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It acts as a nice back drop as you look through parts on the computer, as you search for the tool you just dropped into the pit beneath the tank, or as you sit back and admire a job well done. While working in the shop you will be soothed by the radio playing classic rock tunes without any vocals. It is more of a matter of broader strokes to accomplish a build. For example, you will not be ordering a gross of a specific size of nut or bolt just to reassemble a tank you have recovered from the field. The parts lists for the tanks represented in the game are fairly extensive, but do not go into exhaustive detail. The ground cover, foliage, and water effects are fairly rough.Įach individual tank presented here however is lovingly recreated and true to reality, showing individual parts and allowing the player to interact with most of them. The field trips you take show the primary focus being on the mechanic side of the game. The visuals are fairly good for the tanks and the shop itself. In addition, you occasionally go out into the field for the recovery of old tanks utilizing metal detectors, ground penetrating radar, and even drones. You start off replacing some small peripheral parts and cleaning tanks, but eventually start replacing whole assemblies themselves. You are new, so the first jobs you take on are small and not particularly challenging, befitting a new shop owner. You play the recent inheritor of a tank mechanic shop and museum, and are starting out to make a name for yourself. ![]() ![]() RELEASE OF TANK MECHANIC SIMULATOR SIMULATORTank Mechanic Simulator lets you get up close and virtually personal with all the war machines you’ve read about in your World War II history books. In a sense, this follows on the Plane Mechanic Simulator game published by PlayWay, which let you fix up historical aircraft. Only instead of cars and trucks, this time you are working on tanks, many of which have not been driven, or even freed from a prison of mud, for over 60 years. RELEASE OF TANK MECHANIC SIMULATOR SERIESTank Mechanic Simulator is available on Xbox One and Xbox Series S/X right now.Tank Mechanic Simulator is part of the popular mechanic simulation series. Sadly, you don’t have the option to drive it down the shops but turning a hunk of rust into a working tank is still an impressive accomplishment. It features a meticulous level of detail, letting you mess with all the different components of a tank, then giving it a test-drive before putting it in museum or selling it on. also have a history of releasing pre-rendered trailers well before a game itself is ready, to the point where we’re left wondering if the game will ever actually see the light of the day.īut, while they might have jumped the gun on some games, Tank Mechanic Simulator looks rather fun. We’re also not surprised to discover it’s being published by Playway S.A., who have a wealth of niche simulator games in their catalogue. RELEASE OF TANK MECHANIC SIMULATOR PCBut Tank Mechanic Simulator addresses the very real interest in World War II machines of war and, having been well received on the PC and so it’s not surprising it’s found its way to a new audience. Fancy fixing up old tanks? Then Tank Mechanic Simulator could be right up your street.įifteen years years ago, if you told us that Tank Mechanic Simulator was a real game and that it had arrived on the Xbox, we’ve have checked to make sure it wasn’t April 1st. ![]()
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