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Full Veterans: Napoleonic Wars update
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What changed
- Gameplay
- Maps
Veterans: Napoleonic Wars changes
Take a closer look at how combat changed in Veterans: Napoleonic Wars - and why.
Over the past weeks we have been working on several big parts of the game, and one of the most important is how units actually fight. Combat is the core of Veterans, and we wanted it to feel less like an abstraction and more like commanding real men on a real field. Below we walk you through the three areas we changed, and the thinking behind each one.
Players in our current limited playtest can already feel these changes today. And everyone will be able to try them in the free demo during Steam Next Fest, which begins on June 15.
A New Melee
Before. When two battalions met in melee, they would pull together and line up face to face - drawn toward each other's center even when only a corner of each unit actually touched. It looked unnatural, as if the units were magnets, and it hid the real shape of the fight.
What we changed. Now each battalion has a frontal contact zone - a band along the front of its formation, as wide as the line itself. Any enemy that crosses this zone locks onto the exact spot where the two formations overlap, and the fight happens right there. No more snapping to the center. Units fight where they meet.
Because the front is divided into zones, a single battalion can now fight on several points at once. A wide line attacked from the left and the right deals with each threat on its own section of the front, while the middle may stay free. The width and shape of your line now matter far more than before.
And when you have the advantage, your free flanks become active. If part of your front has no enemy on it and you outnumber the foe, those soldiers begin to swing inward, slowly wrapping around the enemy's side. It is not an instant turn - it takes seconds, and a quick opponent can pull back or reinforce before the trap closes.
We also tightened the charge. Leaving a melee is no longer free: a unit that breaks contact takes a couple of extra hits as it pulls away, and a unit still in fighting shape can charge back in within a few seconds. The choice to press an attack or hold back is yours - limited by your losses, morale, and fatigue, not by arbitrary rules.
A New Fallback
Before. Fallback asked nothing of you. A retreat could last a single second, so clever players used it not to escape a fight but to dodge quickly around the field. It was a maneuvering trick, not a real withdrawal.
What we changed. First, melee is now a real commitment. While a unit is locked in close combat, Fallback is the only order it will accept - every other command is greyed out until the unit breaks away. And Fallback itself now behaves much closer to a true disengagement. The unit pulls out of the fight and cannot be freely steered for about ten seconds - so when you call Fallback, you are committing to leaving, not darting sideways. For the first few seconds the unit ignores the zone of control of the enemies it was just fighting, giving you a clean break if you earned it with good positioning. But take care: if a fresh enemy intercepts the retreating unit, it is drawn into a new fight under the normal rules.
One detail we like: an enemy using Fallback is not marked as routing - it will not flash white. So reading whether a foe is pulling back in good order or actually fleeing is now part of your job as a commander.
A New Shooting Zone
Before. A unit's field of fire was drawn as a cone spreading out from the center of the unit. It did not match where the soldiers actually stood, so it was hard to read which enemies your line could really reach - and it ignored the shape of your formation.
What we changed. The shooting zone is now built from your front line, not from a point in the center. It starts at your outermost front-rank soldiers and opens forward to the range of your weapons. Because it follows your formation, the width of your line sets the width of your fire. A unit spread into line covers a wide field and can engage across a broad front; the same unit in column covers a narrow strip. The zone updates the moment you change formation or turn, and you can see it clearly when you select a unit.
This makes formation a real firing decision. Want more muskets on a wide enemy line? Spread out. Pushing through a gap? A column fires forward in a tight arc. Your shape on the field is now your field of fire.
See you on the field
These three changes work together. Melee rewards reading the shape of a clash, Fallback makes leaving a fight a real decision, and the new shooting zone makes your formation matter for every volley. We think the battlefield feels sharper and more honest because of them.
If you are in our limited playtest, play it and tell us how it feels. The best place to share your thoughts is our Discord - the team reads it directly, so your feedback and ideas reach us first-hand. And if you are not in the playtest, the free demo goes live during Steam Next Fest on June 15, and everyone can take command for themselves.
The drums are beating. We will see you on the field!
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