• NOW LIVE! Into the Woods--new character species, eerie monsters, and haunting villains to populate the woodlands of your D&D games.

That's not what gamist means!

Nonono. I'm agreeing with you!

Exactly! Sorry for the confusion. I was agreeing with you, just attaching the non-jargon, commonly accepted term "jargon" to it. It had seemed like folks were dancing around what the term really qualified as, linguistically.
I got what you meant the first time ;)
 

log in or register to remove this ad

Don't wargames also have a strong simulationist element, in contrast with more abstract games such as chess? Indeed, I thought wargames usually emphasised sim above all, with game coming in second place.
I'm hardly an expert on either wargames or Forge terminology, but here's what I'd say...

Wargames have simulationist overtones, and simulationism advises the 'balance' choices made among the pieces, but wargames are never actually played for simulationism. You never play a battle which is blatantly one-sided, you never play "survivalist horror" (which is what a one-sided battle resembles). You never worry about supply lines, or diseases among the troops, or latrines, or foraging, or what happens when your sniper miniature gets a "Dear John" letter the night before.

What you play are battles in which the winner is very much in question, such that the skill of the players ought to be the element which determines the outcome. You play battles which are contested challenges, with clear-cut victory conditions.

So, it would seem to me that simulationism might inform the trappings of wargames, but never the practice.

Cheers, -- N

PS: IMHO the difference between wargames and a game like chess is that the former is balanced but asymmetric in terms of specific unit capabilities, the latter is symmetric in specific unit capabilities. This is also the difference between Starcraft (asymmetric) and Warcraft II (symmetric).
 

If "gamist" is not a real word, then English doesn't have real words. Unlike some other languages, the speakers of English have rejected defining academies, and a real word is one that English speakers use in English.

Contrawobblefok!
 

Into the Woods

Remove ads

Top