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Video games where the United States Marine Corps is the primary focus of the game, not an incidental element. Pages in category "Video games about the United States Marine Corps" The following 62 pages are in this category, out of 62 total.
1st Marine Expeditionary Brigade; 2nd Marine Expeditionary Brigade; 3rd Marine Expeditionary Brigade; 4th Marine Expeditionary Brigade (Anti-Terrorism) 5th Marine Expeditionary Brigade; 6th Marine Expeditionary Brigade; 7th Marine Expeditionary Brigade; 9th Marine Expeditionary Brigade
BCT Commander is a computer wargame developed by ProSIM Company and published by Shrapnel Games. The lead developer was ProSIM Company founder, Pat Proctor.It is a modern combat simulator and includes scenarios ranging from the 1973 October War to near-future scenarios in Cuba.
12th Littoral Combat Team is an infantry unit in the United States Marine Corps based out of Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, California consisting of approximately 800 Marines and sailors. The unit falls under the command of the 12th Marine Littoral Regiment and the 3rd Marine Division.
A 75 mm pack howitzer of the 12th Marines, in a semi-fortified firing position on Bougainville late in 1943. The regiment was reactivated September 1, 1942, at San Diego, California, as the 12th Marines and assigned to the 3rd Marine Division. It relocated during October 1942 to Camp Dunlap, California.
Close Combat: Marines is the first version of the Close Combat universe made specifically for military training purposes. Forces consist of USMC and OpFor troops. The game was first released in the September 2004, issue of the Marine Corps Gazette. A commercial version for civilians was made called The Road to Baghdad.
Mech Brigade was designed by Gary Grigsby. [2] It serves as a follow-up to his title Kampfgruppe, a World War II simulation. Mech Brigade was designed to bring the system into a modern warfare context. [3] [2] He launched both games in 1985, the same year he debuted U.S.A.A.F. - United States Army Air Force. [4]
Initial fielding of JBC-P Type 1 systems (called Joint Capabilities Release, or JCR) has begun for both Army and Marine Corps units and organizations. The Army leadership adopted a more Systems of Systems Engineering (SOSE) approach toward Battle Command development and has formulated a concept of Unified Battle Command (UBC).