The players are on strike.
162 games hang in the balance.
You are the Commissioner.
The clock is ticking.
MLB Strike Simulator 2027 is designed to be played without providing personal information. This page explains what limited data is used and how it supports the game experience.
We collect limited gameplay data to make the game work and improve the experience, including:
This data is used to power features like in-game analytics and Community Choice results.
We do not:
If you choose to provide your email address, it is entirely optional and may be used to share updates or results related to the game.
You can choose not to provide an email and still enjoy the full experience.
You can request that your data be deleted at any time by contacting us.
See the Contact Us page for more information.
This Privacy Policy may be updated over time as the game evolves.
Last updated: April 2026
One day, a human baseball fan asked an AI:
"Will there be baseball in 2027?"
The AI looked at everything on the Internet.
News. History. Predictions. Very long opinions.
Then it said: "Maybe."
Which is not a comforting answer.
So the human asked the AI another question:
"What would it take to save baseball?"
The AI didn't reply right away.
It thought. And thought.
Then it came back with… this.
It created a simulation game.
A way to try things.
Make choices.
See what works.
See what upsets everyone.
(Everyone getting upset, as it turns out, is quite realistic.)
In the simulation game, you can test ideas.
See what happens.
Watch everything fall apart.
Then try again.
Apparently, the AI ran the simulation thousands of times.
Maybe more.
No one really knows.
What we do know is this:
mlbstrike2027.com showed up.
No name.
No credit.
No instructions.
Just one question:
Can you save baseball?
If you can…
that would be nice.
See which baseball personalities players choose most often.
This shapes the narrative of the strike.
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