Chris’ 15 Most Anticipated Strategy and Wargames of 2026

Introduction

2026 is shaping up to be an excellent year for strategy and wargaming fans. This list highlights a mix of under-the-radar titles, upcoming releases from unproven developers, and a few standout games that deserve a repeat mention, even if Nuno has already covered them, because they simply look that good.

To make things more interesting, the first five (15-11) are what I consider to be hidden gems: games from lesser-known studios that may or may not become breakout hits this year. It’s a gamble, but in this genre, risk often leads to the most rewarding experiences.

15 – SPEE

Spee looks like Steam and Iron with an actual budget, a modern UI, and campaign mechanics reminiscent of Rule the Waves. Combat previews are scarce, though, which raises the big question: will it deliver?

14 – Crimson Banner: War of Liberation

A Chinese-developed “beer and pretzels” wargame set during the Chinese Civil War (1946). There’s a lot of discussion around its logistics system, which intrigues me greatly.

Unfortunately, most information is currently available only in Chinese. If it ever receives an English release, Crimson Banner: War of Liberation could be a sleeper hit, especially for players eager to explore underrepresented historical periods.

13 – First Sino-Japanese War

I played the demo of the First Sino-Japanese War, and it shows a lot of promise. While it currently lacks sound effects, gameplay feels like WDS meets Rule the Waves, with a strategic map similar to Strategic Command.

Visually, it looks like Rule the Waves finally received a proper graphics budget. If the developers refine combat to feel more like WDS and polish the audio, this could become a dream game for hardcore wargamers.

12 – WARCOM: Fortress Europe

If WARCOM: Fortress Europe delivers, it could easily become my game of the year.

So far, the developers’ only previous release was a low-budget GTA-style game, but that effort showed promise. WARCOM uses voxel graphics to generate procedural battlefields, potentially offering infinite replayability.

Combat appears closer to Combat Mission than Armored Brigade 2, especially with its tactical pause system. Still, information is limited, and there’s always the risk of it ending up in prolonged alpha limbo like Battlefield Commander WWII.

11 – War of Dots

From what I understand, War of Dots is a free, fully moddable RTS focused on pure mechanics. I wasn’t particularly interested at first, but that changed when I saw screenshots of a NATO Counter Mod. The developer’s description says it all: “Remove everything unnecessary. Strategy in its purest form.”

If the modding scene takes off, this could become a minimalist classic.

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13 responses to “Chris’ 15 Most Anticipated Strategy and Wargames of 2026”

  1. Surprised to see Dawn of War 4 at #5, but no Total War: Warhammer 40k at all on the list.
    Any particular reason why?

    1. I would imagine it’s because it is not going to release in 2026.

      1. I’m looking for a solution, but this is all the UK’s government stupid laws fault.

      2. Haha, indeed, my bad!

    2. No confirmation on a release date on Total War: Warhammer 40k. Also not sold on it yet since I do not see previews of any large scale battle Total War is known for.

      This list I did my best to highlight some games that are under the radar too. A mix of popular games and hidden gems since more popular games already been covered by Nuno.

      1. You’re always right on the money, my man!

    3. I would love for Total War: Warhammer 40K to release in 2026, but I don’t think that’s going to happen, unfortunately.

  2. Can you stop using imgur please as it’s not visible in the UK

  3. Thank god it’s not a definitive list or in any order. I guess it’s subjective as any list is but some of the choices are laughable and the guy comes across as a casual on the surface Wargamer imho. Some cracking titles but I could give this task to my little niece and give her ChatGPT and it would come up with this kind of content.

    1. Opinions are opinions. I’m glad your niece is a great gamer!

    2. Like the OPs opinions or not, someone respects his opinions enough to pay him to write them. Does anyone pay you, guessing you no one respects your opinion enough. Maybe you should learn how to post you disagree in a useful way like give legit points vice little kid style arguments.

  4. Crimson Banner will be censored into oblivion by the CCP if it’s being made in China. Don’t expect it to be an accurate historical portrayal of the Chinese Civil War at all.

    1. Lot of American video games and movies are influenced by the military industrial complex. I think every country does some type of censoring. I’m fine with it.

      I just want to see other countries depicted in video games.

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