The original Dawn of War games have 109 new Steam achievements after 20 years—if you have the definitive edition, at least

I’m no RTS expert, but I’m nonetheless ride or die for Warhammer 40, 000: Dawn of War. I’ve poured what must be hundreds of hours into campaign and skirmish modes across the game’s four versions, gleefully gunning down gue’la for the greater good and deep striking dreadnoughts where they are least welcome. Granted, there’s no record of my wartime victories, as the Steam versions of these games (and the CD-ROM versions of my youth) never had acheivements-until now. That only holds for the recently released definitive edition, which as Sean Martin said in his impressions is a “sparing” but superlative version of the classic RTS series, but the GOG version has the achievements as well. You can find the full list on a Steam News Hub blog post from Thursday, and they’re about what you’d expect. There are achievements for winning a skirmish and multiplayer match as every faction, seeing each ending across the various story campaigns, and more flavorful ones like killing 666 space marines while playing as chaos marines. There’s also an accolade for deploying each of the games’ relic units-big monsters like the Greater Knarloc and the Bloodthirster-which was always a hype moment in-game, even if matches didn’t always go on long enough to facilitate it. None of them should prove particularly elusive, provided you can find enough opponents online to get all the multiplayer achievements. There’s also “The Grim Darkness of the Far Future,” where you’re meant to kill 40, 000 enemy units. hopefully you’ll be fighting lots of imperial guardsmen. The new achievements won’t account for prior progress, as the blog post notes: “With a 20-year-old game as our starting point, we did not have much in the way of existing stat tracking to use, so we had to add that in this latest patch to support achievements.” That being said, you only have to finish a campaign to get credit; if you have one beaten, you should be able to replay just the final mission and cross it off your list. I’m not much of a completionist, but I will take any excuse to revisit some of the greatest strategy games ever made. If you see me in multiplayer, feel free to let me win! I’m just here for the achievement, after all.
https://www.pcgamer.com/games/rts/the-original-dawn-of-war-games-have-109-new-steam-achievements-after-20-years-if-you-have-the-definitive-edition-at-least/

Dave Hyde: A day for Diana Nyad, and a reunion of ‘two Fort Lauderdale girls’

**Diana Nyad Honored with Plaque at Fort Lauderdale Beach**

FORT LAUDERDALE — It was Diana Nyad’s day, her moment, and her stage as a plaque was unveiled honoring her life achievements at the very Fort Lauderdale beach where she played as a child.

Pointing up East Las Olas Boulevard to a bridge she’d walk over each day from her home on Desota Drive, Nyad, now 76, said, “This plaque is right where I’d come with my family from the time I was in second grade through high school.”

There was another girl who grew up just a few miles away — someone she met in Fort Lauderdale during the 1960s. They’d read about each other in the paper and often found themselves the only two girls at athletic awards banquets, so they would sit together.

“Chris, come in here for a picture,” Nyad called to Chris Evert, the tennis legend, as a photographer waited. The two friends have known each other for six decades, and now they smiled under the plaque that read, “Marathon Swimmer Diana Nyad.”

Nyad’s success is etched in history, from being the first to swim Lake Ontario north to south at age 24, to becoming the first person to swim from Cuba to Key West without a shark cage at age 64.

“I’m in absolute awe of her,” said Evert.

When told people say the same about her 18 Grand Slams, Evert responded, “I didn’t nearly die in those like she nearly did.”

Nyad nearly died after being stung by the highly venomous box jellyfish on one of her failed attempts to swim from Cuba. She failed three more times before finally succeeding. Those failures are all part of her achievement — the full journey that actresses Annette Bening and Jodie Foster brought to life in the 2023 movie, *Nyad*.

No one else who failed in attempting to cross the Florida Straits ever tried again — except Nyad.

It was that indomitable spirit that filled the ceremony with a few hundred family members, friends, politicians, and members of Nyad’s support team, who wore uniform T-shirts emblazoned with their motto: “Find A Way.”

Nyad continuously found her own way — from coming out as gay at 21 to swimming around Manhattan in a record seven hours and 58 minutes at age 26, a record for both men and women. She never felt hemmed in by what people thought — or later, by her age.

Swimming the 103 miles from Cuba to Key West in 52 hours, 54 minutes, and 11 seconds was impressive enough. But doing it at age 64? That was extraordinary.

“I faced challenges, but my challenges were within the line of the tennis court,” Evert said during a speech about Nyad. “You took on the ocean. The jellyfish. The sharks. The waves. The unpredictability of it all. And you did it with the belief that the human spirit can’t be held down at 64.”

Once role models for young Broward girls on how to excel as athletes, Nyad and Evert have gone on to be role models for how to age with courageous dignity — Nyad with that monumental swim, and Evert with her public battle against cancer in recent years.

Their story also highlights a broader issue. When Lynette Long conducted a study of Florida plaques in 2017, she found that just six of 950 honored women. Long has since pushed for ceremonies like Thursday’s honoring Nyad. Another ceremony is in the works for Evert.

“Two Fort Lauderdale girls,” said Evert, 70, at one point during the event.

Nyad attended Pine Crest School, while Evert went to St. Thomas Aquinas. Although Nyad was five years older, they forged a friendship in the way the best in any field do — occasionally crossing paths and supporting each other’s successes over the years.

Nyad visited Wimbledon twice and saw Evert there, even interviewing her for television after her final match in 1989. She also fondly remembers bumping into Evert at a Fort Lauderdale store years ago.

“Chris, Wimbledon!” Nyad exclaimed. “I saw your picture in the paper!”

Nyad punctuates the story by saying her picture was small compared to Evert’s larger headlines.

Evert laughs and admits she doesn’t remember the moment. But here they are, all these years later — two Fort Lauderdale girls standing under a plaque of achievement, getting their picture taken together.

“I love you,” Nyad said. “I’m so glad you came.”

“I wouldn’t have missed it,” Evert replied.
https://www.orlandosentinel.com/2025/11/06/dave-hyde-a-day-for-diana-nyad-and-a-reunion-of-two-fort-lauderdale-girls/

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