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  2. Foxhole (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foxhole_(video_game)

    Foxhole is a cooperative sandbox massively-multiplayer action-strategy video game developed and published by Canadian video game company Siege Camp, who are based in Toronto, Ontario. The game uses Unreal Engine 4 , utilizing an axonometric projection perspective, much like that of a conventional real-time strategy video game with a top-down view .

  3. List of World War II video games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_World_War_II_video...

    Battlestrike: Call to Victory) (2004) World War II Combat: Road to Berlin (aka. Battlestrike: Secret Weapons of WWII) (2006) World War II Combat: Iwo Jima (aka. The Heat of War) (2006) Wolfschanze 1944: The Final Attempt (2006) Battlestrike: Force of Resistance (aka. Mortyr 3) (2007) Operation Thunderstorm (aka.

  4. Artillery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artillery

    'Field Artillery Team' is a US term and the following description and terminology applies to the US, other armies are broadly similar but differ in significant details. Modern field artillery (post–World War I) has three distinct parts: the Forward Observer (FO), the Fire Direction Center (FDC) and the actual guns

  5. List of artillery video games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_artillery_video_games

    1-player game. Inspired by Bally Artillery game in August 1982 Creative Computing by John W. Rhodes. Draws rough terrain instead of a single hill. 1983. Artillery Duel. Xonox.

  6. Artillery game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artillery_game

    Artillery games are two or three-player (usually turn-based) video games involving tanks (or simply cannons) trying to destroy each other. The core mechanics of the gameplay is almost always to aim at the opponent (s) following a ballistic trajectory (in its simplest form, a parabolic curve). Artillery games are among the earliest computer ...

  7. Defensive fighting position - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defensive_fighting_position

    Defensive fighting position. U.S. Marine in a fighting hole outside Beirut during the 1958 Lebanon crisis. A defensive fighting position (DFP) is a type of earthwork constructed in a military context, generally large enough to accommodate anything from one soldier to a fire team (or similar sized unit).

  8. M109 howitzer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M109_howitzer

    M109 howitzer. The M109 is an American 155 mm turreted self-propelled howitzer, first introduced in the early 1960s to replace the M44. It has been upgraded a number of times, most recently to the M109A7. The M109 family is the most common Western indirect-fire support weapon of maneuver brigades of armored and mechanized infantry divisions.

  9. Slide rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slide_rule

    Engineer using a slide rule, with mechanical calculator in background, mid 20th century. A more modern form of slide rule was created in 1859 by French artillery lieutenant Amédée Mannheim, who was fortunate both in having his rule made by a firm of national reputation, and its adoption by the French Artillery. Mannheim's rule had two major ...