In a 1976 poll conducted by SPI to determine the most popular board wargames in North America,
Modern Battles placed 33rd out of 202 games. Two of the individual folio games were rated higher than this,
Chinese Farm coming in 15th, and
Wurzburg 23rd.
Golan was 33rd, while
Mukden was the least popular, placing 54th. In the 1977 book
The Comprehensive Guide to Board Wargaming, Charles Vasey thought that the Combat Results Table (CRT) was "very complex for a [quadrigame with] numerous bloodless retreats." Vasey also complimented the "fine maps", and described
Wurzburg as "a good game with a fierce series of typical battles around the town." In Issue 20 of the British wargaming magazine
Phoenix, George Duguid criticized
Modern Battles for "failing to distinguish between the various arms of the modern army (with the exception of artillery)." Duguid also noted that the games, especially
Wurzburg, often stagnated into a defensive battle of attrition. He also didn't like the abstract concept of air strikes, wishing that there actual physical units representing aircraft. He went on to suggest changes to the rules to correct these deficiencies. In an article in
Moves reviewing wargames by various publishers set in the Arab-Israeli Wars, Ian Chadwick examined both
Golan and
Chinese Farm. He noted that the simplistic game mechanics "makes these games fast and enjoyable, but realism is sacrificed." He also did not like the abstract nature of air strikes and air defenses. He found
Golan to be "a good, tough game, one easily played to a conclusion in one evening." He called
Chinese Farm "a very playable game. It's not as fluid as
Golan, but nonetheless fast and enjoyable." He graded both games "A" for playability, "C" for component quality and "C" for historical accuracy. In
The Guide to Simulations/Games for Education and Training, Martin Campion thought that "The game rules are basically simple but the artillery rules tend to put a larger strain than usual on players' abilities to add numerous numbers in their heads and to consider several alternatives at the same time." In a retrospective review in Issue 20 of
Simulacrum, Dav Vandenbroucke, Art Kritzer & Brian Train, commented, "
Modern Battles departed from the standard scripting of the quads inasmuch as two of the games involved hypothetical battles, and the games were not homogenous and related to each of the others. In another sense as well, it was unusual. Of the many reviews published of this quad in the hobby magazines of the era, only one dealt with the quad as a whole, and most dealt with
Wurzburg in a uniformly positive light while
Mukden was clearly the least popular of the four." ==Other reviews and commentary==