as you’re working for a big corporation and they want more benefits coming their way. One thing I noticed is that seemingly every decision that benefits the Citizens makes the meter move towards Bad. Be careful, if one group gets in the red, you’re fired, whether you’ve completed the three weeks or not. ![]() Every request you say yes or no to affects all of them, whether negative or positive. There are five groups of people all vying for your attention: Elites, Citizens, Media, Security, and Syndicate. Ok lets you keep your job, while Bad gets you fired. If you finish on Good at the end of three weeks, you get promoted. A meter in the top left of your screen shows the impact of your decisions with three words: Bad, Ok, and Good. Swipe left for no and right for yes when a request card appears. There, the board members tell you if you still have a job or not based on your performance. You have three weeks of decision making to get through before attending a board meeting. Swipe left and right to (hopefully) make the right decisions and keep your job. Speak with residents from all walks of life and decide what to do based on their request cards. ![]() Hailing from T-Bull, InfiniteCorp: Cyberpunk Decision-Based Card Game puts the fate of a futuristic city in your hands. Welcome to your new job, where your decisions not only affect the people around you, but also if you stay hired.
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