Electoral Map Game
Direct answer: SEELE helps you create a fictional electoral map game with invented regions, state variables, and scenario outcomes without presenting real forecasts, fabricated results, or campaign targeting advice.
Use this page for map-based strategy prototypes, classroom simulations, and explanatory game loops. Keep maps fictional unless a human reviewer has a clear historical or educational basis.
Generate a fictional prototype See safe prompts
Map mechanics
Regions can change state through fictional variables and visible tradeoffs.
Scenario play
Outcomes teach uncertainty without claiming to forecast real elections.
Neutral review
Map labels, colors, and text should avoid partisan endorsements.
Distinct use cases for electoral map game
This page maps to one product job: generating a safe, fictional, reviewable prototype for this specific creator intent.
Map strategy games
Prototype region control, momentum, and uncertainty as a playable loop.
Civic education
Explain how maps simplify complex civic participation and why context matters.
Interactive explainers
Use fictional regions to teach uncertainty and official-source verification.
Design systems
Draft map cards, tooltips, legends, and result states before production art.
Workflow: from prompt to reviewed prototype
Keep the simulation fictional, document assumptions, and review every political claim before sharing.
Invent the map
Create region names, shapes, labels, and civic characteristics that do not mimic live contests.
Choose map variables
Use trust, engagement, issue clarity, uncertainty, and coalition health.
Define turns
Add actions such as forum, debate, public service response, and rumor correction.
Generate map feedback
Show why regions changed without presenting real polling or demographic claims.
Review political safety
Remove real forecasts, endorsements, targeting, suppression, and unsupported facts.
Prompt variants for electoral map game
Each prompt uses invented settings and avoids endorsements, targeted persuasion, suppression, real polling, fabricated results, and real voting instructions.
Fictional map loop
Build a 12-region map game with resource limits, uncertainty, and neutral feedback.
Classroom legend
Create a map legend that explains confidence, uncertainty, and fictional scenario states.
Debrief mode
Generate reflection questions about why maps can oversimplify real civic behavior.
Accessibility map
Write non-color-only labels and tooltips for a fictional electoral map prototype.
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Outputs SEELE can help draft
Treat every output as a prototype for human review, not a live political artifact.
Region table
Invented regions with variables, risks, and event hooks.
Map interaction plan
Clickable regions, state changes, legends, and tooltips.
Playable strategy prototype
A small map game for browser review.
Neutral debrief
Explanation of uncertainty and official-source boundaries.
Safety checklist
Review for real-world claims, persuasion, suppression, and accessibility.
Political safety and human-review boundary
Nonpartisan fictional simulations only. Do not create candidate endorsements, targeted persuasion, suppression content, real polling or forecast claims, fabricated real results, voting instructions, real-person impersonation, political deepfakes, or unsupported current facts. Users must verify real voting dates, eligibility, locations, procedures, and results through official election sources.
Best for
- Fictional civic games and classroom simulations.
- Interactive story, map, dashboard, and strategy prototypes.
- Human-reviewed educational and media-literacy drafts.
Still needs human review
- No forecast map: Do not use the output as a real electoral forecast or prediction.
- No real targeting: Avoid real voter segments, demographic manipulation, or campaign persuasion advice.
- Use official sources: Real election maps, results, and voting details must come from official or clearly cited sources.
- No false equivalence: Balance does not mean inventing unsupported facts about real groups or events.
FAQ
Visible FAQ answers match the FAQPage JSON-LD in the head.
Can I use a real U.S. map?
Prefer fictional maps for prototypes. Real maps require careful sourcing and human review.
Is this a forecast tool?
No. It creates fictional scenario games, not real election forecasts.
Can regions change color?
Yes, if colors represent fictional scenario state and are accessible without color alone.
What variables are safe?
Trust, engagement, uncertainty, issue clarity, and resource pressure work better than real voter data.
Can I include results?
Only fictional scenario outcomes. Do not fabricate real results.
Where should real map data come from?
Use official or clearly cited sources, and tell users to verify real voting details officially.
Create a safe fictional electoral map game prototype
Start with one prompt, keep the world invented, and review the output for neutrality, accuracy, accessibility, and official-source boundaries.
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