Astir

Legendary Skial King
The new reference in RTS at its best!

The Wargame series returns to duty, larger, richer and more spectacular than ever before. In Wargame Red Dragon, you are engaged in a large-scale conflict where Western forces clash against the Communist bloc.

1991: the two blocs confront each other in a new theater of war, Asia, joined by various other countries: Japan, China, North Korea, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand.

You command the military resources of all 17 nations involved, assembling your fighting force from a phenomenal selection of 1,450 units that have been meticulously reproduced from their source! Command tanks, planes, helicopters, new warships and amphibious units in intense battles of unequaled tactical depth. Master the relief of varied, ultra realistic battlefields, dominate the new maritime areas and rewrite history in a conflict that has been directed and designed in stunning detail by development studio Eugen Systems.

Wargame Red Dragon is thrilling in single-player mode with its new dynamic campaign system, and also offers an extensive multiplayer mode where up to 20 players can compete against each other simultaneously.
http://store.steampowered.com/app/251060/


Having played Wargame: European Escalation and Wargame: Airland Battle, I have high hopes for this sequel. Since they experienced with aircraft for the first time in W:AB, they gave it a more dept now. Also, ships have been added which should be quite nice to get a tactical game.
 
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I have an Acer Aspire 5750G and I manage to run AirLand Battle at medium to low quality in 10v10's. I don't know about Red Dragon yet, but like last time the alpha & beta will almost melt my laptop. I will see, but the game play is terrifically tactical and rewarding.
 
Sorry if this sounds rude, but aren't you in the Belgian Air Component? Why buy and play a game where you operate military vehicles when you're qualified to operate them in real life? I feel like the experience from actually operating one would easily overshadow any experience a video game could provide. I'm just curious.
 
I am a Belgian Air Cadet, which is a division that is supported by the Air Component. The purpose of my division is to give a training on top of secondary school which includes gliding and citizenship. Logically, most of us are ambitious to go into the Air Component, which is strongly supported by our division.

However, I am disqualified for a light form of scoliosis. I am aloud to join any component, but not to be a pilot because of the G-forces and vibrations.

To answer your question, yes it would be ridicule to play this if I would pilot military vehicles myself. But fate isn't on my side.
 
This gamplay footage shows the importance and scale of naval fights.
(also the graphics are astonishing)