Wargaming does more than re-create history - it preserves it.Īnd here’s how it does so, as GamesBeat learned from conversations with Wargaming’s Nicolas “The Chieftain” Moran, the director of militaria (aka chief historian), and Allan Muncaster of militaria relations. It uses staff historians to go over existing ship plans, securing documents from archives in around the world, from collectors, and even from retail to reconstruct these ships in a digital environment. It visits some of the remaining nine battleships afloat (eight of which are in the U.S.), such as the USS Texas, the only battleship from World War I left in the world, or the USS North Carolina. The maker of free-to-play PC online games World of Tanks, World of Warplanes, and World of Warships takes a museum-esque approach to re-creating these awesome ships (along with aircraft carriers, cruisers, and destroyers). Wargaming understands the lure of these majestic, deadly warships better than any other game company on the planet.
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