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  2. Tank! (wargame) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tank!_(wargame)

    Campion concluded, "Tank! offers a fairly simple approach to the tactical problems of armored warfare and the comparisons of the weapons used in it." [1] Geoff Barnard commented "I always rather liked Tank!, especially when you stuck to the early weapons and tanks; with the later years, the system began to fail as a hit became almost automatic ...

  3. Pocket Tanks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pocket_Tanks

    Pocket Tanks features modified physics and additional weapons ranging from simple explosive shells to homing missiles. The game also allows each player to move their tank a maximum of four times at a small, prefixed amount each time. The goal of Pocket Tanks is to use various weapons to attack the other player's tank. Each hit scores a certain ...

  4. Artillery game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artillery_game

    Following in 1990, Kenny Morse released a different game also titled Tank Wars, which introduced the concept of buying weapons and multiple AI computer-player tanks to the artillery game. Gravity Wars was a conversion of the Amiga game of the same name that took the artillery game into space, introducing a 2D gravity field around planets, a ...

  5. Tank (video games) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tank_(video_games)

    A tank or meat shield is a character class commonly seen in co-op video games such as real-time strategy games, role-playing games, fighting games, multiplayer online battle arenas and MUDs. Tank characters deliberately attract enemy attention and attacks (potentially by using game mechanics that force them to be targeted ) to act as a decoy ...

  6. Tokyo Wars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tokyo_Wars

    The player engaging in combat with an enemy tank. Tokyo Wars allows one to eight players to control separate tanks, either as teammates or as opponents. Players can play either in the heart of downtown Tokyo or at the city's bayside dock. However, the players have twenty seconds to make all the decisions before the game automatically locks them in.

  7. 2A46 125 mm gun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2A46_125_mm_gun

    Other variations include 2A46M, 2A46M-1, 2A46M-2, 2A46M-4, 2A46M-5, and Ukrainian KBA-3 and Chinese ZPT-98. The 2A46 can fire armour-piercing fin-stabilised discarding sabot (APFSDS), high-explosive anti-tank (HEAT) and high-explosive fragmentation (HEF) projectiles.

  8. Super Battletank 2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Battletank_2

    This video game is the sequel to Super Battletank, and the player controls a M1A2 Battletank. [3] There are 16 missions, all located in the Middle East. [3] Using radar, the player must scout out groups of enemy tanks and use the primary turret to take out infantrymen, jeeps, SCUD missiles, and armored personnel carriers. [3]

  9. Stellar 7: Draxon's Revenge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stellar_7:_Draxon's_Revenge

    The player is the driver of a "super-tank" called Raven. Raven is armed with powerful weapons and an anti-gravity device that allows it to move fast. The player must defeat the evil hordes of Gir Draxon, overlord of the Arcturan Empire, who aims to enslave Earth and its inhabitants. [3]