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Medium Tanks

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Revision as of 01:35, 27 December 2014
Diamonds? Also, there's a good debate over the plural rhombus question.
Revision as of 17:46, 21 January 2015
re-write
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 [[image:Medium S.png|left|link=|]] [[image:Medium S.png|left|link=|]]
?Medium tanks are reasonably agile multi-purpose tanks which are able to take on many roles such as scouts, support, or even front-line tanks.+Medium tanks are multi-purpose tanks with balanced characteristics that can assume many different roles. They are represented by a two-piece green or red diamond on the mini-map and over target marker.
  
?Medium tanks are extremely varied in their design and capabilities. The heaviest medium tank weighs in at just under 67 tons ( [[Tank:E50_Ausf_M|E 50 Ausf. M.]]) The thickest armor on a medium tank is up to 177 mm on the front hull, or 240 mm on the turret. The fastest medium tank can reach speeds of 70 kph. Medium tanks can also equip quite powerful weapons, but are usually less powerful than [[Heavy Tanks|heavy tanks]], [[Tank Destroyers|tank destroyers]], and [[Self-Propelled Guns|self propelled guns]]. At higher tiers, though (excluding tier 10), a majority of medium tanks will have to resort to either flanking tactics or weakspot-shooting to damage heavy tanks and most TD's.While a majority of medium tanks are effective due to their speed and maneuverability, some medium tanks are designed for more of a support role. These mediums may lack the speed and mobility of their counterparts, but instead, they have better armor and weapons to provide an effective mobile fire support platform.+How a medium tank performs varies greatly from tank to tank, but in terms of size, firepower, maneuverability, and protection medium tanks generally fall between the larger, burlier [[Heavy Tanks|heavy tanks]] and the smaller, nimbler [[Light Tanks|light tanks]]. Medium tanks take many characteristics from both, albeit to lesser extremes. They tend to be fairly maneuverable which allows them to take position and quickly relocate in ways heavy tanks and slow [[Tank Destroyers|tank destroyers]] can't. Medium tank guns are usually more potent than those on light tanks but usually come up short of heavy tank guns. Despite this, most medium tanks have the firepower necessary to reliably do damage to enemy heavy tanks of their tier. Medium tanks also have moderate amounts of armor - enough to protect them from weaker guns and poorly aimed shots, but not enough to allow them to engage most tanks in drawn out, head-to-head brawls.
  
?Medium tanks are effective scouts when [[Light Tanks|light tanks]] are unavailable, and excel at destroying enemy scouts, particularly light tanks. The larger size of the medium tank weakens its role as a scout when compared to light tanks. However, they are still generally mobile enough to exploit weak points in an enemy's defense for an opportunity to locate and destroy enemy artillery. That same mobility provides the medium tank an excellent ability to relocate, either to flank an enemy force already engaged, or to move to support a weak front needing extra firepower.+Since medium tanks are multi-role vehicles, exactly how they're played depends on the situation. In most cases, medium tanks are most effective supporting friendly heavy tanks or other higher tier mediums. When using their speed to engage in flanking maneuvers, medium tanks can put effective fire into larger enemy tanks without putting themselves at risk. A well coordinated pair or group of medium tanks working in tandem can easily take down much larger enemies while taking little to no damage themselves. Medium tanks can also take on the roles of other more specialized tanks that are either critically damaged or already destroyed. Depending on the characteristics of the specific tank being used, a medium tank can use its limited armor and remaining hitpoints to brawl for a short amount of time, its speed to [[Tactics:_Scouting|scout]] enemy tanks, or its firepower to give supporting fire.
  
?Medium tanks in a supporting role usually hang back behind friendly heavy tanks or flank opposing tanks, forcing the enemy to show a weak point to either the medium or the main force. Some medium tanks have strong frontal turret armor that allows them to resort to hull-down tactics; however, the rest of their armor can usually be penetrated by tanks of the same tier and above. Two medium tanks working together can use this to great advantage against a single heavy tank, with one tank hiding in cover drawing the enemy tank's fire and attention while the second medium engages the target's flank.+While most medium tanks share the same well-rounded, multi-use performance, some are more specialized than others. Tanks such as the [[Matilda]] and [[Tank:Sherman_Jumbo|Sherman Jumbo]] are medium tanks only by definition, and effectively play like heavy tanks at their tiers. Others, such as the [[Panther]] and [[Leopard]] are superb in the sniping role, but are poorly protected from enemy fire themselves. In addition, some tanks such as the [[M7]] and [[A-43]] sacrifice armor and firepower for great speed and gun handling, and therefore behave more like large light tanks.
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?If forced to engage a heavy tank on its own, a medium tank can either circle an enemy tank if it moves faster than the target's turret, or make use of cover and spot the target for the friendly artillery. Overall, they are very important to a team's fighting force and shouldn't be underestimated. +
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?Medium tanks appear as green or red diamonds with a forward-slash on the mini-map and over target marker.+
  
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Revision as of 17:46, 21 January 2015

Medium_S.png

Medium tanks are multi-purpose tanks with balanced characteristics that can assume many different roles. They are represented by a two-piece green or red diamond on the mini-map and over target marker.

How a medium tank performs varies greatly from tank to tank, but in terms of size, firepower, maneuverability, and protection medium tanks generally fall between the larger, burlier heavy tanks and the smaller, nimbler light tanks. Medium tanks take many characteristics from both, albeit to lesser extremes. They tend to be fairly maneuverable which allows them to take position and quickly relocate in ways heavy tanks and slow tank destroyers can't. Medium tank guns are usually more potent than those on light tanks but usually come up short of heavy tank guns. Despite this, most medium tanks have the firepower necessary to reliably do damage to enemy heavy tanks of their tier. Medium tanks also have moderate amounts of armor - enough to protect them from weaker guns and poorly aimed shots, but not enough to allow them to engage most tanks in drawn out, head-to-head brawls.

Since medium tanks are multi-role vehicles, exactly how they're played depends on the situation. In most cases, medium tanks are most effective supporting friendly heavy tanks or other higher tier mediums. When using their speed to engage in flanking maneuvers, medium tanks can put effective fire into larger enemy tanks without putting themselves at risk. A well coordinated pair or group of medium tanks working in tandem can easily take down much larger enemies while taking little to no damage themselves. Medium tanks can also take on the roles of other more specialized tanks that are either critically damaged or already destroyed. Depending on the characteristics of the specific tank being used, a medium tank can use its limited armor and remaining hitpoints to brawl for a short amount of time, its speed to scout enemy tanks, or its firepower to give supporting fire.

While most medium tanks share the same well-rounded, multi-use performance, some are more specialized than others. Tanks such as the Matilda and Sherman Jumbo are medium tanks only by definition, and effectively play like heavy tanks at their tiers. Others, such as the Panther and Leopard are superb in the sniping role, but are poorly protected from enemy fire themselves. In addition, some tanks such as the M7 and A-43 sacrifice armor and firepower for great speed and gun handling, and therefore behave more like large light tanks.

Medium Tanks/Data

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