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1965 edition box art. Nuclear War is a collectible common-deck card game designed by Douglas Malewicki and originally published in 1965 that is a satirical simulation of an end-of-the-world scenario fought mostly with nuclear weapons.
This page lists board games, card games, and wargames published in the 1960s. ... Nuclear War (1965) Squander (1965) Triominoes (1965) Fight in the Skies (1966)
The Strand War Game: The Strand Magazine: 1915: They Shall Not Pass: The Battle of Verdun, 1916: Avalanche Press: 2006: To the Green Fields Beyond: Simulations Publications, Inc. 1978: Trenchfoot: Bullets & Bayonets in the Great War: Game Designers' Workshop: 1981: Verdun: Conflict Games: 1972: Re-released by Game Designers' Workshop in 1978 ...
The Batman Game (1966) Battle Cry: A Civil War Game (American Heritage magazine) 1961-1965; Battle Masters (1992), produced in conjunction with Games Workshop; Battleship (1967) Battleship Galaxies (2011) Bed Bugs (1985) Beetle (a.k.a. Cootie) (1927) Beetle Bailey: The Old Army Game (1963) Benji Detective Game (1979) Bermuda Triangle (1976) Big ...
Pages in category "Board games introduced in 1965" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
The card game Nuclear War was designed by Douglas Malewicki in 1965 and published by the Nuclear War Game Company. In 1980 Flying Buffalo bought the rights to the game and published a boxed set . In 1983, Flying Buffalo released Nuclear Escalation , which could be used as a game expansion or as a standalone game.
Battle of the Bulge is a board wargame published by Avalon Hill (AH) in 1965 that simulates the World War II battle of the same name. General Anthony McAuliffe (ret.), who had been commanding officer at Bastogne during the Battle of the Bulge, was a consultant during the game's development. The game proved popular and sold more than 120,000 ...
In 1980, Games Workshop acquired the rights from Hayes and revised the game, simplifying the rules, removing hydrogen bombs, reducing the number of players to 4, allowing radioactive areas to be cleaned, and cutting the board map in half (eliminating Eastern Europe). This revised game was released as Apocalypse: The Game of Nuclear Devastation. [3]