Skip to main content

On Sale: GamesAssetsToolsTabletopComics
Indie game storeFree gamesFun gamesHorror games
Game developmentAssetsComics
SalesBundles
Jobs
TagsGame Engines
(+2)

Oh my gosh!  Thanks so much for making this video!  It was really fun to hear your commentary.  Thanks for being funny rather than mean about some of the game's quirkier elements.  Your point on the Operation Savanah popping up after it becomes useless is well taken.   Thanks again!

(+1)

My pleasure! I know it can be useful to see how people play the game in practice.. Oh and regarding Operation Savanah - it occurs to me that another way to address this is by giving the SADF one more square as their homebase which is not controllable by the player (like the last square in the new Ukraine / Russia game), so they could never be completely extinguished. With that kind of a change, then those Operation Savanah cards would remain relevant, and there would continue to be a need for weapons later on in the game.. Of course it's possible that might be out of alignment with the meta-narrative here.. Was it possible for the ANC to conquer the SADF once and for all? Or did it remain a persistent threat up until end?

(+2)

Well, it was really the Cubans who defeated the SADF in Angola with the help of US oil companies.  Cuban and Angolan forces defeated the SADF at the battle of Quito Cuanavale, which is also called the Stalingrad of Africa.  The Angolan Civil War deserves its own game.  Anyway, this was in 1988 and secret talks between the ANC and the South African government were fairly far along.  The arms embargo was also starting to hurt the SADF's combat effectiveness, especially in the air where the South African Airforce had lost air superiority to Cuban MiG 21s.  Strikes and civil unrest back in South Africa also tied down South African troops that could have intervened in various border conflicts.  Basically, the SADF ran out of money, men, and equipment.  After Quito Cuanavale, South Africa's government decided to start pulling out of Angola and Namibia.  

Could the SADF have invaded neighboring countries after this point?  In theory, yes.  The SADF remained a highly effective and professional force.   However, South African society was tired of decades of war by this point.  

At the end of the day, Mandela pulled off nifty trick:  in ending Apartheid and the border wars, he made South Africa the economic capital of Southern Africa.  South African businessmen ranged across the continent setting up mining ventures just in time to sell minerals to an emerging China.  South Africa also became an important force in ending devastating conflicts such as the two Congolese civil wars.  A desegregated SANDF often forms the backbone of peace keeping missions across the continent (civil war is bad for business).  Today, south African troops can be found as far afield as Sudan.

Cuba won the battle, South Africa won the future.  

  

(+1)

Damn... Thanks for that context, pretty fascinating and inspiring stuff! Any films you recommend on this topic?

(+2)

If you only watch one film, Catch a Fire gives you a pretty good sense of the ANC and its struggles.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catch_a_Fire_(film)

(+1)

Awesome - I actually caught that film at the time it came out, but I don't remember anything, it'll be cool to check it out with fresh eyes.. Thanks!