I remember it was a family board wargame-Pieces were ground forces (army, circle pieces), naval forces (navy, square? pieces), and aerial forces (planes, triangle pieces). No little soldiers or boats or anything, abstract pieces that represented your military might conceptually....Importantly! groups of 5 consolidated into a bigger piece of the same shape. No board game google shows me has any piece like that-I dont remember rolling any dice during combat. Either I forgot like a moron or combat was really deterministic, little to no randomness-The forces at war were (vaguely remembering): Europe?, Soviet Union, Asia?, and more that I cant remember...Importantly. I think America wasnt available (you could wrap around to asia or europe?)-I think mission scoring had some element of card draw, as sometimes to score points some territories had to be occupied or HAD to remain neutral (no one in it or contested by players)-You could nuke a region. For the rest of the game no one can score or occupy it.PLEASE. I cant find anything about this game and Im SURE I didnt allucinate playing with my family a game that never existedPic unrelated, I dont have any pics of how it looked
>>97954803>nuke a regionThat alone screams Risk Legacy
>>97954839Well no... the pieces are soldiers instead of circles and triangles, and it was WW1-esque in aesthetics *despite* the Not-Nuke option
>>97954872the pieces in Risk Legacy I mean*
>>97954803What did the board look like?
>>97954803Ideology: the War of Ideas maybe?
>>97954803Is it some sort of weird version of diplomacy?
>>97954839>>97954882You should post pics.
>>97962245
>>97962854
>>97959484It was a map of the old world, africa(?) europe asia and... I think australia...? again I dont remember ever setting troops on the american continent>>97962245Not that one no>>97962691If that was the case it was one where not only multiple of your troops could occupy a region, but also your enemy without automatically having to fight one another.