When we hear the word "Homefront," our minds often snap to a specific historical reel: grainy black-and-white footage of women in polka-dotted bandanas tightening rivets on bomber planes, children collecting tin foil for the war effort, or families peering through blackout curtains at a starless sky. This imagery, primarily rooted in the World War II era, has defined the term for nearly a century.
Introduction
If you look at historical photos of the homefront during WWII, you rarely see a single person. You see neighborhoods working together—scrap metal drives, communal canning, block mothers watching the children. Homefront
Character Progression and Upgrades
The homefront is where resilience is actually built. It is the last line of defense, and the first place we run to for safety. Beyond the Battlefield: Reclaiming the Power of the
Her husband, Elias, was somewhere in the Pacific. His letters arrived in batches, heavily censored with black ink, leaving her to guess at his safety between the lines about "island weather" and "missing her peach cobbler." Humvee/MRAP: Transport, light MG