In 1973, SPI game designer
Jim Dunnigan created a small-scale "man-to-man" wargame set in
World War II that was published as
Sniper!. The game was significant for being the first commercial tactical board wargaming treatment of man-to-man combat in the Second World War. The following year, Dunnigan designed a companion game using the same basic rules titled
Patrol that expanded the timeline of scenarios to include the period of
World War I to 1970, and introduced rules for the arms and transportation used at various times during that period. Dunnigan called it a "rural version of
Sniper!". Following TSR's purchase of SPI in 1982, TSR assigned game designer
Steve Winter to combine the two games into a single product. This was released in 1986 as
Sniper!, subtitled "Second Edition: Game of Man-to-Man Combat, 1941-90". The expanded game removes the pre-World War II scenarios that had been published in
Patrol, but extends the modern-day scenarios from 1970 to 1990. The new
boxed set features artwork and cartography by Linda Bakk, Doug Chaffee, Tom Darden, Kim Lindau,
Rodger B. MacGowan, and Colleen O'Malley. Game components of this combined edition include: • two paper maps (double sided, with urban terrain on one side and rural terrain on the other, to allow for "double-blind" play with an umpire) • 32-page rulebook divided into Basic, Intermediate, Advanced, and Optional rules • cardstock sheet of vehicles • two six-sided dice • plastic counter tray • 600 die-cut counters. In an article in May-June 1988 edition of
The Wargamer about the development of the game, designer Steve Winter commented, "When I first started revising the
Sniper! and
Patrol games in 1985, there were only two other wargames (that I am aware of) that covered modern combat at man-to-man scale. Since then, at least three more have been published (two of which, like the
Sniper! game, were based heavily on previously published games). Yet, despite this surge of man-to-man games, very few articles have been published about any of them." ==Reception==