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We’ve got some great news for all the classic lovers – 8 timeless titles published by SNEG will soon join our catalog: Prophecy of the Shadow, Great Naval Battles: The Final Fury, Buccaneer, Renegade: Battle for Jacob's Star, Savage Warriors, as well as Wargame Construction Set, Wargame Construction Set II: Tanks!, Wargame Construction Set III: Age of Rifles 1846-1905 + Campaigns, and Wargame Construction Set Pack (gathering all games from the WCS series).

Let’s take a closer look at all of that retro goodness!

Prophecy of the Shadow
A 1992 fantasy role-playing game developed by Strategic Simulations for MS-DOS. In this title, the land is slowly dying, and it is your mission to find out why. Your character is a disciple of Larkin of Bannerwick, but when he is murdered, you are blamed for his death. What’s also unfortunate is that you possess magical powers, but the king has outlawed all magic.



Great Naval Battles: The Final Fury
A compilation of all titles from the Great Naval Battles series – naval vessels combat simulators. All of them depict different conflicts, ranging from World War I to warfare in the North Atlantic during World War II. Every game provides a choice between individual ship views and fleet command views, and you can choose individual stations to operate during the game.



Buccaneer
A 1997 action strategy game in which you command a pirate ship in the Caribbean during the 17th century. You have a choice of six campaigns with varying goals, or you can just engage in standalone ship-to-ship battles.



Renegade: Battle for Jacob's Star
Published in 1995 and set in FASA's Renegade Legion universe, this title is an adaptation of the Interceptor board game mechanics as a space simulation shooter. You’ll find yourself as a pilot in a distant part of the universe, flying missions solo or with your wingmen.



Savage Warriors
A 1995 fighting game pitting warriors plucked out of time and forced to battle each other. It features 10 main characters and 5 secret characters fighting over interactive terrain with a variety of weapons.



Wargame Construction Set
A 1986 strategy game that lets you design and play turn-based tactical battles. You can create scenarios in many different time periods including modern day, ancient times, 1800's, and even in the future. With the complete control over all the units, and customization of their firepower, movement points, strength, aggressiveness and other statistics, you can truly become the battleground mastermind.



Wargame Construction Set II: Tanks!
A 1994 tactical level wargame of armored conflict from WWI to the 1990s. It offers limitless small scale tactical armored confrontations using the various tanks and tools of mechanized warfare. You choose one of three climates, pick opposing forces, and assign objectives. In addition, there are over 20 ready to play historical scenarios and a campaign feature included.



Wargame Construction Set III: Age of Rifles 1846-1905 + Campaigns
A 1996 strategy that simulates battles throughout the era of percussion rifles, roughly comprising the second half of the 19th century. It provides several dozen battle scenarios, as well as a scenario editor in which you can develop your own battles.



All of that classic gaming fun – soon on GOG!
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dtgreene: I have a hard time calling games from 2000+ "old".
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Cavalary: Depends on one's age I guess.
Or maybe even more so on when one started playing games.
Or the period one sees as most relevant, or most memorable.
I kinda agree (definitely on the: "early 3D is just ugly" - part).

I started playing "video games" in the mid/late 70s.

I assume, EVERYONE would agree, that the games of my childhood/youth have to be considered old nowadays, by all appliable standards.

And even though my personal reference for what "old games are" is defined by that...I would say: once a game is 10 years or older, it counts as "old".
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MartiusR: Plenty of good stuff, but I guess we won't see them for at least a month (seeing the time distance between most recent SNEG "coming soon" and "release" )
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Swedrami: 14th of December, according to bleedingcool.com
I see that they've updated it later to 19 December - and it's coherent with release date visible on steam for those titles.

Small delay, but stil much better situation than plain "coming soon".

But what really makes me curious is the base price - seems like games released recently by SNEG have quite big differences in that matter (good example - released in the same day Star General 6.95$ vs Veil of Darkness 11.62$
Post edited December 08, 2023 by MartiusR