1. Northern Journey (PC)(FPS)2. Hatchpunk (PC)(FPS)3. Might and Magic IX (PC)(RPG)4. Star Wars: Empire at War (PC)(RTS)5. Chasm: The Rift (PC)(FPS)6. Real Heroes: Firefighter HD (PC)(FPS)7. CULTIC (PC)(FPS)
8. Consortium (PC)(FPS)9. Brothers in Arms: Road to Hill 30 (PC)(FPS)
10. Forgive Me, Father (PC)(FPS)11. Teomim Island (PC)(FPS)12. Regions of Ruin (PC)(Action RPG)
13. Void Bastards (PC)(FPS)14. Red Orchestra 2: Heroes of Stalingrad - Single Player (PC)(FPS)15. Quake: Scourge of Armagon (PC)(FPS)
16. Quake: Dissolution of Eternity (PC)(FPS)17. Bioshock Infinite (PC)(FPS)18. Chop Goblins (PC)(FPS)19. Ravenloft: Stone Prophet (PC)(RPG)20. Halfway (PC)(Tactical Strategy)21. Brothers in Arms: Earned in Blood (PC)(FPS)22. Might and Magic X - Legacy (PC)(RPG)
23. Civilization IV (PC)(4X Strategy)24. Operation Body Count (PC)(FPS)25. WW2 Rebuilder (PC)(Simulation)A lot of video games focus on the shooting or strategy aspects of World War 2. It makes sense, considering it was a massive military confrontation playing out globally over a period of years, as new strategies, tactics, and tools were unveiled in a mobile confrontation very much unlike the static meatgrinder of World War 1. That said, the conflict has been so heavily mined that little feels new or original.
Yet WW2 Rebuilder found a way to bring something new, not by focusing on the war but on its aftermath. Instead of shooting guns and dropping bombs, WW2 Rebuilder instead makes you survey the aftermath and try to restore what was destroyed. You now have to dismantle to tools of war, then use the raw components to repair damaged roads, construct buildings, and beautify what was devastated. Your tools of the trade include sledgehammers, shovels, welding torches, paint rollers, and brushes. Clean the soot from propaganda posters, rebuild twisted railroads, and remove machinery once dedicated to destruction.
This falls into a small but growing camp of games I think of as "cleaning FPS". These kinds of games started more as a joke with Viscera Cleanup Detail, where you go into levels based on movies and games and scrub the walls in the wake of massacres. Powerwash Simulator is another, which does exactly what it purports to be. WW2 Rebuilder adds its own take with a four-part resource system and the ability to place objects to build a homely world after years of devastation. I really like this genre; as a fan of FPS, rarely do players have to be confronted with the aftermath, yet its a key piece of any massacre or war that human beings take part in. Plus, there is something soothing about seeing the world restored in the wake of wanton destruction.
It's not a perfect game. There are glitches and awkward moments, ranging from spelling typos to awkward placements of items and occasional clipping problems. The physics of large construction equipment can get full on bizarre. The devs understand this though and have thankfully provided a quick Unstuck option as well as the ability to reset vehicles if they end up jammed. They're paying attention, and they're also working on new content, with a new village in Normandy level already added since launch.
That said, the game so far has been almost entirely focused on Western Europe. Levels take place in England, North Ireland, West Germany, and France, and of these, England has the vast bulk. The developers are Polish, so I understand the Euro-centric view, though I do hope that as things expand, we'll eventually see a global take. Helping to reconstruct the railway at El Alamein and Mersa Matruh would be a nice change of pace, for instance.
I have hope for the future with WW2 Rebuilder. I also have hope for this unique genre, because I find it so rewarding to revitalize after all the FPS I play. Hopefully others will too.