Portugal

Portugal is a southern European country on the Iberian Peninsula, bordering Spain. Its location on the Atlantic Ocean has influenced many aspects of its culture: salt cod and grilled sardines are national dishes, the Algarve's beaches are a major destination and much of the nation’s architecture dates to the 1500s–1800s, when Portugal had a powerful maritime empire.

Overview
Portugal is the showcase of what would megacorps do if they controlled the world, and the worst of it is that it is not totally bad. There is no Portuguese government as such. Rather half a dozen corporations (Arasaka, Amazonian Service and Security, WNS, Iberian Agrolndustrials, Metropolitan Merchant Finance and Oliveira-Leisure) control the country. The EC allows it because the specific weight of Portugal in Europe is insignificant and the balance is not affected.

In Portugal life is serene and quiet The "Government!' subsidizes almost everything, from food to television, and all you have to do is to carry out your job, assigned according to your qualifications profile, intended to be manageable. The EC charter forces Portugal borders to be open without restrictions for any community products, but it is difficult to sell something if the shops will not accept it, and the advertisement bubble of WNS does not cover it It is the biggest experiment with a captive market in history.

And the market is steadily growing. The serene and calm atmosphere Arasaka strives so hard to achieve (and woe to anybody who interferes with it, as his family will never recover his body) attracts the third age tourism, as they value quiet over freedom, and many corporate tourists too. The death of the Mediterranean tourism industry has been an added plus, so now the European pensioners flock to the dear beaches and orderly urbanization in the country.

Any rebel against the system will be "reeducated" to purge any antisocial behavior. The fact that those who survive reeducation suffer physical and psychological problems is a small price to pay for the common good. Not all Portuguese people have folded to the corporates. The most daring operate from Spain, using pirate stations to interfere with official channels or smuggling restricted material. Many joined Europa Sur, and most have simply traveled to other EC countries, enjoying the rights of European citizens. From 201 0 to 201 8 almost a million people left the country. There are Portuguese areas in most cities, and hundreds of small eurocrats (without the political clout to reach the high positions, but supporting each other) are beginning to prepare EC intervention in the country.

Lisbon
The touristic emphasis of the new Portuguese government has made Lisbon a showcase of the regime, turning it into a beautiful city, but a dead one, with no life of its own. Great measures have been taken, including building giant dykes to avoid the flooding that affects so many coastal cities. .

Combra
The only city with some flavor left A university city and a hotbed of opposition, frequently rocked by street riots. Part of the disagreement between the two corporate blocks that run the country is in the matter of closing or not the university. Arasaka, of course, is pro closing.

Reference
RAMOS, J. Eurosource Plus. 1st ed. Berkeley CA: R. Talsorian Games, 1995

Portugal