I doubt anyone can help me with these, but fuck it.
There was a pc game that had you play as a historian. You were hired by a politician to do historical research. The historical research always had to do with the population of different tribes at different locations. You would have the results presented to you (IE 300 years ago there were x of group a & b at location 1, 2 and 3, and there are x amount after 300 years at each location. You basicly had to make sense of the data by supplying reasons such as migration and events of mass death like famine or disease. I think it kinda looked like hidden agenda. Monochrome, or maybe 8bit. I think I remember it being greenish.
In hindsight, and without having finished that game, I think the topic was historical revisionism and I think the politician that was also your tutorial guy was using you to justify either genocide or at the very least, conquering land by using you to rewrite history.
HELP ME FIND THAT HISTORY GAME
Hidden agenda - monochrome
Hidden agenda is a game I would recommend. The game starts with you being the new dictator of chimerica, a central american country that is a mishmash of several real life countries (a chimera, duh). The liberation was done by a defecting general of the old dictator and leftist rebels. They form the basis of your army, on the one hand left-wing rebels that want socialism and close ties to USSR, on the other hand, right-wing war criminals that want close ties to the US.
This should tell you that, yes, the game has left-wing bias. But though it has that, there are still numerous interesting state-business side things you have to solve. If you choose a side between the two (US / USSR) (generals / rebels), then the other becomes your enemy. It can be good to postpone and try to work things out for a while.
If you immediately go full socialism, you get economic problem after economic problem, not to mention a series of US sabotages, most of which are based on events that did happen. If you go full capitalism and create mostly export crops, you'll be able to raise your countries health care and education considerably, but the people that helped fight to put you on top will be angry because there are still poor people starving because food is expensive for them (compared to producing food). There are a lot of subtle systems at play. You do most of your work through ministers, but sometimes ministers are trying to get you to fail and sometimes they'll try and commit a coup.
The best part is that the game starts with a series of questions from journalists where you set out your goals. Then at the end you get a detailed analysis of how closely you achieved those goals.
Sometimes you'll have turned the country into a democracy, got voted out, turns out that force was used in getting people to vote and the new person in power immediately begins to reverse everything you did. Other times you get re-elected.
It's a very interesting game and I take it out for a whirl once in a while.