- World at War, Issue 61: Peaks of the Caucasus (new from Decision Games)
the insert game simulates the German offensive in the southern Soviet Union in 1942, and the ensuing Soviet Counteroffensive. The German objective was initially the Caucasus oilfields, but the campaign turned into a struggle for the city of Stalingrad on the Volga. The game uses a variant of the “Boots system” to model higher echelon command-control and logistics, and their impact on the theater of operations. [Forum]
- Empires of the Middle Ages Replay [video]
- Battle for Germany Replay
- World War I Replay
- Empires of the Middle Ages Review [video]
- Two Folio Series Games (new from Decision Games)
- Four Mini-Series Games (new from Decision Games)
- Belisarius’s War: The Roman Reconquest of Africa, AD 533-534 Replay
- The Lost Battalion Review [video]
- The Lost Battalion Replay [video]
- Opaque War: Ukraine 2014 Review [video]
- D-Day at Omaha Beach Replay [video]
- D-Day at Omaha Beach Replay [video]
- Strategy & Tactics Quarterly, Issue 2: America in World War I (new from Decision Games)
America in World War I: In April 1917, the United States entered World War I and the American Expeditionary Force (AEF) proved decisive in the ensuing Allied victory on the Western Front. Yet, a mere 10 years prior the US military was woefully unprepared for war. This issue includes analysis, maps, orders of battle, descriptions of weapons, and biographies of notable military figures such as John Pershing, Billy Mitchell, the young George Patton, and Homer Lea, plus a map poster. [Forum]
- Four Battles of the Ancient World Replay
- Belisarius Replay
- Charlemagne Replay [video]
- World at War, Issue 60: Eisenhower’s War (new from Decision Games)
featuring the insert game, Eisenhower’s War. This is a two-player wargame covering the final 11 months of World War II in northwest Europe, from D-Day through the end of April 1945, when the Anglo-Allied campaign in the west effectively came to its end. The game is also easily adaptable for solitaire play. The political boundaries shown on the map are those drawn by Hitler prior to his downfall. [Forum]
- Zama: Hannibal vs Scipio Review
- RAF The Battle of Britain 1940 Replay