I left those questions to my brain while I had a go at something I’d had my eye on already anyway. It’s called Shadow Empire. It is a grand strategy 4X wargame. I have been playing it almost every day since. It is as strategy as strategy gets, and it is so excellent it has ruined everything. It’s the premise, first. Shadow Empire is set in the space future, after a great galactic dark age following the collapse of a big ol’ interplanetary republic. But you’re not playing as one of a dozen isolated species who all inexplicably became spacefaring at once. You’re descended from the hapless people left behind on an alien planet when civilisation fell in on itself, and your goal is to lead them to somewhere more hapful. It’s basically a game about what happened in the first Foundation book, but instead of uniting the galaxy, you’re confined to one planet. My interest was first piqued at the prospect of a modern Emperor Of The Fading Suns (an intriguing, ambitious, crap mega 4X I plan to write about later, about fighting vast ground and space battles for approximately infinite hours). But any disappointment faded when I created my first planet. You start out in typical 4X fashion, with a little village and some militia dudes. You’ll scout the area, maybe meet some neighbours, and think about where to expand to and what to research. Eventually, sure, you’ll conquer enemies, build new settlements, train better armies, manage trade and diplomacy. But all this is elaborately woven into a wargame. A proper, full on, recon-and-supply-lines-and-impenetrable-TLA wargame. Even the most ardent wargame fan would likely concede that they are often alienating, even insular. And 4X games, for their part, can be rather rote and predictable. Shadow Empire does a remarkable job of bridging the two without sacrificing the strengths of either. And it does it in such a way that it’ll teach you the gnarly, esoteric rules of the genre by degrees. The other reason I’ve become utterly consumed with it is that it’s a fantastic science fiction game. The best part of any game with a black map is gradually uncovering it, and the planets this one has you fight over are wonderfully evocative. Oh, they don’t look much, you can see that. Although I’m rather partial to its simple, very budget retro look (the amusingly clunky two-frame animation when you capture a hostile city would barely have taxed an Amiga), this is not a pretty game. Not even for a strategy game. And yet I quickly became fond of its look. Its humble tiles combine to make a world that feels special each time. Shadow Empire has possibly my favourite map generation of any 4X game. You don’t choose the shape of the landmass, the proportion of ocean, how many rivals there are, or whether it’s a desert or swamp. Instead, a planet is generated in stages, starting with its orbital path, axial tilt and spin. Those factors start you out, and dictate the parameters of the climate, which in turn affect the biosphere (if it even has one). The type of sun, and your distance from it matters. The seasons change in length and variety based on its orbit. If it’s too small it will have no atmosphere, because its gravity will be too low. If it doesn’t spin right there won’t be enough wind for rainfall. If it’s old enough there might be fossil fuels… unless there’s no native life to form them. Will the atmosphere be too thin for aircraft? Is the local flora edible, and if so, what conditions does it need? Will you have to farm indoors? Can your people go outside without dying? Is there radiation from the war? Can it support aerial units? Trying Their Best - A miserably weak infantry unit presented by the useless oaf I appointed to the research division because the other candidate was annoying. lmao gottem - The only aerial bombardment unit in a world that came to somewhat regret its constant rejection of my peace envoys. BEES - buzz bzzz Each stage of the process determines the parameters for the next, from basic physics through climate, then onto abiogenesis, the nature and extent of human settlement, and then finally, the precise history of the apocalypse that struck it in the wake of the imperial collapse. All this means that you could be playing in all manner of places. And since the nature of those places also dictates what resources are there, it makes a real difference. I’ve fought on an icy desert world, clinging to a single forest for defensive bonuses and fighting to take over the narrow equatorial band where crops could grow. I’ve sent armies across a planet teeming with strange pink plant life, none of which was edible, to defend a glacier. My troops have fought over land bridges in a grassy paradise, around rivers of magma for metal mines, across gruelling mountain ranges for coal, between ammonia lakes for revenge, and in a dusty, dry land where I inevitably named a settlement “Gas Town” and ran fleets of motorcycles around the one narrow pass between us and a hostile neighbour. One planet was home to edible plants that grew well at 40 below zero, in thin bands at the poles. Without free rain or surface water, those crops will need you to secure a glacier, or find ice deposits deep underground. One captivating world’s friendly conditions made it home to billions before the war, who left behind vast ruined cities. I’d previously only seen ruins across a tile or two, but here there were some that filled an entire screen, many dozens of hexes wide, and each hex a source of precious metals. Picture two factions settling into an uneasy truce, each scavenging the ruins on their side of an abandoned city, each satisfied with the compromise until the salvage starts to dry up, and the recycling facilities move closer and closer to the border. You can see it, can’t you? That feeling of discovering and making a planet your own is reflected in your regime itself, because Shadow Empire also mixes in elements from management, and even role playing games. I can hardly call it a match for Crusader Kings, but they’re significant enough to matter, and to add another dimension to the war sim. Your regime’s is characterised by a combination of three core ideologies. An autocratic regime will be popular with your soldiers, and give you more power over your ministers. Perhaps you’ll mix that with an intellectual bent, encouraging research and a more calculating approach to governance. There’s enough variety to make anything viable. Your responses to events can consolidate your current profiles, or gradually switch you over to another set. It takes commitment and occasional sacrifices to maintain the exact outlook you want, especially as you need to balance the three pillars of your population (workers, soldiers, and civilians, who operate state buildings, shoot dudes, and run the vital-but-complicated private economy, respectively) too. You’ll also need to keep in mind the opinion and loyalties of your staff. Staff? Oh yes. You can’t run a whole government yourself. You’ll need to set up ministries to handle the economy, foreign affairs, and multiple research institutes. You’ll appoint generals to your armies, and governors to your cities. They all have their own skills, their own preferred profiles, and they’ll all sometimes do something stupid or unhinged. But they spin the machinery’s cogs bolts for you, and are also vital in generating “stratagems”, represented by cards. Fellow card-dislikers don’t be put off; these are just the game’s way of visually representing plans your bureaucracy puts on your desk, assuming you’ve directed your budgets towards the right tasks. It’s through strategems that you do non-routine things like carry out diplomatic overtures, hold a parade, or set your spies to work on destabilising a foreign regime. Did I mention that your staff can also join, or even lead factions within your government? And that they can join cults, corporations, or become embroiled in corruption? Or that you might dig up and restore a swarm of mechanical wasps? Or find yourself in the middle of a war on three fronts when the godfather of the local mafia invites you to dinner? Or that if you’re friendly with a corporation, they might offer to build you a zoo? The Ostanl Foundation had zoos coming out of its goddamn ears until I quadrupled the tax on those clowns. One of my towns has a nest of giant spiders hanging out on an irradiated hillside. They’ve never caused any problems, though, and don’t seem to mind that we drive lorries nearby and have the occasional civil war. Oh god, we haven’t even talked about the ‘war’ part yet. The wars are good, and again affected by the terrain. A mountain heavy game means lots of standoffs and gruelling infantry slogs until someone designs a good air transport, while a wide rocky landscape demands a good fleet of buggies and light tanks, and forests are a free for all until someone builds an efficient battery-powered mech called Angry Simon that absolutely tears through the armour I’d been struggling to break. For something so complicated and large in scale, the individual turns are remarkably low hassle. I suppose partly because I find balancing everything and building my manufacturing/bureaucratic base more interesting than the usual 4X build order roteness. You know how wars go in a 4X. Either they attack you out of nowhere because you’re the player, then you both have all your dudes stand on each other’s shoulders and bash into each other, or you research boats and sail an army directly up their chuff. The battles here are more than just chucking Biggus Dickus at the nearest enemy army until they’re all gone, and the way they scale up gradually from nothing makes them feel manageable. Overwhelming as it all sounds, the clever connection of all these systems makes them much more approachable than you’d think, and the 4X structure gradually reveals them to you over your first game or two. In truth, Shadow Empire’s RPG side will take a back seat, and it cribs key patterns (not the whole cloth) from the civ-like. You will absolutely be waging a tonne of war, possibly right from the beginning if you get unlucky with planet generation. And that war will take proper planning and thought and practical support networks. It remains a wargame first and foremost, so if you absolutely outright hate them, you probably won’t get over that. It’s not without flaws, of course. Much as I love the planet generation, it sorely needs some refinement, and more options to customise or lock down wanted aspects. The unpredictability of each start can be a lodestone when you start out in a hopeless situation, or get an unwanted set of rival empires. Wargame or not, it could use a more involved diplomacy model, or at least some friendlier empire archetypes, and though the option of a planet with dozens of rivals appeals, the extremely long AI turn times make them near impossible to play. This is absolutely a game to alt+tab in and out of, even if that’s not your usual habit. Oh, and there’s currently no naval power or enterprise at all, which doesn’t bother me personally but might you. And finally, although I’ve learned a tonne about it, and continue to learn more detail near every day, I won’t pretend it doesn’t take some dedication, or at least willingness to be confused and badly beaten for a day or two. 2021 moods, amirite. But I love Shadow Empire. It came at me from the right direction. Instead of feeling like a test I had to memorise an encyclopedia for, it enticed me. It uses the nation-building and management as a bridge to hefty war simulation, and the exploration and technology progression to liven up some fairly standard combined arms strategies. The ingredients it transplants from elsewhere sprinkle enough chocolatey cinnamony goodness into that often dense, stodgy porridge to make it the best and most compulsively playable serious wargame I’ve ever played for a solid month. It’s the perfect place to start and I am utterly furious.