

Essentially this works like an industrial-strength grapple that can be used, for example, to tow fast-moving enemy vehicles in closer for the kill-straight into its "meat grinder" chain-treads, which can carve through metal much like their namesake.įor all the fervor, fear, and excitement caused by the apocalypse tank, it is to be expected that the design would draw some disdain. To further offset the tank's relatively slow speed is a now-standard magnetic harpoon secondary weapon, one of the first practical military tools based on the Union's continuing research into magnetism. The apocalypse is such a massive vehicle that ATP engineers installed a second set of cutting treads into its massive hull, enabling it to simply roll over just about anything that survives long enough to get in its way.

The apocalypse tank design underwent several iterations before manufacturer Arkhangelsk Tank Plant settled on the most fearsome, awe-inspiring version in use today. While the apocalypse tank is very expensive to produce for all its Soviet excesses, it is virtually unstoppable on the ground. However, the corporation responsible for the apocalypse tank, Arkhangelsk Tank Plant (ATP), boldly promised the Soviet regime that the apocalypse would revolutionize modern vehicle warfare by trivializing other, lesser tanks. Such mainstream success is impossible to anticipate completely. The apocalypse tank even became popularized in a morning cartoon show and toy line ("They Are Not Allies"), at which point it truly became an icon not in the Soviet Union's military arsenal, and all over the world. The schoolmasters held fast, claiming that the name betrayed evidence of the Union's dissolution into an agenda of mutually-assured destruction with the Allies. While a cadre of schoolmasters denounced the naming of the vehicle as an act of fear-mongering, the Soviet government quickly quelled these concerns by insisting that the name was intended to give hope to the people-here is a tank that can withstand anything, they proudly said. On the whole, the Soviet Union is extremely proud of the apocalypse, which is widely featured in military multimedia propaganda, military recruitment mailings, motivational posters found in businesses and classrooms, and more. The apocalypse tank is the biggest, most powerful ground vehicle ever constructed, and simply cannot be stopped by anything remotely similar.
