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Tannenberg News

Merry Christmas!

Tannenberg coming to consoles
Next year will see Tannenberg released on Xbox One and PlayStation 4, which we’re hugely excited about. We also just released the Verdun remastered update on PlayStation 4 as a nice early Christmas present!

The Christmas Truce turns seven
It’s the seventh year that we’re running the Verdun Christmas Truce, which is inspired by the true events of the Christmas Truce in 1914. Players will be able to experience this unexpected moment of peace and common humanity amidst the horror and chaos of the First World War. In-between normal matches, players will find themselves on a special Christmas Truce map where they can play football matches, have snowball fights and send Christmas cards from the trenches by email or social media.



There were not such widespread truces on the Eastern Front, but the Christmas spirit was present in places nonetheless. In Galicia, Austrian troops were even ordered not to fire unless forced to. Their Russian adversaries also held their fire. At the fortress of Przemyśl, some Russian troops left Christmas trees in No Man’s Land along with a complimentary note for the defenders. This led to a meeting between the sides, with men reportedly exchanging tobacco and schnapps for bread and meat.



Winter Sale deals
Tannenberg is 60% off during the Steam Winter Sale, and Verdun has an even larger 80% discount! It’s a great opportunity to complete your WW1 Game Series collection, or embrace the spirit of giving and introduce a friend the to the series. Also check out our new logos and promo banners – we’re very pleased with how they’ve turned out!

All of us at the WW1 Game Series team wish you a happy holiday!

Happy Holidays!

Merry Christmas
We'd like to thank you all for a great year! We released Tannenberg from Early Access, launched several updates with new content, and another map is on the way! 2019 also saw Tannenberg start its journey towards console release.

Next year will see Tannenberg released on Xbox One and PlayStation 4, which we’re hugely excited about. It will also see the release of Verdun remastered on PlayStation 4.



The Christmas Truce on the Western Front
It’s the seventh year that we’re running the Verdun Christmas Truce, which is inspired by the true events of the Christmas Truce in 1914. Players will be able to experience this unexpected moment of peace and common humanity amidst the horror and chaos of the First World War. Players will be able to visit a special Christmas Truce map where they can play football matches, have snowball fights and send Christmas cards from the trenches by email or social media.

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There were no such widespread truces on the Eastern Front, but the Christmas spirit was present in places nonetheless. In Galicia, Austrian troops were even ordered not to fire unless forced to. Their Russian adversaries also held their fire. At the fortress of Przemyśl, some Russian troops left Christmas trees in no man’s land along with a complimentary note for the defenders. This led to a meeting between the sides, with men reportedly exchanging tobacco and schnapps for bread and meat.



All of us at the WW1 Game Series team wish you a happy holiday!

The Wolf Truce returns!

Wolves at War!

In 1917, several newspapers reported about a truce between the Germans and Russians on the Eastern Front. Big packs of wolves were starving and in their desperation, would kill soldiers that were resting and become more and more aggressive, prompting a truce to take out the wolves together.

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Earn a special truce medal

When you play a match in Tannenberg from November 26th until December 3rd, you might hear a powerful howl throughout the battlefield. This means the wolves have gathered and are ready to hunt for you, your fellow soldiers and your enemy. If you decide to only attack the immediate threat - the wolves - you will earn a special Wolf Truce medal!

The Wolf Truce is based on newspaper reports and other documents which described the danger wolves could pose to soldiers on the Eastern Front. These range from sober warnings about the dangers wolves could pose to displaced civilians and the injured to this report in a US newspaper:



Improvements

The in-game event in Tannenberg has seen some improvements over the previous event we held in March. Here are some of the improvements:
  • Wolf spawning now distributes them depending on which sectors are occupied
  • Pathfinding has been improved, wolves don't chase unreachable players
  • The start of the Wolf Truce event within a match has been made more clear
Tannenberg on Sale!

If you have friends that would like to join the Wolf Event, now is definitely the time to recruit them for service on the Eastern Front. Tannenberg is 60% off from November 26th until December 3rd as well!

The wolves are hungry... get ready!

Armistice 2019 - Lest we forget!

After agreeing the terms of the armistice at the Forest of Compiègne.

One hundred and one years ago today, the Armistice was signed between the allied powers and Germany. At this point, the war on the Eastern Front had been effectively over for some time since the Russian Revolution and the Russian-German armistice of 1917, although there were still moments of fighting (see Operation Faustschlag). The Armistice of November 11th, 1918 finally ended all major fighting in WW1 for good. It would be extended three times before the Treaty of Versailles officially ended the war.

In Tannenberg (and our Western Front WW1 game Verdun) there is an optional two minute silence to commemorate this important day in history. Those who observe it will earn a medal in-game. For those of you on Facebook, we have created an overlay which you can apply to your profile picture. Just follow this link.

The lasting costs of war

Today we celebrate the end of World War One which lasted more than four years. But we also commemorate the 15-19 million who died, and the over 20 million wounded that survived the war - although with a cost. Wounds could be physical or mental; shell shock being perhaps the most well known mental effect of the war.

Shell shock encompassed a wide range of mental reactions to the horror of combat, which were poorly understood at the time. What soldiers in WW1 were experiencing would likely be classified as either combat stress reaction (for temporary effects), or if it was a longer term effect, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

A soldier captured by the Germans in 1918, who was diagnosed with shell shock.

The term shell shock was coined because early analysis suggested that mental disorders might be caused by shockwaves from shells. Of course, this was not the case - physically uninjured soldiers could still suffer posttraumatic stress disorder. War correspondent Philip Gibbs wrote of soldiers suffering from ‘shell shock’:
Originally posted by Gibbs
Something was wrong. They put on civilian clothes again and looked to their mothers and wives very much like the young men who had gone to business in the peaceful days before August 1914. But they had not come back the same men. Something had altered in them. They were subject to sudden moods, and queer tempers, fits of profound depression alternating with a restless desire for pleasure. Many were easily moved to passion where they lost control of themselves, many were bitter in their speech, violent in opinion, frightening.

The breakdowns which could be caused by experience of war were often conflated with cowardice or a 'lack of bravery'. During the First World War, this was encouraged by some leaders due to an increasing shortage of manpower and also the unforeseen costs of disability payments to all those suffering mental injuries. After all, if a man was 'only suffering from a momentary loss of heart' he could be sent back into battle. A dismissive attitude towards shell shock could also be caused by simple ignorance. Royal Fusilier William Holbrook said:
Originally posted by Holbrook
I was reading some time ago where some general said, ‘There’s no such thing as shell shock.’ He ought to have, he should have been there. I mean it’s ridiculous to say things like that. You get a man, even if he was a strong man, you get a terrific burst from a shell within say three or four yards of you, you know. It does, it does upset them. Shell shock, oh my god yes.
Some doctors advocated the use of cruel 'treatments' like electric shocks to attempt to bring shell shock victims back to fighting condition.

The Cambridge History of the First World War estimates that 20% of soldiers may have
been affected by shell shock - but these numbers are uncertain, in part because the doctors at the frontlines may have avoided labelling injured men with psychological conditions that would not be considered worthy of a disability pension. One man who did receive a pension was Thomas Olive:
Originally posted by Olive
I used to have little breakdowns now and then and my wife used to be very frightened. It more or less used to happen at night, when I was in bed. I used to spring up off the bed, you know; it used to frighten her. My daughter, incidentally, is terribly nervous, she’s terribly nervous. My wife says it’s all my fault. Well I had shell shock, you see. I got blown up, you see, and it affected my whole system. I got a pension for about oh, what was it, about 9 shillings a week.

It’s worth noting that the 9 shillings a week was roughly equivalent to about 26 pounds / 30 euros / 33 dollars today. As mentioned before, many of those who suffered mental disorders as a result of their wartime experiences wouldn’t even get that.

When you pause to remember the Armistice today and think back of all those who fell during the war, also remember those who survived but were still scarred by their experiences, whether physically or mentally.

Lest we forget...

Tannenberg is 50% off for Halloween!

Halloween is creeping up on us like a serial killer, which means it's time for a sale! Don't question the logic, just go with it. Tannenberg is 50% off for a limited time - don't delay!

Here are some *haunting* screenshots by players. See what we did there?

A drunken vampire, by Cpt.DoeJohnson?

A letter never sent, by 42nd|LostPyro.

Death stalks this dark forest... but in the form of man or beast?

Our Western Front game Verdun is also on sale over Halloween! There's even a creepy conversion of the main menu... check it out:
https://store.steampowered.com/app/242860/Verdun/
Have a great Halloween!