Compare Wings of Glory prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Dire Wolf. Published by Dire Wolf. Released on 7/21/2022. Available on PC, Mac. Genres: Indie, Strategy.

Turn-based WWI dogfighting with real maneuver-deck mechanics and cross-platform PvP, though its thin content roster will leave you hungry for more within a weekend.

My first take on Wings of Glory was genuine surprise that a board game port this small could feel this deliberate. Dire Wolf has taken Ares Games' WWI tabletop system and put it on PC without gutting what makes it tick, and for a certain kind of player that matters more than any production budget. The core loop is turn-based but the tension is real: each round you secretly commit three maneuver cards from your plane-specific deck, then both sides reveal and execute them in sequence. Your Sopwith Camel handles differently from a Fokker Dr.1 because the decks are genuinely asymmetric, heavy on tight turns for some aircraft and loaded with straight-line speed for others. Special damage states like rudder jams or engine fire then lock or remove specific cards, which creates genuine pressure and not just a stat drain. It is a slow-burn system that rewards reading your opponent's habits, not twitch reflexes. The roster on offer covers Entente stalwarts (Sopwith Camel, SPAD XIII, Sopwith Snipe, Airco DH.4) against Central Powers aircraft (Fokker Dr.1, Albatros D.Va, Fokker D.VII, Roland C.II), each with historically-referenced ace skins. You can build a custom pilot with skills like Bullet Checker to reduce gun jam frequency, or pick historical aces with pre-set loadouts. The Hangar is functional and gets the job done, though the lack of early and mid-war planes is a gap that tabletop fans will notice immediately. Twelve tactical challenges cover dogfights, bombing runs, trench-strafing, and reconnaissance, with three AI difficulty levels. The solo content is lean but honest about what it is: structured practice before you take the fight online. Cross-platform multiplayer is the real reason to consider this seriously. A PC player on Steam can match against someone on iOS or Android, the session creation is clean, and Dire Wolf does require a free account for online play. That is a minor friction point, but not a dealbreaker. Where it does sting is the map. The battle area is compact, and faster aircraft with aggressive straight-line decks can burn through it in a few card plays, turning positioning into a boundary-avoidance puzzle as much as a tactics problem. The developers reportedly expanded map size post-launch in response to feedback, which is the right call, but the underlying issue still comes up in community discussion. There is also no campaign, no persistent pilot progression between sessions beyond a global scoreboard, and no async turn option for online games, all of which the player base has asked for repeatedly. If you have never touched the tabletop game, the three-tutorial on-ramp is genuinely well-built and the UI handles all the arithmetic so you can focus on the spatial puzzle of cutting off an opponent's angles. If you have played the physical version, this is a solid way to get games in when your group is not available. The honest ceiling here is that Wings of Glory is a tight, accurate conversion of a good system, delivered with modest content. It will not replace a full evening of miniatures on a proper mat, but as a cross-platform pickup game that respects the source mechanics and does not pad itself with filler modes, it earns its place on the drive. Fred, Scout Team

Wings of Glory
IndieStrategy

Wings of Glory

Jul 21, 2022Dire Wolf
GamerScout Says

Turn-based WWI dogfighting with real maneuver-deck mechanics and cross-platform PvP, though its thin content roster will leave you hungry for more within a weekend.

PCMac
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Wings of Glory

My first take on Wings of Glory was genuine surprise that a board game port this small could feel this deliberate. Dire Wolf has taken Ares Games' WWI tabletop system and put it on PC without gutting what makes it tick, and for a certain kind of player that matters more than any production budget. The core loop is turn-based but the tension is real: each round you secretly commit three maneuver cards from your plane-specific deck, then both sides reveal and execute them in sequence. Your Sopwith Camel handles differently from a Fokker Dr.1 because the decks are genuinely asymmetric, heavy on tight turns for some aircraft and loaded with straight-line speed for others. Special damage states like rudder jams or engine fire then lock or remove specific cards, which creates genuine pressure and not just a stat drain. It is a slow-burn system that rewards reading your opponent's habits, not twitch reflexes. The roster on offer covers Entente stalwarts (Sopwith Camel, SPAD XIII, Sopwith Snipe, Airco DH.4) against Central Powers aircraft (Fokker Dr.1, Albatros D.Va, Fokker D.VII, Roland C.II), each with historically-referenced ace skins. You can build a custom pilot with skills like Bullet Checker to reduce gun jam frequency, or pick historical aces with pre-set loadouts. The Hangar is functional and gets the job done, though the lack of early and mid-war planes is a gap that tabletop fans will notice immediately. Twelve tactical challenges cover dogfights, bombing runs, trench-strafing, and reconnaissance, with three AI difficulty levels. The solo content is lean but honest about what it is: structured practice before you take the fight online. Cross-platform multiplayer is the real reason to consider this seriously. A PC player on Steam can match against someone on iOS or Android, the session creation is clean, and Dire Wolf does require a free account for online play. That is a minor friction point, but not a dealbreaker. Where it does sting is the map. The battle area is compact, and faster aircraft with aggressive straight-line decks can burn through it in a few card plays, turning positioning into a boundary-avoidance puzzle as much as a tactics problem. The developers reportedly expanded map size post-launch in response to feedback, which is the right call, but the underlying issue still comes up in community discussion. There is also no campaign, no persistent pilot progression between sessions beyond a global scoreboard, and no async turn option for online games, all of which the player base has asked for repeatedly. If you have never touched the tabletop game, the three-tutorial on-ramp is genuinely well-built and the UI handles all the arithmetic so you can focus on the spatial puzzle of cutting off an opponent's angles. If you have played the physical version, this is a solid way to get games in when your group is not available. The honest ceiling here is that Wings of Glory is a tight, accurate conversion of a good system, delivered with modest content. It will not replace a full evening of miniatures on a proper mat, but as a cross-platform pickup game that respects the source mechanics and does not pad itself with filler modes, it earns its place on the drive. Fred, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvpcooponline-coopcross-platformachievementstier:sub-5Maneuver-Card SystemAsync-FriendlyCross-Platform PvPAce CustomizationWWI HistoricalTurn-Based DogfightTabletop Port

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 (64bit version only)
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
Graphics card with DX11 or OpenGL 3.x capabilities
Processor
Intel Core i5-2400 or AMD Ryzen 3 2200G

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 (64bit version only)
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
5 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT (512 MB) or ATI Radeon HD 4850 (512 MB) or better
Processor
Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 or AMD Athlon 64 X2 5000+ or better

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Dire Wolf
Publisher
Dire Wolf
Release Date
Jul 21, 2022

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

More from Dire Wolf