Millenium Dawn – Remilitarization of Ukraine

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Author: Rattus jobiensis

Last revision: 21 Feb at 00:32 UTC (3)

File size: 1.33 MB

On Steam Workshop

Description:

A mod for Millennium Dawn about an alternate history of Ukraine, featuring realistic and potentially feasible decisions (given political will and sufficient funding) aimed at restoring military power and pursuing an aggressive foreign policy.

By completing the decisions, the player will be able to:
– Obtain over 500+ aircraft of various types (restored real-life or fictional ones based on plausible modifications), including fighters, strategic/long-range bombers, and AWACS planes. The player can also unlock aviation technologies and reverse-engineer Soviet/Russian models;
– Restore tens of thousands of small arms and over 700 tanks from mobilization reserves or by redirecting equipment destined for disposal back into the military;
– Acquire over 30 warships and patrol boats, including the aircraft carrier "Varyag", which — if the player chooses so — will not be transferred to China;
– Bring back over 1,000 GLCM missiles and unlock their production technology, along with several thousand surface-to-air missiles, also with access to related techs;
– Denounce the Black Sea Fleet agreement with Russia and attempt to expel Russian forces from Sevastopol;
– Launch attacks on neighboring countries without justifying a war;
– Gain a research boost for nuclear weapons development.

******* Note *******

Most of the options are available and visible in the early 2000s, some only until 2001 (historically, for example, the carrier "Varyag" could only have been physically returned while it was still in Mykolaiv, or strategic aviation/missiles could only have been restored before they were scrapped – albeit with consequences from the US/Russia), etc. Therefore, the mod is more suitable for a new game.

To-Do List:
– Adding Ukrainian localization;
– Adding events/news to accompany decisions;
– Making the reconstruction of the "Varyag" more challenging by introducing appropriate mechanics – in reality, it would’ve involved many issues;
– Making reverse-engineering of the Su-33, MiG-29, and Tu-22M3 more complex;