We wish you a meaningful Memorial Day, Geekly Gang. Hey, hey, Kyra Kyle here. We’re recognizing the holiday today with five great, approachable war board games.
There are a lot of caveats in this post’s title. First, board games set in wartime tend to have steep learning curves. The Campaign for North Africa: The Desert War 1940-43 holds the Guinness World Record for the most complicated board game in history–and the longest rulebook. We’re going with “approachable,” meaning easy to learn. True wargamers may scoff at that. Second, we’re not calling this list a Top 5, because wargame enthusiasts tend not to stop at the game table with fighting wars. Don’t hurt us. And then I set numerous guidelines that made compiling this list difficult.
I didn’t want any games set in the same conflict. Check. I wanted to limit myself to one game per series, so I couldn’t name every Commands & Colors game on this list. Spoiler: A game from the Commands & Colors series will make this list. Although I may have fudged that last guideline just a bit with the fifth and fourth entries. I also wanted to include board games that should still be in print. And I may have fudged that one, too. Drat! Anyway, I hope you enjoy this list of five great approachable war board games.

5) 878 Vikings: Invasions of England (2017)
I love Academy Games’ use of asymmetric player powers in 878 Vikings: Invasions of England. The company has been a fave for my family ever since we played Freedom: The Underground Railroad, another must-play historical board game. In 878 Vikings: Invasions of England, players control the invading Vikings or the English nobles who are trying to withstand the invasion. Viking players either play as Norsemen Viking freeman or as the fearless Viking shock troops known as Berserkers. The English play as the Housecarl, the Kings’ household troops, or as the Thegns who were regional noble Leaders. The English players will also be able to call up the peasant levies, called the Fyrd, to defend their cities.
878 Vikings: Invasions of England is one of the newer games on this list, and it’s set the furthest in time. 878 is the year the game is set. It took me a few times before I stopped equating it to the 300 Spartans who defended the west from a massive Persian army. 878 Vikings: Invasions of England claims the fifth spot, in part, because it may be the most complex of the games on this list. Still, it’s a great play.

4) 1775: Rebellion (2013)
1775: Rebellion is another Academy Games title. I don’t believe it’s from the same series as 878 Vikings, but the two games have the same design team. Similar to 878 Vikings: Invasions of England, 1775: Rebellion features asymmetric play. In 1775: Rebellion, players take the roles of the American Continental Army and Patriots against the British Army and the Loyalists. Each side tries to control the colonies, provinces, and territories. They call on the aid of Native Americans, as well as the German Hessians and French Army to successfully birth a revolution or quell the rebellion.
My oldest daughter played 1775: Rebellion at Nuke-Con several years back, far closer to its original release, and won as the British Army. So, one can change history with this game. My daughter (a teenager at the time) gloated the entire convention. While not the lightest game on this list, 1775: Rebellion is a good jumping-off point if you’re trying to get into war board games.

3) Resist! (2022)
We go from one of the oldest games on this list to the newest game, Resist!. I love Salt & Pepper Games’ stable of titles. This is one of the up-and-coming board game publishers. Salt & Pepper Games produces fantastic small games. In fact, they can put a lot of game into a small package. Resist! is no different.
Resist! is a fast-playing, card-driven solitaire game in which you take on the role of the Spanish Maquis, fighting against the Francoist regime. Over a series of rounds, you undertake increasingly difficult missions, and completing missions earns you the points needed to win. Failing to defeat missions and enemies may cause you to lose. At the end of each round, you must choose whether to end the resistance or risk it and take on another mission. I don’t know too many board games set in the Spanish Civil War. Resist! is a great experience.

2) Caesar!: Seize Rome in 20 Minutes! (2021)
I recently played Rise of Augustus by Paolo Mori, and it was fun. Turns out, Paolo Mori has an entire line of fill-in-the-blank military conflict in 20 minutes. And it’s that subtitle “In 20 Minutes” that secured this game’s place on this list. Caesar!: Seize Rome in 20 Minutes! plays in–shock of shocks–20 minutes. That’s unheard of in most war board games, but somehow Mori pulls it off.
In Caesar!: Seize Rome in 20 Minutes!, players draw tokens from a bag to determine their starting forces and to replenish their losses. Players allocate their resources to each province, gaining tactical advantages and vying for control of the republic. And did I mention this game is lightning fast? I did. Well, what if I told you Mori has multiple games in this line? I did. If you like Caesar!: Seize Rome in 20 Minutes!, you should try Blitzkrieg!: World War Two in 20 Minutes!. Blitzkrieg! didn’t make the list because of our next entry also uses a World War Two theme.

1) Memoir ’44 (2004)
Memoir ’44 is the one entry from Richard Borg’s Commands & Colors series that made this list. Borg’s simple but elegant system of unique cards (to command your troops), miniatures (or wooden pieces) on variable maps, and dice for combat distills the war board game experience into digestible pieces. I could’ve included any of the Commands & Colors games for this entry. Borg offers plenty of options for whatever conflict you’d like to recreate. And that’s what you’re doing in Memoir ’44.
My favorite part of Memoir ’44 is the history behind each skirmish. Memoir ’44 is the oldest game on this list and may be difficult to acquire, but it’s the most interactive fun you’ll have learning about World War II. One of these years, I’ll need to run a recreation of the entire war at my local game store. Ah. It’s so good.
That’s our list for five great approachable war board games. Which game would you add to this list? Let us know in the comments. If you’ve gotten this far, you’re awesome. Everyone knows it. Thank you for reading, and wherever you are, I hope you’re having a great day.
