Labyrinth: War of Terror (5th Printing)

£2,044.58 £1,805.70
(You save £238.87)
Picture of Labyrinth: War of Terror (5th Printing)
£2,044.58 £1,805.70
(You save £238.87)

Estimated Release Date is Sep 30th 2024

GMT Games
Action Points Action/Event Area Majority / Influence Campaign / Battle Card Driven Command Cards Dice Rolling Events Hand Management Point to Point Movement Scenario / Mission / Campaign Game Simulation Solo / Solitaire Game Stat Check Resolution Sud
12+
1 - 2
180 minutes
Volko Ruhnke

NOTE: This is a preorder item. Orders containing both preorder and in stock items will be held and shipped once all items are available. Estimated release dates, images, and game contents are subject to change. For more information, please refer to the preorder section on our FAQ page.

2001: The “American Century” had closed with a single Cold War superpower standing and a pause in conflict that some at the time dubbed “The End of History”. It wasn’t.

In the Middle East and South Asia, an Islamic revival was underway. Resentments bred in part of US support for the regions’ anti-Soviet tyrannies soon erupted into a new struggle against the West. Wealthy Saudi fanatic Usama bin Ladin issued a declaration of holy war against America in 1996 and then fired the first shots with spectacular terrorist attacks on US targets in East Africa in 1998 and the Arab Peninsula in 2000. Bin Ladin’s al-Qaeda organization plotted securely under the protection of the Taliban, a fundamentalist movement in Afghanistan born of the anti-Soviet “Bear Trap” of the 1980s. By 2001, al-Qaeda had set in motion even more devastating strikes — this time within the US Homeland — that Bin Ladin hoped would light off a global Muslim uprising. Uprising or not, the Western response to those September 11th attacks would reshape international affairs from London to Jakarta and from Moscow to Dar es Salaam.

Labyrinth takes 1 or 2 players inside the Islamist jihad and the global war on terror. With broad scope, ease of play, and a never-ending variety of event combinations similar to GMT’s highly popular Twilight Struggle, Labyrinth portrays not only the US efforts to counter extremists’ use of terrorist tactics but the wider ideological struggle — guerrilla warfare, regime change, democratization, and much more.