A disgruntled citizen is a drone, shown as red in the base menu, instead of their usual image. If even one citizen is still a drone when the next turn starts, whatever base they are in has a "drone riot" and shuts down completely until you fix the problem, then it turns back to normal the following turn. Drones are caused by the base's psyche (called happiness in previous Civilization games) dropping too low. If a base is left to riot long enough, and the faction Free Drones is in the game, they might switch over to that faction.
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rdfs:comment
| - A disgruntled citizen is a drone, shown as red in the base menu, instead of their usual image. If even one citizen is still a drone when the next turn starts, whatever base they are in has a "drone riot" and shuts down completely until you fix the problem, then it turns back to normal the following turn. Drones are caused by the base's psyche (called happiness in previous Civilization games) dropping too low. If a base is left to riot long enough, and the faction Free Drones is in the game, they might switch over to that faction.
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abstract
| - A disgruntled citizen is a drone, shown as red in the base menu, instead of their usual image. If even one citizen is still a drone when the next turn starts, whatever base they are in has a "drone riot" and shuts down completely until you fix the problem, then it turns back to normal the following turn. Drones are caused by the base's psyche (called happiness in previous Civilization games) dropping too low. If a base is left to riot long enough, and the faction Free Drones is in the game, they might switch over to that faction. You can nerve staple rioting drones, to force them back to work, but this counts as an Atrocity and causes other factions to impose economic sanctions against you. It also leaves them more vulnerable to mind control by attacking probe teams, and in time they can become resistant to nerve stapling if it used too often.
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