ORIGINAL: Alchenar
ORIGINAL: flanyboy
This is actually a great topic. I've been wanting to make a YouTube video about what makes a Wargame a Wargame and how is it different from a Strategy Game or as you suggested is it a subset. I'll probably get around to it in the next few days.
Also was Take Command 2 on steam? I know it was on Gamersgate but I don't remember seeing it on Steam. I could be mistaken here. Scourge of War Gettysburg was also on GG for awhile too.
With that said I'll respond to you but I really can't right now as I need to head to my Math class. [:D] After classes perhaps.
See this is an important question because there's the suggestion floating around that Wargames are somehow a unique and special genre with a unique and special customer base and I just don't think that's true. I think that there are specific wargames with very limited appeal, but that's because of questionable design choices rather than anything inherent to the genre.
If a wargame is just 'a strategy game that's set in a specific historical war or battle' then there's no reason why they shouldn't be accessible at all.
I'm not sure I agree with you're questionable design choices theory even if it's a subset of strategy. Not all strategy game players like all types of strategy games. Mega detail wargames like WITP likely would have a limited appeal no matter how well designed and I don't see the problem with that. Not every product is targeted at the widest possible audience. Targeting a smaller audience doesn't necessarily mean you have a poor product, but that also doesn't mean that other similar products can't appeal to a wider audience.
Gary knows he's not targeting the vast majority of people with his games, why is that a questionable decision? Why isn't him just designing a game for a specific subset of players who value that type of product a wise choice? If he's intentionally doing it that way and not doing so because he's failing to meet his real goal is it really questionable if that's what he or other designers like him intended?
Note: I'm not disagreeing that Strategy and Wargames might be interlinked but rather your suggestion that products targeted to limited audiences are somehow flawed or unwise. I don't see the problem as long as you are aware of the market you're targeting.