![]() ![]() This is not only a good amount of tanks, but if you’re historically-minded (and why wouldn’t you be? you’re here!) it’s two “proper” Soviet tank platoons comprising of a command tank and two others. You get six T-34s in a pack, enough to fulfill all your tiny tank needs for most games systems (and then some) if you’re playing at reduced scale 28mm-designed games. As a result, here they come, T34/76 and T34/85s in 12mm scale to match their excellent Infantry. ![]() Whether the greatest tank or not, it was ubiqutious in one form or another so if you’re playing WW2 Soviets, you need some of these. Upgunned to the T34-85 in 1944, it fought (nearly) everywhere the Red Army did during WW2, faced everything the Nazis could throw at it, and, through armour, doctrine and gun, mostly came out on top. By the end of the war neither the best armoured or the best gunned, but reliable, ubiquitous, manufactured in numbers that baffle the mind and, when it was introduced, a terrifying combat opponent. Whenever this discussion comes up, the T34 must as well. There’s a lot of discussion about what the greatest tank of the Second World War was, to the extent that if you’re reading this you definitely have an opinion. ![]() Last week I reviewed the Victrix 12mm/1:144 Soviet Infantry, and this week it’s the turn of the stalwart workhorse of the Red Army – the T34.īefore diving in, we’d like to thank Victrix for sending these over for review. ![]()
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