- Fort Sumter Play Tutorial [video]
- Holland ’44: Operation Market-Garden Replay
- Quartermaster General: Air Marshal Replay
- Table Battles Replay
- Commands & Colors: Ancients Replay
- Raiders of the Deep Replay
- Victory in Europe Replay
- Commands & Colors Tricorne: The American Revolution Review
- Hitler’s Reich Review
- 878: Vikings WBC Event Report
- Tobruk Replay
- Korea: Fire and Ice Review
- Skies Above the Reich Review
- The Battle for Ramadi (Tiny Battle Publishing Preorder)
a solitaire game that depicts the climatic seven days of the assault on this key town. You are the commander of the Iraqi Security Forces, and must capture the Government Complex to secure the political victory, but your ultimate objective is to liberate the city and its inhabitants. You have elite Counter Terrorism Service troops supported by army, police and militia units. You can also call on Coalition air assets and special forces to give you the edge. [Forum]
- The Love/Hate Relationship: Gen Con
- Somme 1918 Review
- Silent Victory Review
- Soldier Kings: The Potato War (new from Avalanche Press)
The Potato War is a supplement for Soldier Kings, our multi-player game of the Seven Years’ War. The book includes a full-color 17x11-inch map of the Black Sea Steppe and Caucasus regions. In addition to the new Russo-Ottoman and Potato War scenarios and their additional pieces, there are new pieces (with optional rules for their use) for the Seven Years’ War scenarios of Soldier Kings, plus some additional options. [Forum]
- Panzer Grenadier, Kursk South Flank Publisher’s Preview
- Gorbachev: The Fall of Communism (new from White Dog Games)
a solitaire strategy game covering the collapse of the Soviet Union (1985-91), designed by R. Ben Madison. The game puts you in the role of a trusted and close advisor to Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. You help him manage the stunning changes that rocked the foundations of Communism and the vast Soviet empire during “the decade that shook the world”, when glasnost (candor, free speech) and perestroika (economic and political reform) became household words that defied decades of Cold War certainty. [Forum]