Compare Frontline: Western Front prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Frontline: Games Series. Published by Frontline: Games Series. Released on 9/13/2019. Available on PC. Genres: Indie, Simulation, Strategy.

Old-school hex wargaming at its leanest: a solo-dev WW2 entry that respects Panzer General more than it respects your free time. Good on-ramp, modest ceiling.

I have a soft spot for one-developer wargames that clearly grew out of love for the Panzer General era, and Frontline: Western Front sits squarely in that tradition. This is a hex-and-counter turn-based game covering the WW2 Western theatre from Sicily and Cassino all the way to Caen and Normandy. Before anything else, know what it is: a streamlined, old-school wargame designed to be accessible first and complex second. If you fire it up expecting the mechanical density of Panzer Corps 2 or the production scale of Unity of Command, you will feel the gap immediately. Adjust expectations accordingly, and there is a genuinely honest little game here. The core loop is clean and familiar to anyone who has logged hours in the genre. You move units across topographical hex maps, engage adjacent enemies, and manage a reinforcement economy by spending a resource currency to bring fresh units onto the board. Units level up as they survive, unlocking active abilities that matter: Overwatch lets infantry hold defensive lines, Artillery Barrage calls in off-map fire support, Camouflage keeps vulnerable squads alive an extra turn, and AT Grenades give infantry a fighting chance against armour. The ability list is longer than the price tag implies, covering Smoke, Sabotage, APCR penetration shots for tanks, Shell Shock to suppress enemy stacks, and the full casualty spectrum from Suppressed through Routed, MIA, and KIA. Managing that status chain is where the actual tactical texture lives. Here is the honest problem for strategy veterans: the tutorial does not exist in the traditional sense. There are in-game pop-up hints, but no structured scenario to walk you through unit matchups, terrain bonuses, or the reinforcement cadence. For a genre newcomer, that friction is real. Counterintuitively, though, that same simplicity is the game's best argument for beginners. The UI is deliberately minimal, the maps are readable, and the stat numbers on each unit are straightforward enough that clicking around for twenty minutes teaches you more than most tutorials would. Steam community reviewers consistently flag this as a strong entry point for players new to hex wargames, and they are right. If you have a friend who keeps saying they want to try a wargame but bounces off Gary Grigsby titles, this is the bridge. The campaign breadth covers 15 scenarios including sandbox maps. Historically grounded operations like D-Day, Anzio, and the Cassino breakout give the mission list a solid structure. The unit roster runs to over 100 types, covering the full Allied and Wehrmacht order of battle for the theatre, and you can play either side. The AI is adequate rather than impressive. It will not outmaneuver you with combined-arms thinking, but it applies pressure consistently enough to punish overextension, which is the minimum bar for a singleplayer wargame. Mod support is absent, and there is no multiplayer, so this is purely a solo experience with no community content to extend the shelf life once the campaigns are done. With roughly 77 percent positive Steam ratings across a small review pool, the verdict from the niche audience that found it is cautiously warm rather than enthusiastic. For the price point this sits at, Frontline: Western Front is a defensible purchase for anyone who wants a low-pressure entry into WW2 hex tactics, or a veteran who wants something to pick up and put down without committing to a 300-turn campaign. It will not replace your Panzer Corps installation. It was never trying to. Diego, Scout Team

Frontline: Western Front
IndieSimulationStrategy

Frontline: Western Front

Sep 13, 2019Frontline: Games Series
GamerScout Says

Old-school hex wargaming at its leanest: a solo-dev WW2 entry that respects Panzer General more than it respects your free time. Good on-ramp, modest ceiling.

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About Frontline: Western Front

I have a soft spot for one-developer wargames that clearly grew out of love for the Panzer General era, and Frontline: Western Front sits squarely in that tradition. This is a hex-and-counter turn-based game covering the WW2 Western theatre from Sicily and Cassino all the way to Caen and Normandy. Before anything else, know what it is: a streamlined, old-school wargame designed to be accessible first and complex second. If you fire it up expecting the mechanical density of Panzer Corps 2 or the production scale of Unity of Command, you will feel the gap immediately. Adjust expectations accordingly, and there is a genuinely honest little game here. The core loop is clean and familiar to anyone who has logged hours in the genre. You move units across topographical hex maps, engage adjacent enemies, and manage a reinforcement economy by spending a resource currency to bring fresh units onto the board. Units level up as they survive, unlocking active abilities that matter: Overwatch lets infantry hold defensive lines, Artillery Barrage calls in off-map fire support, Camouflage keeps vulnerable squads alive an extra turn, and AT Grenades give infantry a fighting chance against armour. The ability list is longer than the price tag implies, covering Smoke, Sabotage, APCR penetration shots for tanks, Shell Shock to suppress enemy stacks, and the full casualty spectrum from Suppressed through Routed, MIA, and KIA. Managing that status chain is where the actual tactical texture lives. Here is the honest problem for strategy veterans: the tutorial does not exist in the traditional sense. There are in-game pop-up hints, but no structured scenario to walk you through unit matchups, terrain bonuses, or the reinforcement cadence. For a genre newcomer, that friction is real. Counterintuitively, though, that same simplicity is the game's best argument for beginners. The UI is deliberately minimal, the maps are readable, and the stat numbers on each unit are straightforward enough that clicking around for twenty minutes teaches you more than most tutorials would. Steam community reviewers consistently flag this as a strong entry point for players new to hex wargames, and they are right. If you have a friend who keeps saying they want to try a wargame but bounces off Gary Grigsby titles, this is the bridge. The campaign breadth covers 15 scenarios including sandbox maps. Historically grounded operations like D-Day, Anzio, and the Cassino breakout give the mission list a solid structure. The unit roster runs to over 100 types, covering the full Allied and Wehrmacht order of battle for the theatre, and you can play either side. The AI is adequate rather than impressive. It will not outmaneuver you with combined-arms thinking, but it applies pressure consistently enough to punish overextension, which is the minimum bar for a singleplayer wargame. Mod support is absent, and there is no multiplayer, so this is purely a solo experience with no community content to extend the shelf life once the campaigns are done. With roughly 77 percent positive Steam ratings across a small review pool, the verdict from the niche audience that found it is cautiously warm rather than enthusiastic. For the price point this sits at, Frontline: Western Front is a defensible purchase for anyone who wants a low-pressure entry into WW2 hex tactics, or a veteran who wants something to pick up and put down without committing to a 300-turn campaign. It will not replace your Panzer Corps installation. It was never trying to. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertier:sub-5Hex-and-CounterUnit ProgressionEntry-Level WargameDual FactionObjective CaptureSolo DeveloperReinforcement EconomyStatus Effects

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Xp
Memory
512 MB RAM
Storage
1024 MB available space
Graphics
256
Processor
P4
Sound Card
Any on-board chip will work.

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Memory
2048 MB RAM
Storage
1024 MB available space
Graphics
Intel 4xxx Series w/ 512MB VRAM or better
Processor
Dual-Core Intel i5 CPU @ 2GHz+
Sound Card
Any

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Game Info

Developer
Frontline: Games Series
Publisher
Frontline: Games Series
Release Date
Sep 13, 2019

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Frontline: Western Front is available on PC.

When was Frontline: Western Front released?

Frontline: Western Front was released on 13 September 2019.

Who developed Frontline: Western Front?

Frontline: Western Front was developed by Frontline: Games Series.