Compare The Campaign Series: Fall Weiss prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Wastelands Interactive. Published by Conglomerate 5. Released on 5/30/2014. Available on PC. Genres: Indie, Strategy.

A hex-and-counter operational wargame covering the 1939 Polish campaign, built for players who already own a Panzer General box set and want something meatier, not for anyone expecting a tutorial.

I want to be straight with you before you click purchase: Fall Weiss rewards a very specific kind of player, and it makes no effort to hide that fact. This is a turn-based, hex-and-counter operational wargame covering the German invasion of Poland in September 1939, played out across a 141 x 133 hex map of roughly 20,000 tiles. Each turn represents one day of the campaign, and the full run clocks in at 122 turns. If those numbers read like a purchase checklist rather than a warning, you are probably the intended audience. The standout mechanical hook is the three-faction setup. Germany, Poland, and the Soviet Union are all playable, each with distinct victory conditions: Germany needs Poland crushed and Russia pacified or defeated; Poland has to hold the line for four months while negotiating a Soviet non-aggression; Russia wants Poland gone and Germany at bay. On top of that, three what-if toggles let you activate an earlier Polish mobilization, a French offensive in the West, or Soviet neutrality. The combination produces genuine replay incentive from a single map, which is a real achievement given that the whole game is built around one campaign. Combat leans on coordinated multi-unit assaults rather than single-stack punches: defenders pick up significant terrain and entrenchment bonuses, so the only reliable path to destruction is encirclement rather than frontal grinding. The AI reportedly understands this on a tactical level and will attempt to pull units back to defensible positions or close pockets around exposed attackers. Strategically it is less impressive, but competent enough to punish careless play. Here is the honest caveat that the store page glosses over. There is no in-game tutorial. The manual ships as a PDF in the install folder, not as interactive guidance. Player reviews consistently flag that the AI turn can feel glacially slow if you are waiting for it to resolve movement across hundreds of units, and there is no reliable fast-forward. More critically, recent community reports indicate Windows compatibility problems tied to legacy IE dependencies, with some players on current Windows versions unable to load the game at all without forum workarounds that may or may not still function. That is a meaningful risk for a title with no recent patch activity on record. The modding angle is the only reason I would not write this off entirely for a patient buyer. The Wastelands Interactive engine is shared across several of their WW2 titles, which means the tooling is documented in community spaces and the map format is moddable for players who want custom orders of battle or what-if scenarios beyond the three built-in toggles. The unit roster stretches to over 700 historical entries, including Uhlans, Panzer formations, Stuka air support, and supply depot mechanics that tie into a chain-of-command system where HQ proximity boosts unit efficiency. If the compatibility issues can be resolved on your machine, there is a genuine operational wargame underneath the rough edges. For absolute beginners to the hex-wargame genre, this is not the recommended entry point. The community broadly echoes that sentiment. If you have played Panzer General or any of the Decisive Campaigns titles and you specifically want a Poland 1939 operational layer with three-faction what-if replay and deep unit rosters, Fall Weiss does things no competing title does at this scope. Just verify Windows compatibility before committing, and go in knowing the PDF is your only teacher. Diego, Scout Team

The Campaign Series: Fall Weiss
IndieStrategy

The Campaign Series: Fall Weiss

May 30, 2014Wastelands InteractiveConglomerate 5
GamerScout Says

A hex-and-counter operational wargame covering the 1939 Polish campaign, built for players who already own a Panzer General box set and want something meatier, not for anyone expecting a tutorial.

PC
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About The Campaign Series: Fall Weiss

I want to be straight with you before you click purchase: Fall Weiss rewards a very specific kind of player, and it makes no effort to hide that fact. This is a turn-based, hex-and-counter operational wargame covering the German invasion of Poland in September 1939, played out across a 141 x 133 hex map of roughly 20,000 tiles. Each turn represents one day of the campaign, and the full run clocks in at 122 turns. If those numbers read like a purchase checklist rather than a warning, you are probably the intended audience. The standout mechanical hook is the three-faction setup. Germany, Poland, and the Soviet Union are all playable, each with distinct victory conditions: Germany needs Poland crushed and Russia pacified or defeated; Poland has to hold the line for four months while negotiating a Soviet non-aggression; Russia wants Poland gone and Germany at bay. On top of that, three what-if toggles let you activate an earlier Polish mobilization, a French offensive in the West, or Soviet neutrality. The combination produces genuine replay incentive from a single map, which is a real achievement given that the whole game is built around one campaign. Combat leans on coordinated multi-unit assaults rather than single-stack punches: defenders pick up significant terrain and entrenchment bonuses, so the only reliable path to destruction is encirclement rather than frontal grinding. The AI reportedly understands this on a tactical level and will attempt to pull units back to defensible positions or close pockets around exposed attackers. Strategically it is less impressive, but competent enough to punish careless play. Here is the honest caveat that the store page glosses over. There is no in-game tutorial. The manual ships as a PDF in the install folder, not as interactive guidance. Player reviews consistently flag that the AI turn can feel glacially slow if you are waiting for it to resolve movement across hundreds of units, and there is no reliable fast-forward. More critically, recent community reports indicate Windows compatibility problems tied to legacy IE dependencies, with some players on current Windows versions unable to load the game at all without forum workarounds that may or may not still function. That is a meaningful risk for a title with no recent patch activity on record. The modding angle is the only reason I would not write this off entirely for a patient buyer. The Wastelands Interactive engine is shared across several of their WW2 titles, which means the tooling is documented in community spaces and the map format is moddable for players who want custom orders of battle or what-if scenarios beyond the three built-in toggles. The unit roster stretches to over 700 historical entries, including Uhlans, Panzer formations, Stuka air support, and supply depot mechanics that tie into a chain-of-command system where HQ proximity boosts unit efficiency. If the compatibility issues can be resolved on your machine, there is a genuine operational wargame underneath the rough edges. For absolute beginners to the hex-wargame genre, this is not the recommended entry point. The community broadly echoes that sentiment. If you have played Panzer General or any of the Decisive Campaigns titles and you specifically want a Poland 1939 operational layer with three-faction what-if replay and deep unit rosters, Fall Weiss does things no competing title does at this scope. Just verify Windows compatibility before committing, and go in knowing the PDF is your only teacher. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayercooplocal-coopachievementstrading-cardstier:sub-5Hex-and-CounterOperational WargameWhat-If ScenariosChain of CommandThree-FactionHistorical UnitsTurn-Based WW2Encirclement MechanicsMod-Friendly

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP
Memory
1024 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
500 MB available space
Graphics
256 MB
Processor
1.2

Recommended

OS
Windows 8
Memory
2048 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
800 MB available space
Graphics
512 MB
Processor
1.8 Dual Core

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Game Info

Developer
Wastelands Interactive
Publisher
Conglomerate 5
Release Date
May 30, 2014

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The Campaign Series: Fall Weiss is available on PC.

When was The Campaign Series: Fall Weiss released?

The Campaign Series: Fall Weiss was released on 30 May 2014.

Who developed The Campaign Series: Fall Weiss?

The Campaign Series: Fall Weiss was developed by Wastelands Interactive and published by Conglomerate 5.