Talk:Terra Nullius (Map Game)/@comment-32023146-20190503063440/@comment-31417419-20190503093113

Just fine.

The United States lives on, although facing a Californian secessionist crisis in the area San Francisco and south. It has become one of the last remaining consumer markets in the Western Hemisphere to retain a general status since the virus, although its naval power can no longer be properly projected into the Pacific, with military bases mostly moved to Seattle, Hawaii and Guam. Out of fun, new states include Puerto Rico, Guam, and Jefferson (Oregon and Northern California).

The Federation of Southern Africa is one of the newest states in the world. With South Africa being one of the nations to first eliminate the virus in Africa, it charged North to occupy collapsing states on the verge of their own civil wars thanks to instability. It is currently in the middle of a massive population boom, and its economy is going with it. It leads the East African Economic Zone.

The Swiss got off just a bit worse. Nothing too bad, but they've lost their ability to be neutral, now in the European Union.

Sweden was one of several states that was never truly affected by the virus, with their climate preventing the virus from spreading further than in its earliest days. As such, it now leads the Nordic-Danish Coalition, a military alliance dedicated to protecting Scandinavian interests across the world. It is separate but works in tandem with NATO (now WETO).

Algeria might as well be treated as a defunct nation. The country completely collapsed into sectarian violence, with Tunisia, Morocco and Libya currently pursuing individual interests in the region, one of the last places with the virus. It is at extreme risk of becoming home to a new Dark Zone.

Saudi Arabia has been severely crippled. With its neighbour, Iran, coming out on the world stage as an American ally following the viral infection, and the decline of its economic and military ventures, the country is in destitution, and currently in the middle of a major leadership crisis.