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Bolt Action - Dev Diary #3: Order Die, Unit Activations & Snap to Action

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Published on March 26, 2026

Wargamers! Today we’re diving into the absolute soul of the Bolt Action experience: The Turn Order System.

In most strategy games, you’re looking at a standard "I-Go-You-Go" structure. One player moves their entire army, then the other does the same. While that's clean and easy to follow, it’s also highly predictable and often leads to the "Alpha-Strike" problem—where the player who goes first can effectively cripple the enemy before they’ve even had a chance to react.

Bolt Action shatters that mold. Every unit in your platoon—from your Heer Infantry to your Panzer IV—contributes an Order Die to a virtual bag. When a die is drawn, that side activates one eligible unit. Repeat until the bag is empty. That’s one Turn.

This shifts the entire structure of the game. You aren't just working through a fixed checklist; you are constantly prioritizing, adapting, and deciding what matters right now. It’s a brilliant piece of tabletop design, and it remains a non-negotiable pillar of our digital adaptation.

The Bag: Friction and Tempo

The bag system creates uncertainty, but it is not uncertainty for its own sake. What it really creates is Command Friction. You may know exactly what you want to do with your platoon, but as the old military adage goes: "No plan survives first contact with the enemy." In Bolt Action, that first contact happens every time a hand reaches into the virtual dice bag.

Imagine a German force tasked with seizing a vital objective: a Stone Bridge held by a stubborn US Airborne squad. To succeed, the German commander has a lethal, calculated sequence in mind:

  1. The Panzer IV must fire its High Explosive (HE) shell first to blast the Americans out of the bridgehead and stack Pins to ruin their morale.

  2. Once suppressed, the Heer Pioneer squad (with their deadly flamethrower) will Advance into range to incinerate the defenders.


In a rigid "I-Go-You-Go" game, this is a mathematical certainty. In Bolt Action, it is a high-wire act.

The friction comes when you draw your first die and fire the Panzer IV. The shell hits, but doesn't wipe them out. You’re ready to move the Pioneers next—but the next die pulled from the bag is US. Seeing your Tank exposed in the open, your opponent activates a hidden Bazooka Team to fire at your tank’s side armor, changing your focus from the objective to protecting your most valuable unit.

Suddenly, your "perfect" sequence is shattered. Every draw is a high-stakes gamble. In Bolt Action, victory doesn't go to the player with the best plan; it goes to the player whose plan can survive the friction of the bag.

Officers: Snap to Action!

If the bag creates friction, Officers are the primary tools you use to push back against it. In Bolt Action, an officer is not simply a "hero" unit or a static morale totem; they are your primary Force Multipliers.

You Men, Snap to Action Mechanic: When an officer’s die is drawn, you can trigger a You Men, Snap to Action. This allows the officer to manually "pull" additional dice from the bag for nearby units, bypassing the random draw.

Instead of hoping the bag favors you twice in a row, your US Officer ensures your Sherman shells the objective to pin the defenders before your US Airborne squad initiates Close Quarters.

We have modeled our HQ units with 1:1 V3 technical precision:

  • Platoon Commanders (Leutnant/Oberleutnant): Your frontline anchors. With a 6” Command Range, they can "Snap" up to 2 nearby units to act immediately with them.

  • Company Commanders (Hauptmann/Major): High-tier tactical assets. With a 12” Command Range, they can "Snap" up to 4 units at once.

Designer’s Note: For the German Wehrmacht, we have obviously implemented "Blitzkrieg." Reflecting their superior tactical initiative, your officers can pull one additional order die during a You Men, Snap to Action.



Digital Speed, Tabletop Tension

We’ve automated the "bookkeeping" so you can focus on the "blood and guts."

The virtual bag and UI tracks whose turn it is now, snap to action activations, which units have acted, which have to act and remaining die in real-time, delivering the signature Bolt Action suspense at a punchy, cinematic pace.

When you select an Officer, their Command Range appears as a tactical overlay, highlighting which units are eligible for You Men, Snap to Action or a morale boost. A squad anchored by their Officer is better equipped to stay in the fight while being "pinned."

No more guessing whether units are in range! We’ve mapped measurements to a Tile System where *1 Tile = 1 Inch. A 6” Command Range is 6 tiles; a 12” Run is 12 tiles. This grid removes all measurement ambiguity, providing an instant, visible resource for every tactical decision.

*This is the current playtest data, it might change as the game evolves.

Scaling the Battle: Grouped Activations

In Bolt Action, high unit counts create a grand spectacle, but in a digital environment, they can present a significant pacing hurdle. A 1,500-point match with 30+ units leads to dozens of individual turn timers (online multiplayer, the minimum would be 60 seconds) potentially turning a punchy engagement into a slog. To streamline gameplay, we’ve created an optional Grouped Activations feature.

In this system, a single "pull" from the virtual bag can represent multiple order dice. For example, one draw might grant you three activations to use across your platoon. This reduces the hand-offs between players after every activation, increasing the amount you can accomplish within a single (grouped) activation.

Crucially, we understand that for many, the 1:1 "one die, one unit" system is the heart of the Bolt Action experience. Because of this, Grouped Activations are entirely optional. Players will have the ability to set the activation value to "1," perfectly mirroring the traditional tabletop rules.

We haven't decided which method will be the default for matchmaking, we look forward to playtesting with the community to see what fits best. Regardless, whether you want the streamlined speed of grouped orders or the granular, unit-by-unit tension of the classic draw, the choice will remain entirely in your hands.



The Road Ahead

We have already gathered some excellent feedback from the community, but we want to dig deeper. In our next update, we’ll be releasing a FAQ to address your questions. If you have questions, we might have answers.

We’re also developing an active community on the official Discord (linked here), please join us and help make the game better.

Community Question: When it comes to the bag, do you prefer the raw tension of one-by-one activations, or are you interested in trying grouped activations for larger battles?

Wishlist the game here!

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