Good World War 1 Games

With BF1 turning out to be another generic FPS, what are some good games set during WW1? Are there any there any games that accurately capture the batshit insanity of the war(i.e. No Man's Land, Paris Gun, blimp combat, trench raiding, guys with spears and suits of armor alongside guys with trench coats and riles, etc.)?

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I like how the war ended.

"Prepare to taste walking fire, mother fokkers!"

t. America

Dont forget austria-hungary constantly fucking up at everything.

they didn't actually deploy the BAR except in extremely small numbers, you realize

Doesn't exist.

Valiant hearts

Not in the detail you described. But Verdun on steam is pretty good - it focuses on the common solider (ie going over the top).

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If you're interested in WW1 you could get into reenactments

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Not really, Verdun comes close but is let down by it's game engine.

yes they do

ww1 medic

google it

Battlefield 1

In all seriousness, why is there such a lack of WW1 games? It's by miles the most interesting war in history. A lot of the events and technology used already sound like something from a video game, so why don't devs make more games about it?

Same reason why they don't make games about the Korean War. Too brutal

Wars are, in general, either strategy or shooter territory. Trench war doesn't sound too exciting for a shooter (sit in place, take occassional potshot, sometimes actually charge defenseless against a storm of bullets), and RTSs wouldn't work too well for the same reasons. For GSGs, it's too short a time frame, so it gets merged with a larger time period like in Victoria 2. Perhaps wargaming is the best genre for it, but it's very niche so they don't make too many games.

Even Avtomat Fedorova has more rights to be called "assault rifle", you filthy uneducated hick. BAR is an overweight automatic rifle used as sub-par LMG

Darkest Hour

That's WW2 focused, however.

There's a WWI scenario though I think

Victoria 2

There is, but it's not focused on WW1. It plays just like WW2. Same with Vicky

Blackfield 1 is the best game ever you racist mysogonerd. Wymen and niggers were warriors n shiet man, we won Nigger War 1 because of them.

That flash game from Armor Games I don't remember the name of that I played all the time in High School.

Historyline 1914-1918

Awesome old panzer general style game.

VERDUN, motherfuckers.

youtube.com/watch?v=gsttPBSAxpM&list=PL9-c4EPugY7BwELpl2qhMAg9DuSz9bkkh

Im glad its blowing up in EA's face for their pandering bullshit to libtards. Hats off to gamers with balls worldwide.

Not even black people like it. (Source) Numerous youtube reviews from black guys.

W E
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Ace of Spades, at least before the Jagex fuckery. It obviously doesn't really look like a realistic WW1 game but the no man's land is terrifying and you actually dig trenches. I think it does a great job of capturing what WW1 is about while still being fun. Digging trenches for hours in a match would be gay, but so would just not digging them at all.

What rage?

Until I played the open beta for Battlefield 1 this week, I thought I was done with the series. And that was a pretty disappointing feeling, since I've played every game in it from 1942 all the way to Battlefield 4 — all in, I'm talking about thousands of hours spent capturing Wake Island, doing flips in helicopters, trolling teammates with vehicle stunts, and all kinds of other things you can only do and see in Battlefield games. But somewhere along the line, I got tired of Battlefield games — until this week when I jumped into the series' latest World War 1 arena. And that's because it finally has a heart.

It's not just Battlefield that grew sour for me over the years, though. I grew up on shooters, but now they're created with the cadence and character of yearly Madden releases, which forces game developers to be more creative with gimmicks than core game features. The worst part of that trend has been the strategy of cutting games into tiny pieces that you have to "unlock" by putting ridiculous amounts of time or additional money into them. There were no unlocks in Battlefield 1942, for example — you just bought the game, jumped in, and experienced everything it had to offer. The only limitation was your decision making and curiosity. By the time Battlefield 4 rolled around, the game felt more like an item-unlocking simulator underwritten by the greedy tactics of free-to-play games. At one point EA let players pay $50 for an "ultimate shortcut bundle" which unlocks all of the game's weapons and upgrades, making the friendly accessibility of Battlefield 1942 seem like a distant memory.

But Battlefield 1 is a different story, and that's because it uses what made Star Wars Battlefront so successful. Battlefront, built on the bones of the Battlefield series, is one of my favorite shooters from this decade. When it was released, I said it was my favorite unofficial Battlefield game. It wasn't groundbreaking in its details — capture this point here, or kill this enemy over there — but it had a rare kind of magic that can't be imitated. Jumping into Darth Vader's suit or taking down AT-ATs on Hoth felt thrilling and momentous not just because the game was technically impressive, but because of its soul: the culmination of decades of feelings about familiar characters and stories that imbued the game with an unusual emotional force.

Naturally, Battlefield 1 doesn't have years of rooting for Luke Skywalker and Han Solo behind it, but it does have a rich historical character unlike generic near-future shooter clones. It feels like you're taking part in something authentic, even though it's exceptionally weird and cartoonish at times. But that weirdness makes it feel special. I can't think of another game that lets you strafe horses in biplanes, wear steel armor while firing a machine gun from the hip, or blast enemies from an armored train — yet these are all things you can do in the same round of Battlefield 1, and this is just the beta. I can't wait to see what happens when massive zeppelins and other weird weapons of war are added to the mix.

Battlefield 1 is also easily as intuitive as Battlefront, which is a huge improvement over recent games in the series. The simplicity of Battlefront and early Battlefield games, enabled in part by the game's smooth user interface, felt present here — I didn't have to think about cycling through a million options before jumping into the fray, and the options that I did have were easy to find. (The game will have lots of unlocks, sure, but it didn't feel like much was missing from the starting experience.) There's definitely a feeling of refinement to the whole experience — almost like what you see is what you get as applied to game design. And what you see is spectacular.

Playing Battlefield is best when it feels like being in your own action movie, and that's what the entire Battlefield 1 beta feels like. It's one of the most dazzling video game spectacles I've ever experienced. I charged a town with my squad and watched enemy soldiers rip through my comrades, making my heart pound as I sought cover. I stormed the sky in a biplane, looping through arches and canyons, my machine gun tearing through the wings of enemy aircraft. I dropped a barrage of bombs on a fully-loaded enemy landship, watching it disappear in a spectacular boom that literally shook the walls in my apartment. Then, I stormed the field on horseback, cutting down foes with a sword before being wiped out by an ironclad beast. I wish I could go back in time a couple decades and tell the kid inside me, sitting cross-legged on the floor watching a VHS of Top Gun, that this would be the future of entertainment. It rules.

The first few matches flew by in an instant, and left me wanting a lot more — all because Battlefield's creators did something simple. They made a game that's a joy to play, not one designed to make me pay.

wew youre a big shill

*t. Canada. You guys already stole Graham Bell from us, dont take our only wartime accomplishment as well.

Someone managed to turn the BAR into bait. Only an Australian could shitpost this well.

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Are you saying that he is raising a BAR for shitposting?

when does Holla Forums remake ace of spades

The Great War is possibly the only conflict where a reenactor can be a fat fuck and get away with it as period appropriate. Doughboy.

Yeah, sure

Doughboys were only the Americans though.