It was the last throw of the die for Nazi Germany, basically, which was losing on all fronts, and a near-impossible task for the generals charged with executing it yet it was also the biggest single battle the United States has ever fought and one of the bloodiest. But what's amazing about it is that, to play the game with any competence, you have to understand what the Battle of the Bulge was. The game plays out over 14 days, and over this time certain incidents will always occur (such as random German tanks running out of fuel) and reinforcements will arrive on the day they did arrive - all of which can be seen on the calendar.īattle of the Bulge is an asymmetrical strategy game, both sides having highly pronounced strengths and weaknesses - as well as totally different objectives. It combines its strategy core with a wealth of supplementary material, and more importantly it hard-wires the reality of the battle's circumstances into its mechanics. This may seem a rather heavy introduction to a strategic wargame, but Battle of the Bulge is an exceptional production. The World Wars seemed like history rather than real and recent events. Even as a kid, I understood that I didn't understand something. My parents grew up among people who had lived through and fought in the Second World War, whereas I vaguely remember a great-uncle who'd been in the air force.
For me, and I suspect for you too, the World Wars are something that happened a long time ago - not only in the literal sense, but in the sense in which the actual experience is fading out to the point of vanishing entirely. One of my most vivid memories is watching an Armistice Day service as a kid and, during the minute's silence, noticing old people crying.