Germany : Différence entre versions
Version du 11 juillet 2014 à 18:28 General Revision | Version du 14 juillet 2014 à 09:21 | |||
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? | German tanks have moderately thick armor but are relatively slow and immobile. They have a lot in common with the British. They have high health pools and accurate guns with low alpha-damage but high DPM. Compared to the British, however, their guns trade DPM for penetration. Despite their high health pools, they are prone to module damage and loss of crew due to the small fighting compartments. German tanks are especially notorious for | + | German tanks have moderately thick armor but are relatively slow and immobile. They have a lot in common with the British. They have high health pools and accurate guns with low alpha-damage but high DPM. Compared to the British, however, their guns trade DPM for penetration. Despite their high health pools, they are prone to module damage and loss of crew due to the small fighting compartments. German tanks are especially notorious for their tendency to catch fire when shot at from the front, as their transmissions are located further forward than the tanks of other nations. | |
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German [[Heavy Tanks|heavy tanks]] have thick all around armor, but share a common weakness in a weaker lower glacis plate, allowing even low tier guns to penetrate their otherwise sturdy frontal armor. But this is paid back with good penetration. These tanks are used to absorb damage for the team, while slowly crawling towards the enemy base. They tend to rely on armor angling to absorb hits, especially at mid-tier where their armor tends to be boxy. There are two lines: the Porsche (Maus) and Henschel (E-100) lines, they are both fairly similar in playstyle as counter-offensive heavies, although the Henschel heavies are more versatile and make good spearhead tanks at higher tiers. Both lines end at the largest and heaviest tanks in the game, with the E-100 weighing 130 tonnes and the Maus weighing a whopping 188 tonnes. | German [[Heavy Tanks|heavy tanks]] have thick all around armor, but share a common weakness in a weaker lower glacis plate, allowing even low tier guns to penetrate their otherwise sturdy frontal armor. But this is paid back with good penetration. These tanks are used to absorb damage for the team, while slowly crawling towards the enemy base. They tend to rely on armor angling to absorb hits, especially at mid-tier where their armor tends to be boxy. There are two lines: the Porsche (Maus) and Henschel (E-100) lines, they are both fairly similar in playstyle as counter-offensive heavies, although the Henschel heavies are more versatile and make good spearhead tanks at higher tiers. Both lines end at the largest and heaviest tanks in the game, with the E-100 weighing 130 tonnes and the Maus weighing a whopping 188 tonnes. | |||
? | German [[Tank Destroyers|tank destroyers]] are large and thus hard to hide, but have powerful guns with excellent accuracy, allowing them to destroy higher-tier tanks from across the battlefield. There are two tank destroyer lines emerging from the tier III Marder II. The first is the Production/E-Series line, which starts out similar to the standard Russian TD line, with mobile, well-armed units that have good camo values but lose their mobility and camo at higher tiers as they become bigger and better-armored. The second line is the Waffentrager or Glass Cannon line, with units that have very powerful guns and good camo values but paper-thin armor and mediocre mobility, ending | + | German [[Tank Destroyers|tank destroyers]] are large and thus hard to hide, but have powerful guns with excellent accuracy, allowing them to destroy higher-tier tanks from across the battlefield. There are two tank destroyer lines emerging from the tier III Marder II. The first is the Production/E-Series line, which starts out similar to the standard Russian TD line, with mobile, well-armed units that have good camo values but lose their mobility and camo at higher tiers as they become bigger and better-armored. The second line is the Waffentrager or 'Glass Cannon' line, with units that have very powerful guns and good camo values but paper-thin armor and mediocre mobility, ending with the Waffentrager E-100, which gets a 6-shot autoloader and the same gun selection as the E-100. | |
? | German [[Self-Propelled Guns|self propelled guns]] are accurate and quite maneuverable, allowing them to quickly change position after firing to | + | German [[Self-Propelled Guns|self propelled guns]] are accurate and quite maneuverable, allowing them to quickly change position after firing to evade any counter-fire lobbed in their direction. They may not have as much firepower as their counterparts, but are unmatched in their accuracy. However, the German SPGs generally have very narrow gun arcs, resulting in the need to turn the hull of the tank frequently and causing the accuracy to decline sharply. It's best to keep them at long ranges where their accuracy really stands out and their narrow gun arcs are less of a problem. The T8 T9 and T10 SPGs, are however, less like their lower tiered brethren: They are large, slow to turn, and decidedly middle of the road in terms of their guns unlike the SPGs before them. Less accurate but more powerful than the French and Russians, and faster firing but not as powerful as the Americans or British. | |
Version du 14 juillet 2014 à 09:21
German tanks have moderately thick armor but are relatively slow and immobile. They have a lot in common with the British. They have high health pools and accurate guns with low alpha-damage but high DPM. Compared to the British, however, their guns trade DPM for penetration. Despite their high health pools, they are prone to module damage and loss of crew due to the small fighting compartments. German tanks are especially notorious for their tendency to catch fire when shot at from the front, as their transmissions are located further forward than the tanks of other nations.
German light tanks are just below the USSR in terms of maneuverability, but they have well armored fronts and are able to bounce shots to their sloped fronts if angled correctly. Low tier light tanks arm powerful autocannons that have fast reload while high tier light tanks can arm powerful derp guns (large howitzers with high alpha-damage but otherwise poor stats).
German medium tanks tend to be larger targets than their counterparts, but if you keep this in mind and stay at a distance, the German guns will make short work of your enemies. There are two lines: the The Production/E-Series line, which consists of counter-assault sniping units with well-armored fronts, and the Daimler-Benz line, which consists of more mobile but poorly-armored support-sniper units that are also capable flankers. The lower tiers up to tier VI tend to be more agile with less firepower while the higher tiers tend to have more armor and firepower while sacrificing agility.
German heavy tanks have thick all around armor, but share a common weakness in a weaker lower glacis plate, allowing even low tier guns to penetrate their otherwise sturdy frontal armor. But this is paid back with good penetration. These tanks are used to absorb damage for the team, while slowly crawling towards the enemy base. They tend to rely on armor angling to absorb hits, especially at mid-tier where their armor tends to be boxy. There are two lines: the Porsche (Maus) and Henschel (E-100) lines, they are both fairly similar in playstyle as counter-offensive heavies, although the Henschel heavies are more versatile and make good spearhead tanks at higher tiers. Both lines end at the largest and heaviest tanks in the game, with the E-100 weighing 130 tonnes and the Maus weighing a whopping 188 tonnes.
German tank destroyers are large and thus hard to hide, but have powerful guns with excellent accuracy, allowing them to destroy higher-tier tanks from across the battlefield. There are two tank destroyer lines emerging from the tier III Marder II. The first is the Production/E-Series line, which starts out similar to the standard Russian TD line, with mobile, well-armed units that have good camo values but lose their mobility and camo at higher tiers as they become bigger and better-armored. The second line is the Waffentrager or 'Glass Cannon' line, with units that have very powerful guns and good camo values but paper-thin armor and mediocre mobility, ending with the Waffentrager E-100, which gets a 6-shot autoloader and the same gun selection as the E-100.
German self propelled guns are accurate and quite maneuverable, allowing them to quickly change position after firing to evade any counter-fire lobbed in their direction. They may not have as much firepower as their counterparts, but are unmatched in their accuracy. However, the German SPGs generally have very narrow gun arcs, resulting in the need to turn the hull of the tank frequently and causing the accuracy to decline sharply. It's best to keep them at long ranges where their accuracy really stands out and their narrow gun arcs are less of a problem. The T8 T9 and T10 SPGs, are however, less like their lower tiered brethren: They are large, slow to turn, and decidedly middle of the road in terms of their guns unlike the SPGs before them. Less accurate but more powerful than the French and Russians, and faster firing but not as powerful as the Americans or British.
Light Tanks
Leichttraktor
Pz.Kpfw. II Ausf. D
MKA
Pz.Kpfw. 35 R
Pz.Kpfw. 38H 735 (f)
Pz.Kpfw. 35 (t)
Pz.Kpfw. I
Pz.Kpfw. II
43 M. Toldi III
Pz.Kpfw. M 15
Pz.Kpfw. 38 (t)
Pz.Kpfw. III Ausf. E
Pz.Kpfw. II Ausf. J
Pz.Kpfw. I Ausf. C
Pz.Kpfw. II Ausf. G
Pz.Kpfw. T 15
Pz.Kpfw. 38 (t) n.A.
Pz.Kpfw. II Luchs
VK 16.02 Leopard
VK 28.01 mit 10,5 cm L/28
VK 28.01
Aufklärungspanzer Panther
Spähpanzer SP I C
leKpz M 41 90 mm
leKpz M 41 90 mm GF
HWK 12
HWK 30
Spähpanzer Ru 251
Rheinmetall Panzerwagen
Medium Tanks
Großtraktor - Krupp
Pz.Kpfw. IV Ausf. A
Pz.Kpfw. S35 739 (f)
Pz.Kpfw. III Ausf. J
Pz.Kpfw. IV Ausf. D
VK 20.01 (D)
Pz.Kpfw. III Ausf. K
Turán III prototípus
Pz.Kpfw. IV Ausf. H Ankou
Pz.Kpfw. III/IV
Pz.Kpfw. IV hydrostat.
Pz.Kpfw. V/IV
Pz.Kpfw. V/IV Alpha
Pz.Kpfw. IV Ausf. H
Pz.Kpfw. T 25
VK 30.01 (H)
Pz.Kpfw. IV Schmalturm
VK 30.01 (D)
VK 30.02 (M)
Panther/M10
Panther
VK 30.02 (D)
Panther mit 8,8 cm L/71
Panzer 58
Schwarzpanzer 58
Panzer 58 Mutz
M48A2 Räumpanzer
Kampfpanzer 07 RH
Indien-Panzer
Panther II
E 50
T 55A
Kampfpanzer 50 t
Kunze Panzer
Leopard Prototyp A
E 50 Ausf. M
Leopard 1
Heavy Tanks
Tank Destroyers
Panzerjäger I
Marder II
StuG III Ausf. B
Pz.Sfl. IC
Jagdpanzer 38(t) Hetzer
Marder 38T
StuG IV
Pz.Sfl. IVc
StuG III Ausf. G
Dicker Max
Jagdpanzer IV
Nashorn
E 25
Krupp-Steyr Waffenträger
Jagdpanther
Sturer Emil
Ferdinand
Kanonenjagdpanzer 105
Rheinmetall Skorpion G
Rheinmetall Skorpion
Jagdpanther II
8,8 cm Pak 43 Jagdtiger
Rhm.-Borsig Waffenträger
Jagdtiger
Waffenträger auf Pz. IV
Grille 15
Jagdpanzer E 100
Waffenträger auf E 100