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The strongest move against Moloch is to stop racing and start building outside the destructive system.
The strongest move against Moloch is to stop racing and start building outside the destructive system.


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Latest revision as of 08:35, 22 June 2026

Moloch Game/Game Play

Type Core Diagnostic Game
Category Core Diagnostic
Description Helps identify the subtle ways people and systems exert control through guilt, obligation, and false moral authority.
Status Permanent Beta

Module Contents


Sovereign Games Navigation

Moloch Game/Game Play – Quick Reference Guide

This is the fast, practical cheat sheet for recognizing and responding to the Moloch Game in real time.

Objective of the Game

Compete in a system where rational self-interest leads to collectively destructive outcomes. Everyone tries to survive or win individually, but the group as a whole races toward ruin.

How to Spot It Quickly

  • A situation where “everyone has to do it” even though it harms everyone long-term.
  • A race to the bottom (cheaper, faster, more extreme, more immoral).
  • People saying “I hate this, but I have no choice” while participating.
  • Collective action that no individual would choose in isolation.
  • Incentives that punish cooperation and reward defection.
  • Slave Owner Corruption: Individuals or groups who *intentionally exploit* the Moloch dynamic for personal gain — pushing the race to the bottom further because they profit from the chaos, dependency, or destruction it creates.

Common Moves / Dynamics

1. Tragedy of the Commons — Everyone takes more than they should because “if I don’t, someone else will.”

2. Arms Race — “We all have to escalate because the other side is escalating.”

3. Status Competition — Everyone signals harder (virtue, consumption, extremism) because moderate behavior loses status.

4. Institutional Capture — Good people implement bad policies because refusing would mean career suicide.

5. Negative-Sum Coordination — Short-term individual gain creates long-term group loss.

Winning Conditions (For the Player)

Short-term: Survive or gain advantage in the current system. Long-term: Almost everyone loses — including the “winners” — as the system collapses or becomes dystopian.

Critical Warning: It Corrupts Everyone

  • Even good people become participants.
  • The game rewards the most ruthless and punishes the principled.
  • Over time, it selects for sociopathic traits and destroys high-trust culture.
  • The players often don’t realize they are trapped until it’s too late.

How to Refuse & Counter (Sovereign Moves)

“Moloch doesn’t require evil — only misaligned incentives and short time horizons.”

— Sovereign Games Framework

Name the Game
“This is a Moloch dynamic.”
Refuse
Refuse to participate in the race to the bottom when possible.
Build
Build Parallel Institutions Game that operate on better incentives.
Realign
Use Skin in the Game and Results & Consequences to realign incentives.
Coordinate
Coordinate with other high-agency people to create positive-sum alternatives.
Protect
Practice Sovereign Immunity so you are less vulnerable to systemic pressure.

Quick Immunity Tips

Ask Yourself
“Would I choose this if everyone wasn’t forced to play?”
Default to
Long-term thinking (Time Horizon Game).
Prioritize
Building over competing in broken systems.

See the Game. Refuse the Game. Build Better.

The strongest move against Moloch is to stop racing and start building outside the destructive system.