The year was 2011. Elias stood in the dust-choked command center of a Forward Operating Base (FOB) in Helmand Province, staring at a digital map of . This wasn't a game of front lines and clear enemies. It was a game of shadows, logistics, and "Hearts and Minds." The First Move
By the final "turn" of his deployment, Elias had built a network of paved roads and schools. The local Afghan National Army (ANA) units he had trained were finally ready to take over the FOB. As he initiated the "Download Complete" sequence to finalize the province's transition to local control, Elias looked at the map one last time.
Elias clicked on a cluster of gray huts labeled Khayr Kot . His objective was simple: build a water tower. He dispatched a convoy of Buffalo MRAPs and construction crews. But as the vehicles crawled across the rugged terrain, the "Unrest" meter in the province ticked upward. Every mile traveled was a chance to hit an IED—a silent killer that could derail the entire mission before it even began. The Ambush
It wasn't a total victory—the mountains were still dangerous—but for the first time in years, the "Hearts and Minds" of the valley belonged to the people, not the war.