Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The player controls a tank in a first-person perspective, with the objective of shooting enemy tanks and randomly appearing UFOs while avoiding being hit. The game screen is split into two areas: the top section is black and displays the score, high score, and a radar screen, while the lower portion shows a yellow desert landscape.
Steel Beasts is the name for a family of tank simulators created by eSim Games for Microsoft Windows. Its subject is contemporary combined arms tactics (with emphasis on modern armoured fighting vehicles) at a company scale. As a consumer game, it is a genre mix of strategy game, action game, simulation game, and wargame of fairly complex gameplay.
Sarge (video game) Scorched Earth (video game) Scorched Tanks; Seek and Destroy (1996 video game) Shadow Master; Shellshock (video game) Space Tanks; Spearhead (video game) Spectre (1991 video game) Star Fox: Assault; Starglider; Steel Beasts; Steel Fury; Steel Panthers; Steel Panthers (video game) Steel Panthers II: Modern Battles
A This video game is a 4X turn-based strategic level space warfare game. Sequel to Cosmic Balance II: Kampfgruppe: 1985: Ami, AppII, ATR, C64, DOS A strategy video game of tank warfare of WWII [16] Knights of The Desert: 1983: AppII, ATR, C64, DOS, TRS80 An operational level simulation of the campaigns in Egypt and Libya from 1941-43.
IL-2 Sturmovik: Tank Crew is the title of a series of tank simulation games, all of them set in World War II. Tank Crew is compatible with all other World War II combat flight simulation modules in the Great Battles series: while some users are playing an online game on the simulated tank crew seats, others can sit in simulated cockpits and fly ...
M1 Tank Platoon is a tactical simulator of tank warfare developed and published by MicroProse for the Amiga, Atari ST and MS-DOS in 1989. The game features a mixture of first-person, third-person tank warfare, and tactical simulation gameplay. It was followed by a sequel, M1 Tank Platoon II, released by MicroProse in 1998 for Windows.
The game has realistic physics, including the tank engine's complexity being simulated as well. The player can switch between the different tank positions, such as the driver, the gunner, the machine-gunner, and the commander. Several players can play in multiplayer mode and occupy different stations in the same tank. [1]
AllGame was more positive than most reviews, praising the game's use of graphics and sounds to create an involving experience, stating "I was amazed at the detail of the 3D environments, the use of color, and the multiple camera angles available. You actually feel like you're in a tank.