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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.)
Timelines: Assault on America is a real-time strategy game set in an alternate history World War II, developed by Hungarian studio 4Flash Interactive. The game was released for Microsoft Windows, OS X, and Linux, and for iOS and Android on February 17, 2015. [1]
In Turning Point: Fall of Liberty, the player assumes the role of Dan Carson, an average New York construction worker who has no prior connection to the military.Unlike other similar war games, the player's objective is not to help the Allies win the war, but merely to survive in an environment of total war as a resistance fighter against Nazi Germany.
These are grand strategy computer and video games set in World War II, i.e. games that leave the player in charge of every aspect: military, economic, and political, of a country during (and possibly the period leading up to) the war.
Close Combat is a 1996 real-time computer wargame developed by Atomic Games and published by Microsoft.Set during World War II, it simulates the conflict between the United States' 29th Infantry Division and Germany's 352nd Infantry Division after the Invasion of Normandy.
It is the second game in the Decisive Battles of WWII series, following Decisive Battles of WWII: The Ardennes Offensive (1997). Korsun Pocket received critical acclaim and a number of awards. Upon release, critics from GameSpot , Computer Gaming World and PC Gamer US dubbed it the best traditional computer wargame ever made.
Its success led to three further games in the V for Victory series, and then the similar World at War series published by Avalon Hill. The game simulates the D-Day invasion on the area surrounding Utah Beach and the greater Cotentin Peninsula area. The player takes the role of overall commander of the US forces or the German forces opposing them.
As a consequence of Atomic Games' split with Avalon Hill in September 1995, [2] D-Day: America Invades was the two companies' last game together. According to Alan Emrich of Computer Gaming World, Atomic's Keith Zabalaoui called this "purely a business decision" and clarified that there was no ill will between the companies.