Knight's Cross- The first game in the wildly popular WW2 series, with the player in the role of Hauptmann Jurgen Schmidt, recruited into an elite Wehrmacht unit in 1943-44 as they fight their way through Britain. Released for the Ibuka GameStation 001.
Knight's Cross: Werewolves- Another GameStation title, this controversial "alternate history" title involves a Werewolf resistance unit in the ruins of Berlin in 1948, the year after the "United Nations" won.
Knight's Cross: Combined Assault- The first title in the series for the Elektrosoft PC, this returns to more familiar territory, although with a new protagonist. The famous opening sequence, as the player takes part in the landings at Pevensey, has been widely copied.
Knight's Cross: Frontline- A multi-platform release, for Ibuka 002, Nintendo GameBox, and Elektrosoft "Machine X". Takes place in between the missions of the original, as Hauptmann Schmidt tries to capture the prototype De Havilland Vampire.
Knight's Cross: Red Star- Another multiplatform title, with a new character- Feldwebel Heinrich Moltke. The first to be set on the Russian front, it was poorly received, and the sequel, featuring Moltke's brother, was canned.
Knight's Cross: Infiltrator- The first portable title in the series, for the Nintendo Pocket.
Knight's Cross: Barbarossa- Another, much more successful, multiplatform attempt at the Russian front. Widely acclaimed tank mechanics, a new character, and a longer storyline.
Knight's Cross: Afrika- Applies the winning formula of Barbarossa to the tank battles of the North African desert.
Knight's Cross: Heroes- Another portable title, for the Ibuka Mini-01. Also a "retrospective", with 3 characters from previous games, each with their own campaign.
Knight's Cross: Vanguard- Perhaps the weakest title in the series, which tries to combine the unusual control system of the Nintendo iMotion with a choice of start points for the mission. Also released for Ibuka 002. Got terrible reviews, being called "a poor man's Landser"- referring to the new, better WW2 franchise.
Knight's Cross: Fallschirmjaeger- Updates Vanguard's parachute-deployment mechanics, but combines them with a much less linear, more free-roaming environment to give a far better title overall. Released for PC, Elektrosoft Machine Z, and Ibuka 003- after the Vanguard debacle, they decided to relegate the iMotion to the less-demanding "portable" games such as:
Knight's Cross: Heroes 2- just released for Ibuka Mini-01 and Nintendo iMotion. The iMotion version involves a superb online mode.