The Hotness
Games|People|Company
Eclipse
Gunship: First Strike!
Mage Knight: Board Game
Midnight Men
Agricola: Die Bauern und das liebe Vieh
Hawaii
Star Wars: Battle of Hoth
Wiz-War
Ora et Labora
Rex: Final Days of an Empire
Snowdonia
Barbarian Prince
The Lord of the Rings: The Card Game
Twilight Struggle
War of the Ring
Agricola
7 Wonders
A Game of Thrones: The Board Game (second edition)
Dominion
7 Wonders: Cities
Kingdoms
A Few Acres of Snow
Risk Legacy
Arkham Horror
Through the Ages: A Story of Civilization
Thunderstone Advance: Towers of Ruin
1812: The Invasion of Canada
Dixit 3
Elder Sign
D-Day Dice
The Castles of Burgundy
Le Havre
Kingdom Builder
Sid Meier's Civilization: The Board Game
Race for the Galaxy
Cosmic Encounter
Dominant Species
Dungeon Petz
Battlestar Galactica
Power Grid
Mansions of Madness
Last Will
Twilight Imperium (third edition)
Nexus Ops
Agents of SMERSH
Puerto Rico
Star Trek: Fleet Captains
Kairo
Core Worlds
Sherlock Holmes Consulting Detective
Britain's Wars of Colonisation in the 19th Century and their wargames
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Recommend
61 
 Thumb up
1.02
 tip
 Thumb up
A list of Britain's wars outside of Europe and their wargames.

I'm doing this list to give a list of the wargames out there on this topic as well as to show what interesting topics from this era that have not been featured by a wargame.

This was, of course, the era of "Queen Victoria's Little Wars", although some major wars don't quite fall into her reign (1837-1901).

If anyone knows of any wargames that fall into this category, please add them to the list.

There are some interesting wars that I don't see any wargames on:

Anglo-Burmese Wars (1823-26, 1852, 1885-86)
Opium War (1839-42)
Conquest of Perak (1875-76)
Northwest Frontier Uprising (1897-98)
Anglo-Persian War (1856-57)
Anglo-Egyptian War (1882)
Kaffir Wars (1846-47, 1850-53, 1877-78)
Basuto Wars (1851-52, 1868, 1880-81)
Ashanti Wars (1863-64, 1873-74, 1893-94, 1895-96, 1900-01)
Matabele Wars (1893-96)
Anglo-Gaika War (1878)
First Boer War (1880-81)




Your Tags: Add tags
Popular Tags: [View All]
1 , 2  Next »   | 
1. Board Game: The Sun Never Sets [Average Rating:6.69 Overall Rank:4591] [Average Rating:6.69 Unranked]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Interesting that this game covers the Arrow War, the Zulu War and the Sudan campaigns but where is India and Afghanistan? After all, the romance of the Northwest Frontier is what most people of the Victorian era think of in terms of fighting the "savage natives".
3 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
David Morgan-Evans
United Kingdom
Plymouth
Devon
S&T published a 1st Afghan War game based on the same system and it's pretty good too.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Mon Sep 22, 2008 12:50 pm
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
Heath Avery
Australia
Mount Kiera
New South Wales
Yes the ST Issue game of Afghan War is outstanding
And we have volume 2 coming Im sure it will have the Indian Mutiny as a scenario
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Sat Sep 27, 2008 5:06 am
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
2. Board Game: Rifle & Saber [Average Rating:5.52 Unranked]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
A company-level game of the period between 1850-1900. Most of the scenarios are on the American Civil War and the Franco-Prussian War but there is one scenario on the Indian Mutiny and a Moves article added more scenarios on the Boer War.

Again, no Northwest Frontier.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • 0 comments
3. Board Game: Soldier Raj [Average Rating:6.28 Unranked]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
One of the few games (probably the only game) that covers exclusively Britain's conquest of India.

Of course, "Britain" is not quite an accurate term. The Honourable East India Company, employing native and European troops, commanded its own private army and was the driving force in expanding its influence in India. You could say it was the Blackwater of its time.

It was only in 1858, after the Indian Mutiny, when the HEIC was disbanded and its territories transferred to the Crown.
3 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • 0 comments
4. Board Game: The Indian Mutiny [Average Rating:5.26 Overall Rank:6594]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
One of the very few wargames that cover Britain's campaigns in India, although this is not quite a "war of colonisation" for the British. More like the response...
2 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
Michel Boucher
Canada
Ottawa
Ontario
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
More like the effect of a stupid decision...
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Mon Jul 28, 2008 4:47 pm
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
If you're referring to the cartridges incident, that was just the catalyst. Old-school Western historians buy this theory because they think British rule in India was so wonderful it's inconceivable that there was any deeper resentment.

But there was...

Now, neither was the Mutiny a nationwide revolt. So the Indian nationalists who call this the First War of Independence are also stretching history a little
1 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Tue Jul 29, 2008 2:09 pm
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
5. Board Game: Khyber Rifles [Average Rating:4.69 Unranked]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Finally, a game on the Northwest Frontier!

The Pathan tribes were a constant thorn to British rule in India. Then as now, they don't take any lip from anyone, be they British, American or Pakistani.

Given the current situation, perhaps wargame designers could think about exploring Britain's campaigns in Afghanistan and the Northwest Frontier as a corollary to the ongoing conflict in the region.
2 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • 0 comments
6. Board Game: Asia Crossroads [Average Rating:5.85 Unranked]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Once the British got India, that's where the "fun" began.

This game is noted for its square grid.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • 0 comments
7. Board Game: First Afghan War [Average Rating:6.42 Overall Rank:5075]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
One of the interesting things to note about gaming Britain's war of colonisations is that many of the wargames deal with Britain's disasters.

The primary cause of the First Afghan War was that the British decided they should have influence over the affairs of the Afghans (otherwise the Russians would) and they marched a force to Kabul in 1839 to install their puppet king. By 1841, Afghanistan was in open revolt.

On 6 Jan 1842, the British force in Kabul, under increasing pressure from the Afghans, decided to retreat to India. 4,500 troops, including 700 Britons, and 10,000 camp followers. By the time the force reached Jalalabad seven days later, one Briton and a few sepoys were left.
3 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • 0 comments
8. Board Game: Battle of Maiwand [Average Rating:7.50 Unranked]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
In 1878, the Second Afghan War began, for pretty much the same reasons as the first one.

This British managed to 'win' this war, defeating the Afghans at Kandahar in 1880 but the most famous battle of this war was, again, a major British defeat, so much as that there are two wargames on this battle.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • 0 comments
9. Board Game: Maiwand [Average Rating:5.36 Unranked]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
As US and NATO forces are learning today, troubles in Afghanistan and the Northwest Frontier don't really go away.

The British had to invade again in 1919.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
Brad
United States
Brandon
Florida
Rise...Men of Sherwood...and Play Games!
badge
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
There is one major difference between today and the British invasions, the majority of the local tribes are either on our side (some) or indifferent, the British basically had everyone against them, as did the Soviet's in the 1980s.
1 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Sat Jul 26, 2008 7:33 pm
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
Frank Eisenhauer
Other-Asia
Astana, Kazakhstan
msg tools
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Vanhel wrote:
There is one major difference between today and the British invasions, the majority of the local tribes are either on our side (some) or indifferent, the British basically had everyone against them, as did the Soviet's in the 1980s.


History teaches us that the Afghan Tribes are always only on their own side. That side might coincide for a time with "our" side, but only as long as it furthers the particular tribes goals. Needless to say not always are the tribes goal really the best for their own future.
4 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Sun Jul 27, 2008 12:23 am
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
Jan van der Laan
Netherlands
Leeuwarden
Friesland
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
eisenphx wrote:
History teaches us that the Afghan Tribes are always only on their own side. That side might coincide for a time with "our" side, but only as long as it furthers the particular tribes goals. Needless to say not always are the tribes goal really the best for their own future.


Hear, hear!

I hope our American friends are to discover this in time to avoid Vietnam like disasters.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Sun Jul 27, 2008 9:32 pm
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
Brad
United States
Brandon
Florida
Rise...Men of Sherwood...and Play Games!
badge
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Hence why I said some are on our side, as it benefits them to be. The majority of the others are indifferent, treating us in much the same way they do tribes from other regions that are not their enemies or relatives.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Thu Jul 31, 2008 11:37 pm
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
10. Board Game: Maori Wars: The New Zealand Land Wars, 1845-1872 [Average Rating:0.00 Unranked]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
How many games are there on the New Zealand Land Wars? Just this one, and it's not even published yet. (C'mon KPG! You said you wanted to publish this!)

This is one of the most interesting wars of the era. It wasn't about politics, imperial ambition or "bringing the word of God to the noble savages". And it wasn't a war where the white man was better-armed than the natives. By this time, many Maoris were Christian (if nominally), already signed a treaty with the British, and bringing their experience in musketry to age-old bush warfare tactics.

Nope, it was just about land.
2 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Now available for pre-order.

http://www.legionwargames.com/legion_maori_wars.html
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Tue Mar 22, 2011 10:43 am
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
11. Board Game: Zulu War [Average Rating:5.80 Unranked]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Britain fought many wars in sub-Saharan Africa - the Kaffir Wars, the Ashanti Wars, the Basuto Wars, the Matabele Wars, the Gaika War - but the only one that has seized the popular imagination is the Zulu War.

Interesting for a war that lasted only about six months.
1 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • 0 comments
12. Board Game: Zulu Attack [Average Rating:5.66 Unranked]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
The Battle of Isandhlwana - 22 Jan 1879.

Lord Chelmsford and his army of 5,000 European troops and 8,000 natives were encamped near a hill called Isandhlwana. When scouts reported contact with the enemy, Chelmsford left 1,800 men to guard the camp while he set off with the balance. He failed the find the enemy. When he returned to the camp, only 355 men had escaped death at the hands of a massive Zulu army.
1 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
Steve Herron
United States
Johnson City
Tennessee
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
When one eliminates a Zulu unit it just reappears back on the right corner edge of the board. Easy rules just two pages. It would be a good introductory game to wargaming, with good face lift it would make a nice reprint.
5 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Sun Jul 27, 2008 12:49 am
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
13. Board Game: Like Lions They Fought [Average Rating:6.43 Overall Rank:3957]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Lord Chelmsford could only say, "I can't understand it. I left a thousand men to guard the camp."
4 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
4.0 Rules
United States
Rutland
Vermont
Drop the dice and step away from the table!
badge
Move along, nothing to see here!
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Just got an unpunched copy of this game.I have only played it once so far.I have been wanting a game on this topic ever since I saw Zulu and Zulu Dawn.Very interesting little War,Isandhlawana,Rorkes Drift.Lots of interesting characters,Chelmsford,Cetshwayo.Good book-The Washing of the Spears.
3 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Sat Jul 26, 2008 11:23 am
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
14. Board Game: The Defense of Rorke's Drift [Average Rating:6.76 Overall Rank:3348]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Of course, nothing sells like heroism and after a defeat like Isandhlwana, Britain was looking for a consolation prize and the gallant defence at Rorke's Drift was certainly worthy of praise.

Much ink and film have been spent on this subject...
3 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
M. Kirschenbaum
United States
College Park
Maryland
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Still the game to get if you want a really detailed ASL (or miniatures) like treatment of the battle. The map is atrocious to look at but plays quite cleanly.
1 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Sat Jul 26, 2008 1:49 pm
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
Mark Ernst
United States
Morrison
Illinois
mbmbmbmbmb
Don't forget this is a two for one game that also includes a simulation of the Boer War.
1 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Sat Jul 26, 2008 2:24 pm
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
David Morgan-Evans
United Kingdom
Plymouth
Devon
I love this one and I've played it dozens of times; and not really cared about the eventual outcome as much as the sheer joy of the game. You may criticize the map but, apart from the buildings, there really wasn't that much terrain that would be relevant at this scale. The Boer war game it comes with is another of my favourites, if only because it has not been done better and is a neglected era in wargaming. It does have, however, a truly atrocious method of keeping track of casualties. I solved this by designing my own casualty sheets.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Edited Sun Sep 28, 2008 12:55 am
  • Posted Sun Sep 28, 2008 12:52 am
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
15. Board Game: Victoria Cross [Average Rating:7.13 Overall Rank:1521]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Thus, it is no surprise that 11 Victoria Crosses were awarded to the defenders of Rorke's Drift, the most ever for a single engagement.
6 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • 0 comments
16. Board Game: Zulu! [Average Rating:6.10 Unranked]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Rorke's Drift remains a popular topic with wargame designers. This is an old DTP Richard Berg game but he has a new Rorke's Drift game on pre-order with L2 Design.

http://www.l2designgroup.com/pre-orders/ZULU!.html
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • 0 comments
17. Board Game: Soldiers of the Queen: Battles at Isandhlwana and Omdurman [Average Rating:6.13 Overall Rank:4909]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
The British now make their appearance in North Africa but I've not yet come across a game on their conquest of Egypt or the Battle of El Tel-Kebir.

Please add to the list if you know any.

The thing about being in charge of Egypt means inheriting its problems with Sudan. If you know any games of Britain's first involvement in the Sudan, and of Gordon's ill-fated expedition, please add them to this Geeklist.

There are two games which cover the Battle of Omdurman, which occurred during Britain's second invasion of Sudan.
4 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
Adam D.
United States
Suquamish
Washington
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
The Isandhlwana game is fun (am I the only one who loves Congreve's rockets?).

Omdurman, not so much. I think they should have done Abu Klea (hello broken square!) or something. All that dice rolling as the mahdi's troops charge suicidally (allah be prais.. > is not very fun.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Mon Jul 28, 2008 2:01 am
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
Jeff Curtis
United States
Plainfield
Indiana
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
I agree the Isandhlwana scenario is fun.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Mon Jul 28, 2008 4:25 am
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
18. Board Game: Remember Gordon! The Battle of Omdurman [Average Rating:6.73 Unranked]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Omdurman was basically an ambush by the dervishes on the advancing British. Not sure how they can do that in a wargame, unless playing double-blind.
1 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
Leon Major
United States
Stillwater
Oklahoma
mbmbmbmbmb
Great list! Omdurman was not an ambush. The Brits were behind a zariba. They opened artillery fire ae 2,700 yards and volley fire at 2,000 yards. The 21st Lancers(Churchill's unit) was ambushed when they charged a small group of dervishes. A large group was hiding behind them in a ditch. Played the game a couple of times. We had fun with it.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Tue Jul 29, 2008 12:41 am
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
It was an ambush.

Put it this way, if you were Kitchener and you knew, thanks to your birds-eye view of looking at a wargame, that 20,000 dervishes were waiting in force, would you have marched your army across its front, thus exposing your entire flank?

That's what Kitchener did, because he didn't have the benefit of playing a wargame.

(BTW, not referring to the 21st Lancers' action. That was a sideshow in Omdurman.)
1 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Edited Tue Jul 29, 2008 2:23 pm
  • Posted Tue Jul 29, 2008 2:20 pm
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
Leon Major
United States
Stillwater
Oklahoma
mbmbmbmbmb
Let's see- you get your men up at 3:30 AM for the battle because you knew the enemy was in the area. The enemy attacked around dawn. You open artillery fire on them from over a mile and a half, volley fire from over a mile and kill thousands of them and you were ambushed? I guess you can call it an ambush(I don't) when the Brits were moving to capture Omdurman later that morning and where attacked again.They repulsed this attack though not as easily as the first one. By the end of the battle an estimated 10,000 dervishes were dead at the loss of 50 Brits and their native soldiers.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Tue Jul 29, 2008 11:54 pm
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
But when playing this wargame, would you have done the same move as Kitchener? It's hard to believe that anyone would. He was completely surprised by the dervish attack. Of course, we all know the story. MacDonald saved the day and became the hero of Omdurman.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Wed Jul 30, 2008 11:58 pm
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
19. Board Game: The Second Boer War [Average Rating:6.59 Unranked]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
There are several wargames on the Second Boer War but on the First Boer War, not much. If you know of any wargames on the First Boer War, please add them to this Geeklist.

This was the last war for Britain of the century and was a clear sign of the departure from the previous small wars. The British were eventually to deploy 500,000 men to the conflict.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • 0 comments
20. Board Game: Redvers Reverse: The Battle of Colenso, 1899 [Average Rating:0.00 Unranked]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
But like many of the battles from this era, we are more fascinated with British defeats than victories, and the Second Boer War had more of British defeats than you could shake a stick at.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • 0 comments
21. Board Game: Bittereinder [Average Rating:6.25 Overall Rank:4655]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
The war eventually degenerated into the horrors of no-holds-barred guerrilla warfare.

Bittereinder referred to Afrikaaners who refused to surrender and sought to continue the conflict any way possible. The British response was equally brutal, if not more.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • 0 comments
22. Board Game: Boxer Rebellion [Average Rating:5.00 Unranked]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
The Yi He Quan or Righteous and Harmonious Fists or Boxers was a popular movement to "overthrow the Qing, destroy the foreigner". In 1900, they besieged the foreign communities in Beijing and Tianjin. When the Ba Guo Lian Jun or Eight Allied Nations Army mounted a relief operation, the Qing dynasty declared war on the Westerners.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • 0 comments
23. Board Game: Siege at Peking [Average Rating:5.78 Overall Rank:5923]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
The Ba Guo Lian Jun relieved the besieged foreign communities in Tianjin in Jul 1900 and in Beijing a month later.
2 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
Adam D.
United States
Suquamish
Washington
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
And one of the cooler looking Wargamer games to boot.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Mon Jul 28, 2008 2:02 am
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
Elwyn Darden
United States
Richmond
Virginia
mbmbmbmbmb
I strongly urge playing this with multiple Allied players, one per nationality. The amount of infighting and national(i.e. personal) abuse adds a whole new level of entertainment.

Two Chinese players: one for the Boxers and one for the Imperial troops can also liven things up a bit.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Edited Mon Jul 28, 2008 1:17 pm
  • Posted Mon Jul 28, 2008 1:15 pm
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
24. Board Game: PEKIN 1900 [Average Rating:8.00 Unranked]
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Does anyone know how I can get this game? Is it available for download?
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
Adam D.
United States
Suquamish
Washington
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Ok that's just wrong. A solitaire colonial Peking game with no publication date?


KHAAAAAANNNNNN!!!!!
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Mon Jul 28, 2008 2:04 am
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
25. Board Game: Pax Britannica [Average Rating:6.60 Overall Rank:1345]
John Laprise
Qatar
Doha
There is no rest for the wicked...
badge
...and I am so tired.
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
This qualifies as its late 19th C. ...the game ends with the start of WW I. Great powers can't invade one another but everyone is fighting for colonial possessions. Great game. Someone should give it a Twilight Struggle treatment.
3 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
William Hostman
United States
Eagle River
Alaska
designer
Gaming in Greater Anchorage area, Alaska since 1978. Looking for Indy-willing RPG players in Eagle River (or willing to drive to Eagle River). Geekmail me if interested.
badge
Yes, this really is what I looked like when I uploaded that avatar. Not that it's quite current anymore.
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
I'm hoping someone will give it a java treatment.
1 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Sat Jul 26, 2008 10:44 pm
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
Dave Rubin
United States
Trenton
New Jersey
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
No, no, a Here I Stand treatment! laugh
2 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Sun Jul 27, 2008 2:16 pm
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
1 , 2  Next »   | 
11 comments [Hide]
Post Comment
Jur dj
Netherlands
Leiden
Avatar
mbmbmb
Good list, and thanks for pointing out how many wars have not been dealt with. Maybe game designers could concentrate on them rather than a twentieth take on the Battle of the Bulge or Gettysburg.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Sat Jul 26, 2008 8:41 am
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
Bill Eldard
United States
Burke
Virginia
mbmbmbmbmb
elijah234 wrote:
The East India Company was the real player in this game.


The East India Compnay was certainly the most interesting phenomena of the era. It established its own trade policies, and admininstered its foreign holdings like any sovereign colonial power, to include its own private army until the Sepoy Mutiny prompted Her Majesty's government to take over. The Opium War and the Mutiny are prime examples of the HEIC dragging the British government into conflict, not unlike Rhodes and others managed to do in Africa.

elijah234 wrote:
Sadly, what most people may know about the HEIC could come from the Pirates of the Caribbean!


Indeed. Unfortunately, most folks aren't educated to appreciate history as the record of real people who dealt with real events and crises, and more fascinating than fiction.
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Sun Jul 27, 2008 3:03 pm
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
Canada

designer
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Nice list, can we get it sorted by games average ?
 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Fri Aug 1, 2008 7:03 pm
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
Elijah Lau
Singapore
Singapore
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Desaix wrote:
Nice list, can we get it sorted by games average ?


I prefer to leave the games grouped in a thematic format for now.
1 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Sat Aug 2, 2008 1:00 am
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
Mark Christopher
United States
Salem
Massachusetts
Avatar
mbmbmbmbmb
Great list! This is a fascinating period. I recall reading (too many years ago) Peter Hopkirk's The Great Game, about Great Britain's rivalry with Russia in central Asia. I never even thought about looking for games about it. Fantastic!
8 
 Thumb up
 tip
 Thumb up
  • Posted Sat Aug 2, 2008 1:41 am
    • Choose your Dice
      • Roll
      • Comment (Optional)
    • Reply
    •  
    • Quote
1 , 2  Next »   | 
Front Page | Welcome | Contact | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Advertise | Support BGG | Feeds RSS
Geekdo, BoardGameGeek, the Geekdo logo, and the BoardGameGeek logo are trademarks of BoardGameGeek, LLC.