As the war dragged on, Soviet generals found themselves in an increasingly dire situation. American commitment to the Allied cause resulted in a huge deployment of Allied ground forces, negating the Soviets' significant armor and defensive advantages. The catastrophic failure of the Super tank project also contributed to the Soviets losing faith in the armour technology that once formed the backbone of their armies. Soviet strategists also noted that, while brimming with specialist skills, the Allied infantry ranks were somewhat lacking in anti-infantry capability. As a result, all the remaining resources left over from the super tank project were quickly diverted to a new project designed to force the Allies to turn to an infantry vs. infantry engagement. The end result was the MAD Tank.
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rdfs:comment
| - As the war dragged on, Soviet generals found themselves in an increasingly dire situation. American commitment to the Allied cause resulted in a huge deployment of Allied ground forces, negating the Soviets' significant armor and defensive advantages. The catastrophic failure of the Super tank project also contributed to the Soviets losing faith in the armour technology that once formed the backbone of their armies. Soviet strategists also noted that, while brimming with specialist skills, the Allied infantry ranks were somewhat lacking in anti-infantry capability. As a result, all the remaining resources left over from the super tank project were quickly diverted to a new project designed to force the Allies to turn to an infantry vs. infantry engagement. The end result was the MAD Tank.
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useguns
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usearmor
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dbkwik:cnc/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
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Role
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Name
| - Mutually Assured Destruction Tank
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Ability
| - Cannot detonate while under the effects of the Iron Curtain
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abstract
| - As the war dragged on, Soviet generals found themselves in an increasingly dire situation. American commitment to the Allied cause resulted in a huge deployment of Allied ground forces, negating the Soviets' significant armor and defensive advantages. The catastrophic failure of the Super tank project also contributed to the Soviets losing faith in the armour technology that once formed the backbone of their armies. Soviet strategists also noted that, while brimming with specialist skills, the Allied infantry ranks were somewhat lacking in anti-infantry capability. As a result, all the remaining resources left over from the super tank project were quickly diverted to a new project designed to force the Allies to turn to an infantry vs. infantry engagement. The end result was the MAD Tank. It uses a radial seismic blast to deal significant damage to surrounding structures and vehicles. The powerful seismic waves have a large area of effect, but will indiscriminately damage all nearby targets, regardless of allegiance, thus rendering it virtually useless as a defensive weapon. Infantry, however, are immune to the effects of the weapon and take no damage at all at any range from the blast. The tank begins its attack by starting a large piston mounted on its back that gradually builds speed as the weapon nears detonation. The single crew member bails out and attempts to remove himself from the area. Once the charging sequence is complete, the tank unleashes its powerful seismic waves in all directions, shattering nearby buildings and vehicles and destroying itself in the process; thus the tank is actually a single-shot disposable weapon, albeit on a much larger scale than other such weapons. The MAD tank apparently died with the Soviet Union as it was not seen again after the war.
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