Steel Division 2 - [EUG] Gal Marcel Bigeard
Hello commander !

Today, let’s have another look at Steel Division 2’s next planned expansion: Nemesis - Raid on Drvar.
If you don’t remember, this DLC won Nemesis’ Run 5 competition almost a year back.

In last week’s DevBlog, we have been reviewing the Axis battlegroup Unternehmen Rosselsprungs. Today, let’s focus on its Allies counterpart, the Yugoslav partisan NOV (standing for Narodnooslobodilačka vojska, or National Liberation Army).

The rise of Tito

As we have seen last week, the Kingdom of Yugoslavia was invaded by several Axis powers and capitulated between April 6th & 18th, 1941. The young king was forced to flee in exile, leaving a power vacuum in the country.

Two men rose to prominence on that occasion: the communist Josip Broz, more famous under his nom de guerre Tito, and the royalist Draža Mihailović. The two men joined forces in a large-scale uprising starting in July 1941 in Serbia, soon spreading to most Yugoslavia. Yet, the two groups’ incompatible goals will soon break that national union, ultimately driving them on a collision course.
Mihailović wanted the return of the king, relied on his Serbian-only nationalist Chetnik movement and was politically leaning toward fascism and antisemitism ; while Tito saw the war as an opportunity to get rid of the monarchy and establish a socialist government, welcomed any Yugoslav ethnicity in his ranks, and saved and enlisted Jews.
From October 1941, Mihailović and his Chetniks split from the partisans, and even sought German support to fight the communists. But the Germans refused, only willing to accept their unconditional surrender. Therefore, the Chetniks remained at war, both with the Germans AND Tito’s communists.



Forced to evacuated Serbia, under pressure from both Germans & Chetniks, Tito moved and settled to Bosnia which would become the partisan army’s stronghold.
There, he worked on organizing, arming and expanding his partisans, crating the 1st Proletarian Brigade (December 1941), then a 2nd (March 1942), and so on … By 1943, with Italy’s capitulation and their subsequent disarming by German troops, many Italian soldiers (in one instance almost an entire division) went to the partisans, increasing their numbers. By 1944, Tito had built the largest and most effective partisan movement in occupied Europe.

Foreign support

But to equip & maintain such an army, Tito needed more supplies than what hidden workshops or raids on Axis outposts & depots could provide. He needed foreign recognition and support.
And such support could only come from the Western Allies, and especially Great-Britain through the Mediterranean Sea, since USSR, the fellow communist power, was too far away beyond German occupied territories.

Britain supported both communists & Chetniks, although leaned more in favor of the latter at first. But this changed when British intelligence officers on the ground transmitted reports of Chetnik atrocities against civilians, and that they would let Axis forces move unscathed through their territories to attack communist group, when not even siding with them. From September 1943, Churchill switched support to Tito, “a much more effective, and reliable, ally in the war against Germany”, although maintaining minimal support to Mihailović’s men.



Allied support took various forms, the most tangible for the partisans on the ground being the airdrop of weapons, ammunitions, uniforms, … and other supplies which they lack most. They also evacuated wounded partisans by air or sea toward Italy, to be treated. British SOE & American OSS also sent intelligence officers and sabotage instructors to train the partisans in various new guerilla techniques and weapons, and to act as liaison with both Tito & Mihailović’s HQs. When the German paratroopers jumped over Drvar on May 25th, 1944, both OSS & SOE had a mission in the town, the British one even including Churchill’s own son!

Another form of support was air superiority, contesting Axis use of the Yugoslav airspace and securing Allies airdrops. Yet, Allied fighters remained in high altitude, which they dominated, but rarely got close to the ground. Thus, Germany and it auxiliaries could still provide some air support to their ground troops, as long as they kept flying at low altitude. Allied air forces over Yugoslavia were a mixed bunch of British, South African & Greek squadrons from Mediterranean Allied Air Command, soon (barely ten days after the start of Unternehmen Rosselsprungs) to be regrouped in a dedicated Balkan Air Force.

NOV forces at Drvar

When the Germans managed to pinpoint Tito’s HQ at Drvar, the Bosnian town was protected by elements from two partisan corps, the 5th & 8th, combining elements from five divisions (1st, 4th, 6th, 9th & 39th) et various independent units. “Division” was actually a big word, for none fielded as many men as a mere German infantry regiment, and the comparison was even more at their disadvantage when it comes to support weapons.



Partisan equipment is a motley assortment from many sources: old Yugoslav army weapons (M.24 rifle, ZK-383 SMG & ZB-30J “Zorka” LMG), captured German or Italian ones (Kar. 98 & Carcano rifles, MP-40 & Beretta SMG, Breda 30 & MG-34 LMG, Solothurn ATR), or Allies-supplied ones (Sten & UD-M42 SMG, Bren LMG, Boys ATR & PIAT). But the true “badge of honor” of any Yugoslav partisan was to be entrusted with one of the rare Šarac : a captured MG-42. To be given such prized weapon was akin to an award of bravery, and few gunners would dare lose such trophy before their life. So well-regarded was the MG-42 among Yugoslavs that it was retro-engineered and kept in production with few modifications as the Zastava M53 until the end of the Cold War!

Heavier equipment is either old Yugoslav mountain artillery, or captured light AA, AT or fire support guns. Likewise, the few armors owned by the partisans were all captured ones, either in combat or salvaged from the Italians after the armistice of Cassibile neutralized them.

NOV had no air force of its own at the time of Drvar, although Yugoslav pilots were being trained by the British in Egypt on Spitfires. But they weren’t ready and would play no part in this battle. The British-led Balkan Air Force (only a few days from being created, but already operational and active on May 25th, 1944) provided only high altitude air superiority & supply drop or evacuation, but took no direct part in ground operation. At least until the raid on Drvar …
From then on, the BAF literally “fell from the sky” and engaged German troops everywhere it could, playing a major role in the defeat of the German anti-partisan operation. And would provide strong close air support to the partisans until the end of the war …

The partisans had no real uniforms: some had retained old Yugoslav army fatigues, others captured from enemy depots, civilian clothes or British ones dropped by the RAF. It also included a bigger ratio of women than any other armies. But there was one piece of clothing which unified them all and became the trademark of Yugoslav partisan: the Titovka, a side cap of varying colors (although usually green) but always displaying a red star.

NOV’s main features

What can you expect from NOV in Steel Division 2?



  • As a partisan army, almost all NOV units have the Raider trait.
  • The partisans have eyes everywhere, and as such can count on a generous RECON tab, both in terms of slors, AP costs & choices, although most of them are infantry. The only combat recon vehicles being BLINDA, captured Autoblinda 41.
  • Being an infantry-centric battlegroup, you can also count on a maximum of slots and choices in this category: the PROLETERI equipped with the best weapons, including MG-34 & PzFaust ; the regular BORCI (with M.24 & Zorka) ; the tank hunter LOVCI TENKOVA (with Boys ATR & AT grenades) ; Fanatical KURSANTI (cadets) from the nearby NCO school who were among the first one to engage and pin down the German paratroopers ; or Disheartened PIONIRI, who were merely construction workers with no combat experience et barely had a few weapons ; …
    While BORCI are the regular partisan squad, a partisan company would usually reorganize its elements into more specialized task-orientated groups when attacking a target: PODRŠKA with two automatic rifles provided fire support, JURIŠNICI with some SMG & Molotov cocktails would be the main assault elements, while Fanatical BOMBAŠI with Italian carbines & “Eksploziv” would storm buildings. The latter are smaller bombs than TNT but being carried in large numbers.
    The category also includes OSS & SOE LDR. as few elite & well-armed American & British command/instructor squads.

  • As can be expected, the TANK tab isn’t very prolific, with few and quickly expensive slots of R-35, L6/40 & Somua in small numbers.
  • While the partisans can’t rely much on heavy equipment in other tabs, SUPPORT is quite open and well-furbished, with a selection of light mortars, infantry support guns, MG (both captured Italian Breda M37 and MG-42, the latter ŠARAC being Fanatical for the reasons explained before) but also a few (four IRL) L3/35 tankettes. One unique unit is the PARTOP, a cut-off 80mm mortar being used to propel a round of roughly 10kg explosive (usually salvaged from unexploded German aerial bombs): with very short range, it can blast any entrenched infantry.
  • The partisans had some AT weapons, but most of them very light or obsolete: 20mm ATR, DŽONBULISTI (meaning “JohnBullist”, “John Bull” being the PIAT’s nickname), Italian 47mm or German 50mm anti-tank guns, with just a handful of PaK 40.
  • Most partisan AA weapons were heavy HMGs or various mountain guns. We have unified that great variety of guns into a single card of Itaian Breda 20mm AA gun. By chance, Drvar being Tito’s HQ, it was also protected by the only “heavy” AA guns NOV possessed: four Yugoslav Royal Army M.28 76,5mm guns. But AA is NOV’s weakest spot, with very few slots and very expensive.
  • NOV didn’t lacked artillery, although over 80% of them were mortars. The rest being M.28 75mm & M.17(i) (captured Italian) 100mm mountain guns.
  • Thanks to the BAF’s decision to finally “get closer to the fight”, NOV can count on massive and very efficient air cover … but not immediately. In A, only a few fighters are available, representing the high altitude air superiority patrols, while only from phase B do the close air support and heavy pounders arrive. Phase A only includes British BEAUFIGHTER & MUSTANG Mk.III (the latter so far only available to the Poles) fighters, while phase B sees the unlocking of Greek BALTIMORE & SPITFIRE Mk.Vc/trop, tank-busting British HURRICANE Mk.IV (introduced recently with Tribute to the Liberation of Italy, actually the same squadron at two different times) & BEAUFIGHTER with rockets, and the new South African VENTURA bomber.


Au revoir and until next week!

We’d love to know what you think. Leave your feedback and your comments.

Keep a close watch on our Steam forums to keep up to date with the latest Steel Division 2 talk. Looking for an online game? Visit the kick-ass Discord server or Reddit page.

See you on the battlefield, commander!
Steel Division 2 - [EUG] Gal Marcel Bigeard
Hello commander !

With Tribute to the Liberation of Italy finally released, let’s take a closer look at Steel Division 2’s next planned expansion: Nemesis - Raid on Drvar.

If you don’t remember, this DLC won Nemesis’ Run 5 competition almost a year back.
Raid on Drvar will feature two new battlegroups from the too often overlooked Balkan theater, introducing two new nations in the process: Yugoslavia for the Allies, and Croatia as a minor Axis one.
Yugoslavia’s battlegroup will be NOV, the National Liberation Army, while Axis one will be the German-Croatian Unternehmen Rösselsprung (meaning Operation Knight’s Move) hunting the partisan leader, Tito.
Today, let’s focus on the latter.

A bit of context …

To understand the reasons for Operation Knight’s Move, let’s rewind a bit the History of Yugoslavia in WW2.
Before the outbreak of the war, Yugoslavia was a kingdom under the regency of Prince Regent Paul of Yugoslavia. On the inside, the country was torn by tensions between various ethnic groups making up the kingdom, while on the outside it tried to stay neutral between Axis powers and France & Britain. With France’s defeat in 1940 and Great-Britain standing alone, Yugoslavia had to accommodate with Germany and, especially, Italy which had invaded Albania as early as 1939. Isolated, cut off from any Allied support and surrounded by hostile neighbors, Yugoslavia agreed to join the Tripartite Pact (formed by Germany, Italy & Japan) on March 27th, 1941.



But this adhesion to the Axis was short-lived: two days later, the government was overthrown by a coup led by Air Force & Royal Guard officers! Prince Paul was deposed and his nephew Peter (six months short of its eighteenth birthday) was declared of age and replaced him as King Peter II leading a government of national union (although without the communist party & the Croatian fascist Ustashe movement).

But Peter was not to remain long on his throne either: barely a week after the Belgrade coup, Yugoslavia was invaded from three sides: by Germany, Italy & Hungary. The Royal Yugoslav Army surrendered unconditionally 11 days later & King Peter fled in exile. The country was dismembered, with Germany, Italy, Hungary, Bulgaria and even Albania (a puppet-state from Italy) all annexing territories ; a new fascist Independent State of Croatia (NDH) was created ; and what remained was occupied by Italy & Germany.



Another example of well put together Blitzkrieg?
Actually, that’s when the problems really started for the Axis powers in the Balkan.

The power vacuum was taken advantage of by the banned communist party, which already had an existing clandestine organization, to take the leading role of the Yugoslav resistance. Its leader, Josip Broz, more famous under his nom de guerre Tito, managed to unify almost all resistance movements, keeping ethnic differences under control. Only the Royalist Serbian Chetniks refused his leadership, fighting both the Axis occupiers AND the communists, and in some cases, even rather siding with the former against the latter.

In under three years, under Tito’s leadership, the Yugoslav National Liberation Army (NOV) became the largest and most effective partisan movement in all Europe, tying down hundreds of thousands of Axis troops in the Balkan. Hitler tried for some times to avoid being too involved in this area, delegating most of the occupation and partisan hunting duties to its Italian & Bulgarian allies. But when Italy surrendered in 1943, and many Italian troops (in some places, an entire division) subsequently switched to NOV with their weapons, Germany had to step in.

Killing Tito

From then on, anti-partisan operations intensified in scope and violence. The Germans were well aware of two facts: first the war wasn’t going well for them, so the sooner they crushed the Yugoslav partisans, the sooner they would be able to redeploy their troops elsewhere ; second, NOV’s organization leaned entirely on Tito’s ability to keep ethnic tensions at bay. Should he be eliminated, the whole partisan army would collapse. NOV’s leader was the key: as Generalfeldmarschal von Weichs, commander of the OB Südost (Greece & Balkan fronts) put it, Tito is our most dangerous enemy.



This led to Unternehmen Rösselsprung (Operation Knight’s Move), the assassination attempt on Tito.
German Intelligence finally managed to pinpoint his secret HQ in the village of Drvar, in Bosnia, in early May 1944. Operation planning had to be kept short to prevent the target from disappearing: the plan was drafted and approved in less than two weeks, and launched four days later, on May 26th, 1944.
It involved dropping an SS parachute battalion right on top of Drvar to locate and eliminate Tito, and gather intelligence. Meanwhile several ground columns would converge on Drvar from separate starting points to prevent Tito and any other key targets to escape.



Just like most airborne operations, the paratroopers were to jump on target, secure it, and link with ground troops within a day. As often, it didn’t go that way.
As it happens, although taken by surprise, the partisans put a stubborn resistance, allowing Tito to escape (within a hair's breadth though), pinning the paratroopers and delaying their ground reinforcements. The raid had failed, but quickly evolved into a major battle …

Unternehmen Rösselsprung’s main features


What can you expect from Unternehmen Rösselsprung in Steel Division 2?

  • Unternehmen Rösselsprung isn't an actual "division", but an umbrella name regrouping all the troops involved in the operation, although they were detachments belonging to several different units. This mean that this battlegroups offers a wide array of German infantry units, both new and existing ones, usually not mixed up in a same division: SS-Gebirgsjäger, SS-Fallschirmjäger, Brandenburger (including new paratrooper variants), Grenadier, Kadetten, Chetnik auxiliaries, Croatian allies, …
    Veterancy varies a lot, from elite special forces, paratrooopers, … to Disheartened & inexperienced Croatian home guard.
  • Unternehmen Rösselsprung was a search-and-destroy operation, with a high emphasis put on recon & intelligence elements to quickly find & identify key enemies. This is represented ingame with the battlegroup having access to a lot of RECON slots & choices, allowing it to supplement its INF or TANK tab with foot or amored scouts from this section.

  • SS-Gebirgsjäger represent elements from 7. SS-Freiwilligen-Gebirgs-Division « Prinz Eugen ». They have the same organization ingame as Heer ones as depicted in 5. Gebirgs-Division, although 7.SS received mostly Czechoslovakian collective weapon at its creation, meaning their LMG are MG-26(t) and HMG mostly MG-37(t) (= ZB-53 as used by the Romanians). As other mountain troops, they are all Raiders, with more sniper rifles but with fewer AT weapons than line infantry.
  • SS-Fallschirmjäger represent SS-Fallschirmjägerbataillon 500, an SS disciplinary unit. Being SS and not Luftwaffe, the battalion didn’t have access to FG-42 as other Fallschirmjäger. SS-FJ come in three types: SS-Fs-Jäger Füh., a 6-man command unit, SS-Fs-Jäger, a 12-man rifle squad with 2x MG-42, and SS-Fs-Stossjäger, a 8-man SMG squad formed à la Soviet. This battalion is famous for performing near-suicidal missions, with staggering losses each time. As such, all SS-FJ are classified as Fanatical ingame.
  • Brandenburger (special forces) in this battlegroup have two origins: Jäger-Regiment 1 Brandenburg was part of the ground forces, while a platoon-worth of Fallschirm-Brandenburger jumped with SS-FJ-500. You may remember the “mainstream” Brandenburger from Vert. Toulon, here they also come as Brandenb. Aufkl., Brandenb. Führer, Brandenb. MG-42, Brandenb. Pionier & Fs.Brandenb. Aufkl.. Being special forces, they are all Raider, elite-locked, and come with a wide array of G-43, MP-44, flamethrowers, explosives, sniper rifles, …
  • other “German” infantry units include the ubiquitous Grenadier, but also Kosaken Pionier (Soviet collaborators equipped with captured weapons & explosives), Kadetten (mixed G-43/MP-40 Fanatical assault squad) or Chetniks auxiliaries (heavy 15-man recon squads with Sten, M.24 Yugoslav rifles & MG-26).
  • one of this battlegroup’s unique feature is the presence of Croatian troops fighting alongside German ones. They come from three origins: NDH’s own troops, Croatian “legionaries” in German divisions & Ustaše fascist militia. While Kro. Legionäre (Führer, Pionier & “vanilla” variants) are similar in equipment (but with their own uniforms) to their German counterparts, Ustaše are 12-man squads equipped with old Yugoslav & Italian armies leftovers, while Domobrani are 8-man Disheartened militiamen with a similar motley assortment of weapons. Dojavnici are recon militiamen with MP-40 & Beretta, as Disheartened as their INF counterparts. NDH also had some Italian vehicles handed over by the Germans: Autoblinda 41, L6/40 light tank, Semovente 47/32 light tank destroyer, L3 tankettes, Fiat 626NLM trucks, …
  • the battlegroup’s armor support isn’t its strongest point, made up mostly of French & Italian Beute tanks: R35, Somua S35 & M15/42. Several recon armors complete them: the classic SPW AB 41 (= Autoblinda 41), but also new ones such Aufk. Panzer III F & SPW AB 43 47mm. Beware, the latter isn’t the unicorn sole prototype with a 47mm in the AB 43’s turret, but a sawn-off one, without turret and with a 47mm Italian AT gun fixed in an open-top position.

  • Unternehmen Rösselsprung’s artillery include GebG. 36 75mm & GebH. 40 105mm howitzers, as well as the excellent K35(t) “Hruby” 105mm, and a lot of mortars.
  • AA cover is clearly the battlegroup’s weak point, not expecting much air attacks from NOV, with single & quad 20mm as well as Steyr-borne Drilling. Historically, the British-led Balkan Air Force made them regret their optimism …
  • AIR support includes a few German Stuka variants, but mostly Croatian air force planes. The latter operated German bombers, various captured French or Italian planes, but also old pre-war Czechoslovakian or Yugoslav designs: Ca.310bis, BH-33E-SHS and M.S. 406 C1 recon planes (all armed), IK-2, C.202 & C.205V fighters, and several Do-17 bomber variants.



Au revoir and until next week!

We’d love to know what you think. Leave your feedback and your comments.

Keep a close watch on our Steam forums to keep up to date with the latest Steel Division 2 talk. Looking for an online game? Visit the kick-ass Discord server or Reddit page.

See you on the battlefield, commander!
Steel Division 2 - [EUG] Gal Marcel Bigeard
It’s been in the works for quite some time, commander!

Today marks the day that we are releasing our latest Steel Division 2 expansion, the Tribute to the Liberation of Italy.

https://store.steampowered.com/app/1640470/Steel_Division_2__Tribute_to_the_Liberation_of_Italy/

Get it while it’s hot!

Keep reading to find out what you can encounter in our newest expansion.

What does Tribute to Liberation of Italy bring?

Are you ready for a whole slew of new features, units, battlegroups, and other goodies with the latest expansion?



  • Command 8 new meticulously researched divisions and access four fully voiced new nations: South Africa, Brazil, and the competing Repubblica Sociale Italiana and the Allied-aligned Kingdom of Italy.
  • 4 new Axis battegroups: the 5. Gebirgsjäger, the Italian-German mixed 4. Fallschirmjäger, the 26. Panzerdivision or the Mussolini-loyal 4a Divisione Alpini “Monterosa”.
  • 4 new Allied battlegroups: the 6th South African Armoured Division, the Italian Corpo Italiano di Liberazione, the 8th Indian (Infantry) Division, or the diverse Task Force 45.
  • Over 300 new units, including infantry squads, with 22 brand-new vehicle models, 4 new plane models, as well as many new variants. This includes a wide variety of Italian equipment, from the P-26/40 tank, to the ubiquitous Semovente 47/32, the rare Semovente M41 90/53 and other versions, AS.42 heavy recon jeep and MotoGuzzi side-cars. Other new units include the uncommon German FAMO 88mm, Indian ACV-IP Mk.2 APCs, South African Bedford QL 6pdr Portee, American M2 90mm AA guns, British BL 4,5-inch howitzer, and many more. Take to the skies with the C.202 serie VIII Folgore, G.55 serie I Centauro, Re.2002 Ariete fighters, or Z. 1007bis serie VI Alcione bomber.
  • New infantry model sets, such as South African, Brazilian, Indian including Sikh and Gurkhas, German Gebirgsjäger, and many different types of Italian soldiers in both Axis and Allied divisions.



Some background reading

If you are waiting to download or want to catch up on some history, look no further! Follow the links below to access all the Versus posts, detailing each new battlegroup.



  • Read more about the Armored battlegroups: the 26. Panzerdivision with its special AA forces and the supersized 6th South African Armoured Division in the first Versus blogpost here.
  • Check out the two Mountain formations, the German 5. Gebirgs-Division and the specialised 8th (Indian) Infantry Division in the second Versus blogpost here.
  • Discover more of the two unique Infantry battlegroups, the Axis 4. Fallschirmjäger and the US-led international Task Force 45, in the third Versus post here.
  • Last but not least, the Italians! You can find more about the opposing Italian battlegroups, the Axis 4a Divisione Alpini “Monterosa” and the Allied Corpo Italiano di Liberazione in the fourth Versus blog post here.
  • Read all about the Italian Air Forces, both Axis and Allied, and the unique planes they fielded in this in-depth blog post.



What’s next?

Before we let you get to it, commander, just a quick note on the upcoming goodies currently in the pipeline. We are hard at work on the next DLC, Nemesis: Raid on Drvar. You will receive more details and news in next week’s post. Also, we will hopefully be able to reveal more about our new Army General campaign DLC in the not-to-distant future!



We have also made recuts of the 10v10 Tannenbeg maps in order to provide two new 1v1 & 2v2 maps, which are being tested as we speak. It will be released soon.

Au revoir and until next week!

We’d love to know what you think. Leave your feedback and your comments.

Keep a close watch on our Steam forums to keep up to date with the latest Steel Division 2 talk. Looking for an online game? Visit the kick-ass Discord server or Reddit page.

See you on the battlefield, commander!
Steel Division 2 - [EUG] Gal Marcel Bigeard
Hello commander!

We hope you are well. Not too long now, for a massive new drop of content for Steel Division 2. We are very close to the release of our next expansion, Tribute to the Liberation of Italy, coming on February 3rd.

https://store.steampowered.com/app/1640470/Steel_Division_2__Tribute_to_the_Liberation_of_Italy/

The new Italian-based expansion has seen quite a gestation period. By the by, you might have lost track of what to expect.

In today’s blog post, we’ll do a quick recap of all the good things that came to pass for Tribute to the Liberation of Italy.

A Brief History

Initially revealed in April last year, we took pains to detail each new feature, unit, and battlegroup in Tribute to the Liberation of Italy. This includes the typical Versus posts, highlighting a pair of new battlegroups.



In case you’ve forgotten, each of these Versus brings a whole load of information, including division histories, strengths and weaknesses, and (of course) all the new units specific to each battlegroup. Check them out below!

  • Read more about the Armored battlegroups: the 26. Panzerdivision with its special AA forces and the supersized 6th South African Armoured Division in the first Versus blogpost here.
  • Check out the two Mountain formations, the German 5. Gebirgs-Division and the specialised 8th (Indian) Infantry Division in the second Versus blogpost here.
  • Discover more of two unique Infantry battlegroups, the Axis 4. Fallschirmjäger and the US-led international Task Force 45, in the third Versus post here.
  • Last but not least, the Italians! You can find more about the opposing Italian battlegroups, the Axis 4a Divisione Alpini “Monterosa” and the Allied Corpo Italiano di Liberazione in the fourth Versus blog post.
  • Read all about the Italian Air Forces, both Axis and Allied, and the unique planes they fielded in this in-depth blog post.
  • Our two new Aces, both Italian but from opposing armed forces, can be studied in this dedicated blog post.

Take a good look

We also took time to highlight a range of new models and skins for both the Axis and Allied units to be shipped in our upcoming expansion:




What can you expect?

Our new expansion brings a ton of juicy stuff. See below what you can expect.



  • Command 8 new meticulously researched divisions and access four fully voiced new nations: South Africa, Brazil, and the competing Repubblica Sociale Italiana and the Allied-aligned Kingdom of Italy.
  • Four new Axis battegroups: the 5. Gebirgsjäger, the Italian-German mixed 4. Fallschirmjäger, the 26. Panzerdivisionor the Mussolini-loyal 4a Divisione Alpini “Monterosa”.
  • Four new Allied battlegroups: the 6th South African Armoured Division, the Italian Corpo Italiano di Liberazione, the 8th Indian (Infantry) Division, or the diverse Task Force 45.
  • Over 300 new units, including infantry squads, with 22 brand-new vehicle models, 4 new plane models, as well as many new variants. This includes a wide variety of Italian equipment, from the P-26/40 tank, to the ubiquitous Semovente 47/32, the rare Semovente M41 90/53 and other versions, AS.42 heavy recon jeep and MotoGuzzi side-cars. Other new units include the uncommon German FAMO 88mm, Indian ACV-IP Mk.2 APCs, South African Bedford QL 6pdr Portee, American M2 90mm AA guns, British BL 4,5-inch howitzer, and many more. Take to the skies with the C.202 serie VIII Folgore, G.55 serie I Centauro, Re.2002 Ariete fighters, or Z. 1007bis serie VI Alcione bomber.
  • New infantry model sets, such as South African, Brazilian, Indian including Sikh and Gurkhas, German Gebirgsjäger, and many different types of Italian soldiers in both Axis and Allied divisions.


Au revoir and until next week!

That’s it for this week. Not long now, commander!

Keep a close watch on our Steam forums to keep up to date with the latest Steel Division 2 talk. Looking for an online game? Visit the kick-ass Discord server or Reddit page.

See you on the battlefield!
Steel Division 2 - [EUG] Gal Marcel Bigeard
Hello commander!

With every day, we get a step closer to the launch of our next expansion for Steel Division 2, the Tribute to the Liberation of Italy. In last week’s post, we talked about the various updates you can expect to drop simultaneously. Read more about them here.

Today we wanted to show you some new Allied vehicle skins coming with the expansion. Please note: these are not new models, but are the paint jobs and camouflage patterns adapted by the new battlegroups for their operations in the Italian theater of war.

The South Africans

South African tanks use the standard Commonwealth olive green paint, but its Fireflys were famous for altering the color of the tip of their gun. As a Firefly had a longer gun than the regular Sherman, it was a hot target for opposing Germans. To prevent their quick identification, the last half of the tank gun was camouflaged with a mix of green, black, and white. This made it look shorter. The trompe l’oeil made them pass for regular Shermans to distant observers.



South African recon vehicles also sport their own two-tone light camouflage pattern.



The Poles

The Poles are represented in the Tribute to the Liberation of Italy expansion with the 2 Warszawska Brygada Pancerna (the 2nd (Warsaw) Armoured Brigade). This independent formation was the armored reserve of the II. Polish Corps in Italy. In Steel Division 2 it is featured as tank support for the pro-Allied Italian Corpo Italiano di Liberazione battlegroup.



Although the brigade’s insignia was a winged arm holding a sword (see above), the formation is more often represented in media and scale modeling by the famous symbol of its 4th Armored Regiment: a black scorpion (see below).



The Brazilians

The Brazilian FEB (Força Expedicionária Brasileira), as part of Task Force 45 didn’t use the Allied star, but its own “starry” insignia.



The Canadians

While Canada isn’t featured in the expansion with a battlegroup of its own, its significant contribution to the Italian campaign isn’t forgotten. They are represented by the 1st Canadian Armoured Brigade, universally regarded as the best Allied armored formation on the Italian front. The Canadians will be found fighting alongside, and part of, the British 8th Indian Infantry Division battlegroup.



Don’t worry if you don’t see the ubiquitous maple leaf… it is there, at the back. ;)



The United States

The handful of Hellcat tank destroyers featured with Task Force 45 were early production models. They were being field-tested by the 894th Tank Destroyer Battalion. At that time, they were designated T70, and weren’t very well-regarded as tank destroyers, deemed way under-armored. Instead, the battalion used them as armored recon, in which role their speed and low profile proved perfect. And the gun was a bonus.



The British

Although not featured in any current Steel Division 2 division, some may recognize Steel Division: Normandy 44 Desert Rat’s SP Autocar M3. Used in a recon role by the 6th Duke of Connaught's Own Lancers, the 8th Indian Infantry Division’s recon regiment, it was given a fresh paint job and some Sikh crew.



The Lone Australian

What? Australia is in the game! Indeed, consider this an Easter Egg, but we got our official first Australian unit debuting in the Tribute to the Liberation of Italy expansion. After the North African campaign, all Australian ground troops had been sent back to take part in the Pacific theater. However, some Royal Australian Air Force squadrons remained on station in the Mediterranean until the end of the war. As part of the Desert Air Force, they will support Allied ground troops on the Adriatic shores, including the 6th South African Armoured Division in-game.



Being a solitary unit, we will display this Spitfire Mk. Vb/Trop variant under the British flag in the Armory. It is proudly Australian, however, with its own camouflage and markings.

Au revoir and until next week!

All right, commander, at ease. In case you have missed it, today is also the day we’ll be launching our new World War III battle simulator, WARNO. Be sure to check it out!

Keep a close watch on our Steam forums to keep up to date with the latest Steel Division 2 talk. Looking for an online game? Visit the kick-ass Discord server or Reddit page.

See you on the battlefield, commander!
Jan 13, 2022
Steel Division 2 - [EUG] Gal Marcel Bigeard
Hello there!

We hope you are well! As you know, we are getting closer to the release of the next expansion, the Mediterranean-themed Tribute to the Liberation of Italy. The launch is on February 3rd!!

https://store.steampowered.com/app/1640470/Steel_Division_2__Tribute_to_the_Liberation_of_Italy/

We will also push some general improvements and changes to Steel Division 2 with the new expansion. This update will be available to all.

Let’s check what you can expect.

A Set of Updates

The following items are just a selection of the changes we intend to ship with the Tribute to the Liberation of Italy expansion.

Vehicle Flamethrower Buff
Flamethrower vehicles in Steel Division 2 have a very short aim time, letting them shoot first but subsequently suffer from a wait in between shots. This leads to the second shot coming quite late; an enemy unit will likely have been able to shoot back once or twice in the intervening period. We have improved the rate of fire for flamethrower vehicles, allowing them to fire multiple shots in rapid succession.

Map Changes
We have replaced several flag objectives to balance the Ostrowno map. And, we have added the Destruction mode to our new Kostritza map, which came as part of the free Reinforcement Pack #12.




Tank MG Surpress Buff
Tank-mounted machine guns (except for larger caliber 12.7mm and 13.2mm) are not considered effective enough against infantry. We have slightly increased their suppression.

Obsolete and Light Tank Price Improvement
We have checked the prices of light tanks (such as the T-70, Toldi, BT-7, and so on) and other obsolete armored vehicles (French Beute tanks, Valentine 2-pdr, 7TP, etc.) to make them more appealing. Depending on the model, we have decreased the prices by 5 or 10 points.



Panzerfaust-armed Squads Availability Buff
The availability of Panzerfaust-armed infantry squads (Grenadier, Panzergrenadier[/b], etc.) was deemed too low. To make them more appealing, these squads have been buffed from 6/12/18 to a 8/16/24 availability rate (or 8/16/- depending on Combat Phase). They are still less available compared to their counterparts not equipped with Panzerfausts.

Commonwealth Rifle Squads Availability Increase
British, Canadian, New Zealand, Polish (and soon, South African) infantry Rifle Squads have been hit too hard with the recent availability nerf. While previously they were too numerous per card - compared to other infantry - now they are too rare. We have increased their availability a bit from 6/12/18 to 8/16/24 (or 8/16/- depending on the Combat Phase).

AA Unit Change in Soviet Divisions
We will replace 1x card of 37mm AA units with 1x 25 mm AA units in various Allied Soviet divisions. This was teased with the 358 Strelki battlegroup, in which we replaced some 37mm AA guns with the less widespread (but still present within Steel Division 2’s timeframe) new 72-K 25mm AA gun.



17. SS and 352. Infanterie Change
Thanks to feedback from the community, we understand that the Volksdeutsche units of the 17. SS-Panzergrenadier “Götz von Berlichingen” (featured in the Tribute to D-Day DLC) should be equipped similarly to other Panzergrenadier squads of this division. This means they will feature two light machine guns while being Disheartened. This change would also affect the same type of Volksdeutsche unit of the 352. Infanterie (from the Back to War DLC). However, as there weren’t supposed to be any Volksdeutsche in this division, we changed them to Osttruppen to reflect the historical disposition of the formation’s forces.

Panzer Lehr Batlegroup Changes
The historical elite Panzer-Lehr division had a special feature that saw all of its Panzergrenadier battalions equipped with half-tracks, compared to the one out of four battalions in regular Panzerdivisions. These soldiers also carried a lot more Panzerschreck anti-tank weapons into battle.

We have decided to make the Panzer-Lehr more unique in-game by creating a new Panzergrenadier squad armed with Panzerschreck instead of Panzerfausts. This squad can only be deployed in half-tracks and will replace all existing cards of Panzergrenadier (Faust), as well as non-Faust squads in this division only. These changes are still being tested and are not confirmed yet.



Panther buff
We will change the number of Axis Panther tanks available in Combat Phase A from 1 to 2. This makes them more appealing to deploy at the beginning of a game. These changes are still being tested and are not confirmed yet.

Au revoir and until next week!

That’s all for this one. We’ll be back next week with more news on the Tribute to the Liberation of Italy expansion.

Keep a close watch on our Steam forums to keep up to date with the latest Steel Division 2 talk. Looking for an online game? Visit the kick-ass Discord server or Reddit page.

See you on the battlefield, commander!
Steel Division 2 - [EUG] Gal Marcel Bigeard
Happy New Year, commander,

It’s good to be back! We’ve got a feeling 2022 is going to be a kick-ass year! We hope the holidays were delightful (or are still delivering the goods, lucky you) and that you had your batteries recharged, plenty of food in your stomach, and managed to get some good ‘ole fun time on the Steel Division 2 battlefields!

We will start the new year with a recap of the one that came to pass. And as promised, we can finally reveal the release date for our latest expansion, Tribute to the Liberation of Italy. Keep reading to find out more!

January 2021 - Nemesis #3

https://store.steampowered.com/app/1477780/Steel_Division_2__Nemesis_3__Battle_of_Rimini/

First up, and close to a year ago, we released our Nemesis: Battle of Rimini DLC. Our premier Italian influenced mini-expansion, we brought you two new Divisions from Operation Olive. This Allied offensive tried to break through the Gothic defensive line on the Adriatic coast in September 1944. It pitted the hybrid-combined arms 2nd New Zealand Division against the veteran paratroopers of the 1. Fallschirmjäger.

New toys included the British Bristol Beaufighter heavy fighter, Greek Martin Baltimore bomber, German (captured) Re.2005 fighter, as well as various new infantry units such as Greek Oplites mountain infantry, and New Zealander Maori.



April 2021 - Burning Baltics

https://store.steampowered.com/app/1418231/Steel_Division_2__Burning_Baltics/

Ah, our fourth major History Expansion! Burning Baltics released at the end of April. By the summer of 1944, the war had come to the Baltics. This expansion featured a variety of unique new Divisions, tons of new units, new nations, and a new Army General campaign focused on one of the last (successful) Axis counter-offensives on the Eastern Front, Operation Doppelkopf.

With Burning Baltics you got to play with eight new Divisions, from the famous Axis "Grossdeutschland" and "Nordland", to the ad-hoc Panzerverband Strachwitz and the 52. Sicherungs-Division z.b.V.. The Allies received the veteran Soviet 19th Tank Corps, the Mobile Group Fedyunkin, the Estonian 7th Rifle Division and the 43rd Army's Reserve battlegroups.



July 2021 - Nemesis #4

https://store.steampowered.com/app/1571590/Steel_Division_2__Nemesis_4__Storming_Toulon/

We hit our stride with our Nemesis DLCs number four, taking inspiration from the Allied invasion of the swooning and sweltry French Riviera (it is home, after all) in the summer of 1944. Two new interesting divisions, the Axis garrison troops of Verteidigungsbereich Toulon and the Allied French 1e Division Française Libre found their way into Steel Division 2.

We featured a bunch of new units, including Kriegsmarine Marineinfanterie, Commandos d'Afrique special forces, heavy Flak 38 105mm guns, Flakzwilling 37mm, M6 Fargo, and M3 Gun 37mm.



November 2021 - Reinforcement Pack 12

https://store.steampowered.com/app/1810030/Steel_Division_2__Reinforcement_Pack_12__Kostritza/

Things quieted down in the latter part of the year. One of the main reasons was that we were working on several projects simultaneously, including Tribute to the Liberation of Italy, the new Nemesis: Raid on Drvar and a new Nation Pack: South Africa for Wargame Red Dragon. Behind the scenes, we were also preparing ourselves for the upcoming reveal of our new World War III battle simulator, WARNO.

We launched a new map as part of a free Reinforcement Pack. Kostritza was previously featured as a “showcase” map, but never intended for gameplay use. We dusted it off, gave it a lick of paint, and released it to our fans to make up for some of the developmental delays.



December 2021 - Reinforcement Pack 13

https://store.steampowered.com/app/1810031/Steel_Division_2__Reinforcement_Pack_13__Lucky_13/

We weren’t done quite yet! In the last month of the year, we dropped another free Reinforcement Pack, aptly named Lucky 13 DLC. This featured two new Divisions: the Axis Panzerdivision Tatra and the fast-moving Allied Task Force Butler. A bunch of interesting new units were deployed as well, such as the Panzer 38(t) light tank, Volksturm squads, M3A1 Cavalry recon half-track, and OSS elite special forces.



What’s coming next?

We have our next major expansion on the near horizon: Tribute to the Liberation of Italy. You have been itching for a release date. We are happy to tell you that February 3rd will be the launch day!

We’ve already transitioned to the next project, Nemesis: Raid on Drvar DLC. No concrete details yet on when to expect it, but it will come in the not-too-distant future!



And as already hinted, we’re also already at work on our next Army General DLC. But we’ll tell you more about this soon …

Bidding you goodbye!

Happy to have been able to start the new year together, commander!

Don’t forget to keep a close watch on our Steam forums to keep up to date with the latest discussions. Looking for an online game? Visit the kick-ass Discord server or Reddit page.

See you soon!

Dec 23, 2021
Steel Division 2 - [EUG] Gal Marcel Bigeard
Hello commander!

We hope you are doing well. It’s been a busy couple of weeks for the entire team, but it proved to be a fitting end to an already busy and productive year!

As is our Steel Division 2 custom (the third one in a row already!), we are going to leave you for a (short) break before returning in full force in 2022. We’ll recharge the batteries over Christmas and be back before you know it in the first week of the new year.

A New Game

It’s been a heck of a ride, but we pulled it off! We revealed our brand-new game, the World War III battle simulator WARNO (which stands for Warning Order), last Friday. The unveiling didn’t go down without a hitch, of course, which is always the case. For instance, the Steam page was unable to be published for some hours, but we got everything sorted in the end. If you have missed it, be sure to wishlist WARNO and get ready for the Early Access launch on January 20th.

https://store.steampowered.com/app/1611600/WARNO/

We know quite a few of you have been clamoring to know what this means for Steel Division 2. We said it before, and we’ll say it again, but we will continue to work on our World War II game in the same way we have done in the last two-and-a-half years. There is no change in plans, no radical departure from our schedule; you will still have your weekly blog post, and we are still planning, developing, and creating exciting new content for Steel Divison 2. Yes, this means new Nemesis DLCs, new units, new divisions, a new Army General campaign, new expansions, and much more.

Do not worry: Steel Division 2 is a game that thrives, and we are 100% committed to keeping it that way for the foreseeable future.

Tribute to the Liberation of Italy

You will have to wait a bit longer to get to play with our latest expansion, the Tribute to the Liberation of Italy. It won’t be until the new year that we’ll be able to launch it. Expect a release date when we are back! In the meantime, look at those mosaics of some new infantry & vehicles.





The Strike Team is currently busy play testing and checking new units and divisions. They are all in a good place now. In the next couple of days, they should receive the greenlight to stream freely the Tribute to the Liberation of Italy expansion. And you know what that means: a release will shortly be upon us.

We have also moved most of our attention on the Nemesis: Raid on Drvar DLC. Once again, more information will come in the future. Expect the launch soon after the Tribute to the Liberation of Italy expansion.



We bid you adieu!

That is everything for this week and year! We will see you on the other side, commander. It’s been a pleasure, and let’s try to make 2022 a better year than the ones that came before (hopefully shouldn’t be too difficult).

From the whole Eugen Systems team: we wish you happy holidays and all the best for 2022. We will be back in the first week of January.

Don’t forget to keep a close watch on our Steam forums to keep up to date with the latest discussions. Looking for an online game? Visit the kick-ass Discord server or Reddit page.

As always: see you on the battlefield, commander!
Steel Division 2 - [EUG] Gal Marcel Bigeard
Hello commander,

There it is! We have revealed today what we have been working on for quite some time: WARNO, our next-gen World War III battle simulator.

https://store.steampowered.com/app/1611600/WARNO/

Some of you dedicated readers of this blog were right (others, not so much) in that we were developing a new Cold War-era game.

In case you missed it, be sure to check out WARNO’s reveal trailer.



What does this mean for Steel Division 2? As a matter of fact, not much. Of course, we hope to entice you to go over and play WARNO when it launches into Steam Early Access on January 20, but we still have plenty of content planned for our World War II game. We don’t only have the Tribute to the Liberation of Italy expansion coming soon, but also the Nemesis: Raid on Drvar DLC and more. Don’t expect us to stop developing for Steel Division 2 any time shortly!

We have learned a lot, and improving and updating Steel Division 2 has been a genuine joy for the team at Eugen Systems. With WARNO, we implemented some of these lessons learned. For instance, our new game will feature elements such as the Army General strategic campaigns, division-based battlegroup builder, Rules of Engagements and Smart Orders, and more.

We hope you will join us on our new journey. Be sure to wishlist WARNO (if you haven’t done so) as you get ready for action on the 20th of January! If you want to keep up to date, don’t forget to check out our dedicated Discord server or WARNO’s own Steam forums.

Until next week’s blog post. Adieu, commander!

Steel Division 2 - [EUG] Gal Marcel Bigeard
Are you ready, commander?

The wait is almost over. Yes, that’s right, Christmas will come early as tomorrow (Friday the 17th of December) we will be officially unveiling what we have been working on so hard (and in secret) the last couple of months and years!



It is so close, you can almost touch it! Undoubtedly, you sleuths will have the answer soon, but be sure to tune in and check our channels, including this space and our Discord server for the big reveal.

You will not be disappointed…

But onwards to other exciting things, as we go back to good ‘ol Steel Division 2. More specifically, let’s look at some new Allied units for our upcoming expansion, Tribute to the Liberation of Italy.

The Italian Meatgrinder

Italy during World War II was not particularly known as a tank country thanks to the local topography, with its mountains and hilly countryside. The Italian campaign was an infantry’s war; but whoever says infantry, has to say artillery.

With the pace of operations and offensives on the Italian peninsula being much slower than other theaters of war, massive amounts of artillery guns and ordnance of all types were used by the Allies. This includes the U.S. M1 155mm (predecessor to the infamous Long Tom) and the M1 8-inch 203mm, as well as the British BL 4,5-inch 114mm guns (also featured in the South African divisions in-game).



Another key feature of the more static Italian battlefields was the use of heavy AA guns on the frontline. These were usually kept in the rear by the Allies, but as Axis air forces posed less threat, more of these formidable guns were used in a direct fire role. The Allies could count on the U.S. M2 90mm and British (manned by South African crews) QF 3,7-inch 94mm dual-purpose AA guns. The American unit is slightly superior to the famous German 88mm in an AT role; the British gun (which we presented earlier as somewhat worse) was actually better than the previous two examples. Its downside was that it carried only a handful of AT shells (in real-life, often none) and was hampered by inferior targeting optics.



Going Sky High

Aside from new Allied Co-Belligerent Italian plane models, which we showcased in the blog post here, the Allies most original plane in the Italian campaign was the tank-busting RAF Hurricane Mk IV. This close air support aircraft sported two Vickers 40mm S guns. With a deadly pedigree as a tank killer in the North African deserts, by 1944 it was replaced by rocket-firing Typhoons, with only a few Hurricane Mk IVs remaining over the Adriatic and Balkans. Consider this tank buster a formidable counterpart to the German “Panzervögel” Stuka G-2 or Soviet IL-2-37.

In-game, this particular unit (as well as its bomb-fielding variant) will be featured as a close air support aircraft with the 8th Indian (Infantry) Division. It will also be deployable in our upcoming Nemesis: Raid on Drvar DLC.



Another new major plane variant includes the Boston Mk IV (British designation) / A-20J-5-DO Havoc (US designation). This aircraft carries a substantial increase in the number of close-defense MG compared to the existing Mk III. It will also be featured with both the 8th Indian (Infantry) Division (as a bomber) and Task Force 45 (as heavy recon).

There is also a new napalm P-47 variant, the P-47D-22-RE which flies with a new paint job and camo.

We have also taken the opportunity to improve various in-game models which were noted (either by the Strike Team or our community) as being incorrect, including the Mosquito PR Mk XVI and the Wildcat Mk V.



Back to Earth

Not being tank country doesn’t mean tanks didn’t serve with distinction in Italy. The Allied forces could count on the usual combination of Shermans, Stuarts, M3 and M5 half-tracks, and some indigenous variants here and there. Like the artillery-fire capable South African M10.

Lighter vehicles also made their way to the Mediterranean front. This includes the Indian recon ACV-IP (Armoured Carrier, Wheeled - Indian Pattern), as well as the 6-pdr Portee 57mm light tank destroyer. This is a South African battlefield conversion, say a scratch-built technical, merging a 6-pdr AT gun onto a Bedford lorry. The gun was mounted so it could fire to the front, over the driver’s cabin.



Some New Map Variants

We are also working on a new “tactical” variant of the recently released Kostritsa map. This one will be slightly reduced in size, to be played with a lower income. This map version also allows you to micro smaller numbers of units to get a more intense “company-level” feel to the battle.

Also, thanks to feedback from the community and our Strike Team, we are improving the Ostrowno map by reworking the positioning of some of the objectives.

Until next time

That is everything for this week. We hope to see you soon (say… tomorrow?)!

Don’t forget to keep a close watch on our ourSteam forums, or check our Facebook and Twitter channels. Looking for an online game in the meantime? Visit the kick-ass Discord server or Reddit page.

See you soon, commander!

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