Ages of Conflict: World War Simulator
About Ages of Conflict: World War Simulator
Ages of Conflict: World War Simulator, developed by GY-GY Games, drops you into a geopolitical sandbox where AI nations independently form alliances, stage rebellions, and scheme against one another — all without a predetermined script. This isn't a classic strategy game to win or lose; it's a living window into the rise and fall of virtual civilizations, shaped as much by observation as by intervention.
How to Play Ages of Conflict: World War Simulator
Each session begins with a choice: load a preset map — spanning individual countries, continents, or the entire world — or build your own in the built-in editor. From there, watch AI nations govern themselves, forge alliances, and wage wars while detailed statistics track how civilizations evolve over time. The focus sits firmly on exploration and observation rather than competitive victory, and every session generates a unique geopolitical story.
God Mode
Step beyond passive observation and reshape the world directly. Rename countries, provoke wars, forge or shatter alliances, and erase nations entirely with a single click. Assist specific nations by granting them gold, or dial up the simulation speed to push centuries of history forward in minutes.
Analysis and Experiments
Adjust the number of nations and empty cities to set the scale of events, then study how those variables ripple through global dynamics. Detailed statistics surface the development patterns of each civilization, letting you simulate historical processes and compare outcomes across different configurations.
Workshop and Sharing
Create custom maps and scenarios in the editor, then share them with other players to discover entirely new geopolitical setups and approaches.
Controls
PC
- Left mouse button: Interact with buttons
- Mouse wheel: Zoom in and out
FAQ
What is the actual goal in Ages of Conflict: World War Simulator?
There's no win condition. Choose how many states populate your world, then watch battles, alliances, and the rise and fall of entire civilizations unfold. Every story is unique to that session.
Which real-world maps are available from the start?
Real regions, continents, and a full world map are all accessible immediately — no unlocking required.
How does changing the number of nations affect the simulation?
Setting more nations and empty cities scales up the scope of events. There's no traditional difficulty curve — the number of nations and cities you configure determines how complex the geopolitical activity becomes.
How do you speed up a civilization's history?
The simulation includes a time-speed control. Increasing it lets centuries of history play out quickly, so you can observe long-term geopolitical trends in a single session.
Does sound matter, or is it purely visual?
Watching in silence is perfectly viable, but sound delivers signals about events as they happen, so you don't miss significant moments in your world's story.
Games You Might Like
If the god-mode observation loop in Ages of Conflict appeals to you, Sandbox Universe delivers a similar hands-off experience — add planets, black holes, and asteroids, then watch the physics play out across an entire star system. For a different kind of world-building, Animal Evolution Simulator puts you in charge of guiding a species from its earliest form to apex predator through strategic choices. Fans of resource management and long-term progression will find Idle Game Dev Simulator rewarding, scaling a game studio from a garage to a global empire over time. Browse the full simulation games catalog or explore strategy games for more geopolitical and grand-scale titles.



