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A new campaign event is live!

The Entente and Central Powers clash again in our latest campaign event: the Poison Prince campaign. Casualties from both Verdun and Tannenberg on PC will be tallied up until April 30, and the side which loses the least men will emerge victorious.

Poison gas was first used on the Eastern Front at the Battle of Bolimów in Russia, by the Germans. It failed (badly) but poison gas would be used again on the Western Front during the Second Battle of Ypres. It would be far more successful there… we’ll share more about these two moments in history during the course of the campaign!

Russian soldiers wearing gas masks.

The Poison Prince campaign is named after the German commander for the second, more effective gas attack. Albrecht, Duke of Württemberg was the crown-prince of the Kingdom of Württemberg, part of Germany which would cease to exist in 1918.

Read the Campaign FAQ here!

Good luck out there…

WW1 FPS Isonzo will continue the fight started by Verdun

After fighting on the Western Front of World War 1 in Verdun then the Eastern Front in Tannenberg, the first-person shooter series will continue on the Italian Front in Isonzo later this year. Blackmill Games and M2H today announced their latest game will rumble across the mountains, valleys, and towns of northern Italy. Watching the announcement trailer, oof yeah I don't think the lovely weather makes up for the hellish battlefield terrain.


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Attention soldiers at the East Front! You’re needed at the Alpine frontier!

Our new game Isonzo is coming later this year!

The Great War had many battlefields with a vast variety of landscapes and warring nations - and later this year you will be able to fight on the Italian Front.

Although you’re used to fighting in the cold in Tannenberg, high up in the mountains of Isonzo will be a new experience! The rivers and charming Italian towns create an entirely new environment for you to conquer!

[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]

[h3]Read all about Isonzo![/h3]
Check out the special announcement post we made on the Isonzo page, and wishlist the game too while you're there!

https://store.steampowered.com/app/1556790

[h3]Thank you[/h3]
For now, we want to thank you all for your love and support for Verdun and Tannenberg! We’re definitely not forgetting the games that brought us here - we’re excited for the next step in our WW1 Game Series adventure and hope you’ll join us!

Arrivederci, hope to see you all in Italy later this year!

- The WW1 Game Series team

The Winter War 1915 campaign has ended...

And so the latest campaign comes to a close, with 945,395 casualties for the Entente and 982,641 for the Central Powers. That's 37,246 more losses for the Central Powers. So far the Entente have generally come out on top in the campaigns - albeit by a small margin. Perhaps people prefer playing for the Allies?

The first Austro-Hungarian counter-offensive aimed at relieving the Prsmsl Fortress consisted of 175,000 men in total, so these losses are vastly greater than any week long battle during the war. As you'd expect, considering that Verdun and Tannenberg are about frontline combat at an intensity that could never be maintained for long in real life.



Thanks to everyone who took part. We hope you had fun and found the history interesting!

The battle for Hartmanswillerkopf

The Winter War 1915 campaign continues for a couple more days - have you earned a gold medal yet? On the Eastern Front there were Austro-Hungarian troops trying to break through to relieve Przemyśl Fortress, meanwhile on the Western Front an important observation point was being contested.

Photograph from the summit of Hartmanswillerkopf in 1915.

January 1915 saw mountain warfare centered on the Hartmanswillerkopf peak in the Vosges mountains. German and French troops fought intermittently from 1914-1916 to control the heights, which offered both sides potential observation of strategic railways. The operations were costly (though nowhere near as brutally harsh as in the Carpathians) and troops were often pulled from the Hartmanswillerkopf conflict to reinforce other areas of the front. Ultimately both sides would go on to accept a stalemate in early 1916, and the situation became stable until 1918.

Hartmanswillerkopf memorial.

The campaign will end on February 4th. So far the Entente are ahead with almost 30,000 less casualties than the Central Powers. Will things change before the 4th?