Battle For The Hill

Battle for the Hill is a free to play browser-website election and political simulator. You play as an American politician, fighting to be elected to office and shape the country with policy and legislation.

BFTH isn't just a game – it’s a sandbox for aspiring leaders, political enthusiasts, and anyone who loves the thrill of competition. Whether you’re crafting an airtight policy agenda, lobbying for public support, or surviving scandal, every decision has consequences.

Are you ready to take on the challenge and lead your nation to glory? The hill is yours to conquer – if you can handle the pressure.

Create a character with your political positions, gender, race, religion, and sexual orientation, and prepare to run for office!

Choose between the parties available & fight for your values. The choice is yours.

Choose your alliances carefully and work to defeat your ideological opponents in the primary election to become your parties nominee.

Run for congressional seats, senate seats, and governorships. They are all up for grabs in Battle For The Hill. As well as, of course, the Presidency.

Write a bill. Debate in congress. Whip the votes. Move the US law in a direction you were paid to do so.

Create bipartisan voting bloc's and represent your constituents well, and effect actual change!

Work your way up through the party ranks, and take the helm of one of America's major parties.

Compete in your party's primary, run in the general, and become the next President of the United States.

Forge your path, climb the ladder to become one of the greatest politicians in history. Stick with the status quo or throw out the rules. Serve your constituents or put your own goals first. Fight for what you believe in or fight for power. The choice is yours, but can you survive the battle for the hill?

Reviews

“Battle for the hill is a great game to get immersed in, from the multi-party system to the bill creation, no matter where you are on the political spectrum you are on there is a party for you. From right wing maga loving gop to far left socialists, you pick a side and go for the throat. Each party has their own discord so you can make friends or enemies or even frenemies. The election system is nice, raising stats, entering primaries, seeing how far you can go to win an election, the outcome is always fascinating. You can run attack ads, campaign for your colleges, change your states positions if you are elected governor, they even have gerrymandering if that is your thing. If you want to experience an exciting yet sometimes frustrating political simulation game battle for the hill is one you should try out. Will you be next? This ad review is brought to you by Yuri, join the socialist today!”
Yuri Cleary

“Battle for the Hill is a video game which is everything BUT a video game. It's a crash course on the real world via the most relevant topic in our lives: Our Government. Much like our real governments, disagreement and depression are the two things that come to mind first. However BFTH manages to circumvent reality and produce a sense of community among "politicians," causing us to think critically about issues we normally would have a safe answer for. In Battle for the Hill, unlike most simulations, the reality of "consequences" heralds players to doom or success. Resource management in cash or having to actually manage a group of people...your actions can have severe repercussions on hundreds of people and they develop situations you have to respond to. In BFTH you can be a Senator, Governor, Congress person, Party political figure such as Chair, President, SCOTUS, Cabinet, and else. There's always room for opportunity and a broom for the inactive; to be replaced by you...potentially vibrant and ambitious enough to make it to the top. BFTH isn't fun because it's a video game. It's entertaining because it's a community; Since the game has negative and positive implications for your behavior, your actions, and your decisions... BFTH becomes a real simulation. There is no total failure, but no total victory either. Everything is a perspective, and if you enjoy the realism of a world which makes you contemplate and consider the consequentialism of a "world," You'll learn more about politics here than you would from an 80 year old socialist professor at Harvard.”
James Ernest