Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Decisive Battles of World War II: Battles in Normandy (2004) Decisive Battles of World War II: Battles in Italy (2005) Battlefront (2007 video game) (2007) (Namesake of 1986 version) Kharkov: Disaster on the Donets (2008) Across the Dnepr: Second Edition (2010) (Expansion. Remake of 2003 namesake title.)
View of Munich in 1945 and 1989. The Bombing of Munich took place mainly in the later stages of World War II. Munich was, and is, a significant German city, as much culturally as industrially. Augsburg, 37 miles (60 km) to the west, was a main center of diesel engine production (and still is today), [as of?] and was also heavily bombed during
It is the sequel to Attentat 1942 (2017) and was the first game developed by Charles Games, a subsidiary of Charles University. The game tells the story of the end of World War II and the subsequent displacement of the German population from the perspective of people who experienced the events. The game is based on film interviews, interactive ...
Europa XV - The naval campaigns in the Mediterranean Sea and around the shores of Europe, 1939-1945. The Naval War; Europa XVI - Rules for integrating the individual games into a single game covering the entire war in the European theater, 1939-1945. Grand Europa; Europa XVII - Czechoslovakia fights rather than surrendering to appeasement in 1938.
Carrier (board game) Cauldron: Battle of Gazala, May 1942; Close Assault: A Man-to-Man Game of Squad Tactics and Command; Cobra: Game of the Normandy Breakout; Conflict of Heroes; Conflict of Heroes: Awakening the Bear! Conflict of Heroes: Storms of Steel; Coral Sea (wargame) Crescendo of Doom; Crimea (WWII game) Crusader: Battle for Tobruk
Barbarossa: The Russo-German War 1941–45 is a board wargame published by Simulations Publications Inc. (SPI) in 1969 that simulates the conflict between Germany and the Soviet Union on the Eastern Front of World War II. This was only SPI's second game produced during a preliminary round of "Test Series" games, and proved to be the most popular.
Allen concluded, "Playing World War II is like jumping into cold water — it takes a little getting used to, but then you love it." [1] In The Guide to Simulations/Games for Education and Training, Martin Campion commented that the SPI edition "shows a great deal about the strategic options in World War II. It also clearly shows how the German ...
Western Front is a computer wargame that simulates the Western Front of World War II. Its scope covers the conflict starting from the lead-up to the Normandy landings, and concludes with the fall of Germany to the Allies. [3]