I am intrigued that the game will include an alternate Swedish setting! I am however a bit curious about what assumptions will go into its underlying premise.
The basic premise for this edition of T2K is as I've understood it that while the Wall did collapse in '89 and Germany hence IS reunited, Boris Yeltsin did NOT manage to avert the August 1991 coup, with the consequence that the Soviet Union did NOT collapse, and hence much of the Warsaw Pact should remain intact, the Baltic states never gained independence, etc.
In Sweden's actual history, that collapse had immediate repercussions on defence policy, with downscaling of the operational strength and reductions in ongoing investments. The slogan used by defence minister Anders Björck at the time was that Swedish defence was made "smaller but sharper" (*mindre men vassare"); while spending was cut, the intent was to get "more bang for the buck" ("mera pang för pengarna"). But the fact remains: the ongoing programme to acquire a new MBT for the Swedish army was reduced to a fraction of the originally intended numbers, as was the on-going acquisition of the Gripen multi-role fighter. Development of a new medium-range AA system (Rbs 23) was put on hold. Numerous obsolete units (such as the bicycle infantry "cykelskytte") were, instead of being modernised into mechanised infantry, simply disbanded. And so on, and so forth. Some systems were eventually developed and fielded, but years, even decades later, and in much smaller quantities.
Will the Swedish setting take all this into account, so that the Swedish defence that meets the Twilight War is not simply what the country historically had at the time, but rather that which would have existed, had policy not suddenly changed direction in late 1991?
Will it even take into consideration other, wider consequences, such as might the unchanged course of Swedish policy in the end have led the country to not elect to acquire a foreign MBT, but instead invest in developing the domestic Strv 2000, in keeping with the mainstream of Swedish Cold War acquisitions policy?