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What are some of the games where the player fights the boss and realizes he's the bad guy?

In the early 90s, the Sega MD classic strategy game Grand Strategy: the German Blitzkrieg ? which featured the German army, began on September 1, 1939, and covered the entire European theater of World War II from the 1939 invasion of Poland to the 1945 capture of Berlin. At first, this game looks a lot like the 90's traditional real-time strategy games (such as C& C, Red Alert), into the game, a map of Europe, to show you Germany in 1939 when the boundaries, and identify the next target area to attack, and with the process of World War II, the player in the passage of time to expand the territory for Germany, must be the first time to play perhaps also have a great sense of The first time you play the game, you may still feel a sense of accomplishment. However, 99% of the players have found that the game, no matter how to play, after the Battle of Stalingrad, the blue German territory will no longer increase, but continue to become smaller and smaller, to the last level of the Battle of Berlin directly after the change. Naturally, there appeared n number of players who wanted to be dissatisfied, exploring the game in every possible way to see if a different result could occur. Sure enough, someone found a way after that. ? If the game "Low Countries" and "France" level are a big win, can be out of the Battle of Britain level; "Battle of Britain" a big win, can be out of the sea lion program. If you win the "Sea Lion Project" and capture Britain, win the "Caucasus" and defeat the Soviet Union, and then win the "North Africa Landing" (i.e., resisting the American landing), you will get the The hidden ending, which means that the Axis won the war. When this ending occurs, Germany, shown in blue on the map, occupies almost the entire map. The hint is to the effect that, thanks to you, the Third Reich has captured vast territories and begun the construction of the Thousand-Year Reich, but the background image is of people imprisoned in Nazi concentration camps. The final line then concludes with a famous quote from Frank, a war criminal at the Nuremberg Trials and Governor General of Poland, "A thousand years are easy to pass, but Germany's sins are hard to undo." It then goes straight into the closing credits, "Lili Marlene" (which is also the ending of the historical factual ending).