Power, Religion and Battles -  Thirty Years’ War is releasing today!
"War is one of the scourges with which it has pleased God to afflict men." (Cardinal Richelieu - French statesman)

Epsom, UK - September 03, 2015. - 1618 – Tensions within the Holy Roman Empire have reached a climax. Ferdinand II, King of Bohemia and a zealous Catholic, is unpopular among his Protestant subjects. The revolt is brewing. Powerful European Protestant leaders are following the evolution of the situation at the frontiers of the Empire. Foreign interventions seem inevitable: Europe is on the brink of a long religious war!

Thirty Years’ War, the new wargame from Ageod, covers this decisive period of the modern European history. As the head of the Catholics or Protestants, the players have a considerable freedom of military and political actions. Recruiting new units, reinforcing the casualties with mercenaries, manoeuvring armies of thousands of men and planning yearly campaigns, will soon become their everyday life!

Powered by the famous AGE engine that proved to accurately simulate local conflicts and major wars alike, Thirty Years’ War is a wargame like no other, thanks to its deep and rarely covered historical context.

AGEOD's Thirty Years War Primer Preview Video - A Preview video from Youtuber Pewpewchewchew


Players will have the chance to select scenarios, from 1618 to 1648:
•    The Bohemian Revolt: This scenario covers the first years of the war, from the sieges of Pilsen and Budweiss to the intervention of the Catholic League and the battle of White Mountain in 1620.
•    The Paladins: A small-scale scenario that represents the months of fight in the Rhenish Palatinate.
•    The Danish Phase: This scenario runs from the Danish entry into the war to its final defeat and the treaty of Lübeck.
•    The Swedish Intervention: King Gustav II Adolf of Sweden aims to invade the Holy Roman Empire in order to bring support to the German Protestants.
•    The Thirty Years’ War: This ambitious scenario covers all the years of fighting, from the Bohemian Rebellion to 1648.

 

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