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This subgenre of vehicular combat involves mech robots, or mecha, as the vehicle for combat. [citation needed] For most mech games, they are played in either first-person or third-person view style. Other games are based on popular Anime television shows such as the various Gundam series, Robotech, and Evangelion.
The Combat Vehicle Reconnaissance (Tracked) (CVR(T)) is a family of armoured fighting vehicles (AFVs) developed in the 1960s and is in service with the British Army and others throughout the world. They are small, highly mobile, air-transportable armoured vehicles, originally designed to replace the Alvis Saladin armoured car .
Rage (video game) Rage 2; Ravaged; Ray Tracers; RC Cars; Recoil (video game) Red Faction: Battlegrounds; Redline (1999 video game) Renegade Ops; Return Fire; Return Fire 2; RIGS: Mechanized Combat League; Road Fighter; Road Rage (2017 video game) Road Rash (1991 video game) Road Rash (1994 video game) Road Rash 3; Road Rash 3D; Road Rash 64 ...
Streaker, a 1987 computer game published by Bulldog; Combat Vehicle Reconnaissance (tracked), a high-mobility carrier vehicle named Streaker, from the United Kingdom; Streaker (SpaceDev), a small launch vehicle; MQM-107 Streaker, a target-towing drone used by the U.S. Army and Air Force
Pages in category "Tracked reconnaissance vehicles" ... Combat Vehicle Reconnaissance (Tracked) F. FV101 Scorpion; FV107 Scimitar; L. Lynx reconnaissance vehicle; M ...
The FV107 Scimitar is an armoured tracked military reconnaissance vehicle (sometimes classed as a light tank) formerly used by the British Army, until it was retired from active service in April 2023. [2] It was manufactured by Alvis in Coventry.
Rogue Trip: Vacation 2012, also known as Rogue Trip, is a vehicular combat video game developed by SingleTrac and published by GT Interactive for the PlayStation in 1998. The game is set in an apocalyptic fiction alternative history version of the year 2012 where mercenaries fight against each other using vehicles, and various weapons as they pick up tourists, hitchhikers, and passengers ...
It was the lead vehicle and the fire support type in the Combat Vehicle Reconnaissance (Tracked), CVR(T), family of seven armoured vehicles. Manufactured by Alvis, it was introduced into service with the British Army in 1973 and was withdrawn in 1994. [5] [6] More than 3,000 were produced and used as a reconnaissance vehicle or a light tank.