Title: World of Tanks
Year introduced: 2011
Country of origin: Belarus
Languages: Russian / English
Price: include premium accounts / options
Belarusian online tank game which features the duels between two teams of tanks, tank destroyers and self-propelled guns. Although it is a tank game, it isn’t a simulation, rather an action shooter that gives the players chance to control the historical tanks from as early as World War I up to the late 1960s and 1970s. The basic mode of the game is "random battle", which means that the match-making engine takes random users from queue and sets them up in two teams on a random map. All the vehicles available in the game are split into tiers from 1 to 10, where tier 1 are early tanks (f.e. Renault FT 17, Leichttraktor), while tier 10 are heavy tanks from the mid 20th century. In random battles the vehicles are chosen from 3 tiers, f.e. 1 to 3, 3 to 5, 2 to 4, etc. which gives some chances to even the poorer designs. Self-propelled guns have a different role during the battles - their users have option of top-down view on the battlefield, so they can attack targets, spotted by the tanks, while being far from the frontline.
Maps are various - from open spaced vast fields to narrow streets of the cities, but most of them are rather similar to each other and make very little difference to battles. The tanks are historical constructions, which gives a chance to see how different they were, what were their strong and weak points. At least that is how it was at the beginning of World of Tanks - with time, the commercial side of the project killed the spirit of the historical game and more and more of not historically accurate projects were available, usually as premium tanks. Why is that a problem? Soviet and German technology trees are full of tanks that were widely used before, during and after World War 2, but at the same time there are a lot of prototypes, designs that never made it to tests phase or in some cases, even ideas for the tank that were never considered to be used. It would be fine, but the tank that was used in battles has proved its weak and strong points, while those projects, which only were f.e. in form of blueprints, never entered the production, never saw any action, so we have the idealistic image of them - not how they were, but how they could have been if they were ever made. The best example is a Japanese super tank O-I, that was only rumoured to have reached the prototype stage, in the World of Tanks is very well protected and well armed. At the same time, the Japanese did not have materials to build good tanks during World War 2, so all the parameters of O-I in World of Tanks are made up and have no confirmation in any historical data.
Another problem is the mentioned match-making engine that puts together the tanks from different tiers to set up the team and the tiers themselves - some of the tanks were put too low or too high on the technology trees, f.e. The M4 Sherman is put in tier 5 together with T-34 and Panzer IV, which is fine, they were close. But in the same tier we have KV-1 (much heavier and far better when it comes to armor and weapon), Churchill tank (very heavy, good armor), AT 2 British tank destroyer (only planned, never built) that is almost immune to shells from the other tier 5 tanks, or AMX ELC Bis (French light tank prototype from 1955). So, to put it in other words, in a random battle you can end up in a tank from the early 1930s facing an enemy in a tank prototype from the 1950s (or even later), which is frustrating, especially when the enemy is using a premium tank that is "spiced up" version of historical tank.
Overall, it is an interesting tank game, definitely not a simulation, there are no tactics involved, not much options you have during the battle - some of them are called "seal clubbing" (like Mittengard) since there is no space to manoeuvre, just who will shoot first or have better armor will win. Some of the maps were rather good, but as most of the game elements with time they were "improved" (which means spoiled), made "more special" (which means not available for free players). What started as an interesting tank game with elements of historical battles has now turned into a money-making scheme, where premium tanks (that you have to pay for) are far superior to those available for free. That would be understandable if at the same time the regular or historical tanks would not be "slightly changed" (which means spoiled) or "made more competitive" (which means spoiled). Example? Hotchkiss H35 was one of the best tanks in the lower tiers due to great armor (historically accurate), but at the same time slow and rather poorly armed (again historically accurate) - due to one of the updates, H35 was tweaked a little bit to make it more fair for other tanks (so not historically accurate anymore) and from that point the armor is less efficient. At the same time, Pz.Kpfw. 38H 735 (f) premium tank was available, which is the German version of this tank (after the invasion of France, Germans have acquired a lot of those tanks) and in that version the armor is much better (again historically not accurate since Germans never changed the armor).
Strong points: plenty of historical tanks, options to slightly modify the tanks, sometimes the battle are quite entertaining, but it is up to the players you will end up with.
Weak points: plenty of made up tanks, premium options give huge advantage, too much pressure on players to spend money (like removing maps), changes made during updates usually are for worse, match-making that can put you in battle in which you can’t even scratch most of the enemies.
Rating: 3 / 5 based on 4 votes
★★★☆☆
Multiplayer first person shooter set in reality of World War 2 and in meticulously recreated maps of real battles.
After the success of World of Tanks, and its inevitable demise, it was just a matter of time when the clones of WoT will start to take over the market and Battle Tanks: Legends of World War II is one of those clones.
Futuristic tank battles arcade game similar to World of Tanks - provides different vehicles and different gameplay modes.
Third, next to World of Tanks and Warships, a game from Wargaming.net that sort-of simulates 20th century war battles. Although it was published as their second title, it is considered far inferior to the other two. And not without reasons.
Post-apocalyptic survival for dummies
Can you solve this cold case?
Can you solve this 60 years old cold case?
Elden Ring premiered recently to pretty much universal acclaim - critics and users seem to love the concept, the outlook, the formula, the experience. And someone should tell FromSoftware they’re do...
After almost 2 years of empty promises and pointless roadmaps that never materialized it looks like CD Projekt RED finally gave up on saving the dumpster fire that Cyberpunk 2077 was. I mean they put ...