- Thoughts from The Players Aid on GMT Games Company Update
- GMT Games Company Update
- Custer’s Last Stand
- Fire in the Lake and Vietnam 1965-1975: A Comparative Review
- Introductory Solitaire Wargames Examples and Advice [video]
- Blood & Plunder: No Peace Beyond the Line (Firelock Games @ Kickstarter)
- Fort Sumter: The Secession Crisis, 1860-61 (GMT Games Preorder)
two-player Card Driven Game (CDG) portraying the 1860 secession crisis that led to the bombardment of Fort Sumter and the American Civil War. Fort Sumter is a small footprint game (11x17” mounted map) that takes approximately 25-40 minutes to play. The game pits a Unionist versus a Secessionist player. Each player uses the area control mechanic pioneered in my We The People design and immortalized in Twilight Struggle to place, move, and remove political capital. The location of political capital determines who controls each of the four crisis dimensions (Political, Secession, Public Opinion, and Armaments). After three rounds of play, the game culminates in a Final Crisis confrontation to determine the winner. [Forum]
- Advanced Platoon Leader (new from H&S Games)
- N: The Napoleonic Wars Review
- The English Civil War App Review
- Parabellum, Issue 1 (new from Europa Simulazioni)
Parabellum is the new magazine publication from Italian publisher, Europa Simulazioni. The premier issue is now available and features the insert game, Inferno sugli Altopiani 1916. The game covers the Spring 1916 Austro-Hungarian offensive on the Italian Front. One player controls the Austro-Hungarian forces, the other the Italian forces. Full colour, 48 pages, with game reviews, historical issues, clubs news and most of all a complete game with die-cut counters and an A2 format map. Rules are printed in Italian but English rules are a free download on the website. [Forum]
- The Fighting for Shevardino Redoubt
- Belgium 1940 Armour
- The Evolution of the Early Roman Army
- Battleground Berlin
- Merkur
- The Siege of Smolensk 1632-33
- The Berezina 1812
- The Battle of Baugé, 21 March 1421
- China’s Final Victory, 1943–5