Von Rom -> (6/11/2003 1:04:42 AM)
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Is wargaming dying? Personally, I see it entering a new era. Let me explain. I got into wargaming basically because of my love of history. All my life I have been a voracious reader. Mostly it has been history books and biographies of historical figures. My favourite movies have been historical films, etc. . . When wargames came to the PC I was in seventh heaven: now I could game all those battles about which I had spent my whole life reading. How would I perform at the Battle of Thermopylae? As Napoleon, could I win at Waterloo? As Rommel, could I stop the Allies on the beaches of Normandy? How would I perform at Midway? As MacArthur, could I duplicate his brilliant invasion at Inchon? Wargaming (and strategy games such as Imperialism, Civilization 2, etc) was a way to re-live some of the most important moments in history. Over the past two decades we have seen the virtual elimination of history from the classrooms of our high schools (and now our colleges). In recent interviews, some students thought Hitler was the leader of Great Britain in WWII, and that George Washington was President of the USA during the Great Depression. . . :rolleyes: So it is a pleasure to see that history is making a comeback via the mass media through TV (the History Channel, Biography, etc) and through the movies (Spartacus, Bravehart, Last of the Mohicans, Saving Private Ryan, Schindler's List, etc). Recently, the TV movie "Hitler: The Rise of Evil" actually was a topic of discussion on a popular radio program. And it is making a comeback through the gaming community: Not only are Matrix and Battlefront bringing this genre back with a vengeance, but other games devoted to history have drawn huge followers, such as Shogun Total War, Medieval Total War (and a soon to be released Rome Total War), the Age of Empires series (the manual alone devoted space detailing the history of ancient civilizations), SM's Gettysburg, the Close Combat franchise, EU2, and of course the FPS devoted to WWII. Personally, I think there will always be a place for the "wargame". The younger people will prefer the "faster" type RTS of Sudden Strike, while the older folks will gravitate to the turn-based "thinking" strategy-type game/wargame. I think if you make history exciting; if you spark an interest; and if you make it a living thing that brings it alive to the viewer, then that person may very well gravitate to the wargame (especially if it is well done). Personally, in reading history, I want to play wargames; and in playing wargames, I want to read history. . . History and wargames both can be entertaining and informative . . Cheers!
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