Baz JJ
Members
- May 23, 2013
- 2,349
- 502
I saw this question in another post and it made me wonder how many AFUK members aren't familiar with this type of game.
Also, I find that many people have misconceptions.
Wikipedia says
QUOTE
MilSim is an abbreviation of military simulation, and refers to military simulations conducted by civilians for entertainment purposes.
MilSim most often falls into two different categories: reenactment and simulation. Reenactments focus on a particular event in history and aim to provide the most accurate representation of the time period, events, and outcomes of the historical event. Simulation, however, may only focus on a particular time period and representation of which course a particular situation may have taken in history. In most cases a simulation event includes fictitious characters, groups, and political situations.
UNQUOTE
Of course, there is also Filmsim and people often mix the two terms. Its very hard to find a binding definition anywhere.
In my experience, there are a lot of shades of grey with milsimming. Extremes are those companies which treat players as real soldiers - exact loadouts are required for the era, players have to sleep rough for 36 hours (or not at all); some even have ranks, basic training and use saluting. At the other end of the spectrum is something one level away from a skirmish - a day theme where there is some ongoing connection between the games even though they have breaks between games and still use a safe zone.
I guess the message is that there is no one such thing as a milsim - instead, lots of different flavours.
If it interests you as an alternative to skirmishing, my advice would be to read the small print and understand what flavour you're buying !
Also, I find that many people have misconceptions.
Wikipedia says
QUOTE
MilSim is an abbreviation of military simulation, and refers to military simulations conducted by civilians for entertainment purposes.
MilSim most often falls into two different categories: reenactment and simulation. Reenactments focus on a particular event in history and aim to provide the most accurate representation of the time period, events, and outcomes of the historical event. Simulation, however, may only focus on a particular time period and representation of which course a particular situation may have taken in history. In most cases a simulation event includes fictitious characters, groups, and political situations.
UNQUOTE
Of course, there is also Filmsim and people often mix the two terms. Its very hard to find a binding definition anywhere.
In my experience, there are a lot of shades of grey with milsimming. Extremes are those companies which treat players as real soldiers - exact loadouts are required for the era, players have to sleep rough for 36 hours (or not at all); some even have ranks, basic training and use saluting. At the other end of the spectrum is something one level away from a skirmish - a day theme where there is some ongoing connection between the games even though they have breaks between games and still use a safe zone.
I guess the message is that there is no one such thing as a milsim - instead, lots of different flavours.
If it interests you as an alternative to skirmishing, my advice would be to read the small print and understand what flavour you're buying !
Last edited by a moderator: