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Germany: Telekom (Data), Bosch (Robot Parts), Merck (chemicals, drugs), BILD (News, Fakenews Prestige good), BASF (Chemicals, fertilizer), Mercedes or BMW (Prestige Car)
France: Ubisoft (Prestige Game: Open World game)
Qatar / UAE: Baladna (Food industry and Farming)
USA: Microsoft (Software, Datacenter, Games, Prestige Good Xbox)
Italy: Ferrari, Lamborghini (Automotives)
Korea: Hyundai (Automotives)
Japan: Square Enix (Software, Games), Shueisha (Publishing, the prestige good of this company can be mangas), Toei Animation (Filming, TV, entertainment, etc) Studio Ghibli (Same as Toei, though i'm not sure in which category these 2 last companies belong)
USA: Blizzard Entertainment (Software, Games)
Take in mind that some of these companies are subsidiaries of other companies, you decide whether you want the parent company or the subsidary
prestige goods: Nvidia software - variant of software,
source: https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/software/
Nvidia GPUs - variant of processors
Nvidia DGX Spark - variant of computers,
source: https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/products/workstations/dgx-spark/
Industry charters: Data centers, Electronics industries, Offices, Robotics Industries (nvidia isn't actually super active in these sectors but they are likely fictional expansion candidates)
Prosperity bonuses: I think it would be interesting here to add a significant electricity input malus to model the cost of the AI boom, and output bonuses for software, data centers and offices
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Home appliance:
Midea → China / Eastern Guangdong: one of the biggest home appliance producers in the world.
BSH Hausgeräte → Germany / Bavaria: one of the biggest home appliance producers in the world.
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Chemical / fertilizer / pharma
BASF → Should buff the petrochemical industry instead of giving innovation and a small fertilizer buff instead of oil extracation, because it is one of the biggest producers in these fields and one of the biggest chemical company in the world. They also don’t do anything innovative in my opinion. The supported industry should also be the industrial building where you can produce dye; at the moment it’s the cosmetic industry. It would be much closer to reality if the German aniline come from an industrial building instead of dye plantations.)
Bayer → Germany / North Rhine (should buff the fertilizer industry and give a small buff to pharma or something else): a very large mixed producer of agricultural and pharmaceutical products.
Nutrien Ltd. → Canada / Saskatchewan: the biggest fertilizer producer in the world.
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Gas production:
Gas refining (if you consider adding a gas refining industry in the future, they could buff this. In my opinion, it’s a must-have, because gas is much more than just the thing that comes out of the ground. You did it for oil, so maybe you could give gas similar processes :) ).
Air Liquide → France / Île-de-France
Linde → Ireland / Leinster or Germany / Bavaria (was a German company until 2016, now located in Ireland after a merger with Praxair, USA).
Air Products → USA / Pennsylvania
These are the top three in the industrial gas sector.
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Explosives industry:
Orica Ltd. → Australia / Victoria
Dyno Nobel → USA / Utah; Sweden / Svealand (was a Swedish company until 2000, now located in the USA after a merger with Neste Chemicals, Finland).
MAXAM → Spain / Toledo
These are the top three in the explosives industry sector.
Italy: Lamborghini, Alfa Romeo (Automobiles)
Japan: Square Enix (Software, games), Nissan (Automobiles)
USA: Blizzard Entertainment (Software, games), Chrysler (Automobiles)
India: Tata Motors (Tata Group is the parent company...i think)
UK: Aston Martin (Automobiles)
I feel that the current mechanics limit companies too much to very specific sectors. There are interesting combinations that can occur to shape a country's economy, which many countries can't aspire to because they only have access to generic companies.
Irl a company would inevitably form