player missions such as Capture the Flag, Deathmatch, Attack and Defense and Blitzkrieg. The multiplayer side includes both co-operative missions and player vs. These include for example Panzerkampfwagen IV, Königstiger, IS-2, Focke Wulf 190, Stuka and Petlyakov PE-2. Campaigns start with infantry action but later on the player gets to control tanks and planes. On the German side, the mission is to slow down the advance of the Soviet army. The Soviet campaign focuses on breaking through enemy's defenses. The single player campaign can be played from either German or Soviet perspective. Iron Front: Liberation 1944 is set in Southern Poland during Soviet summer offensive.
The game was developed by X1 Software and AWAR on Bohemia Interactive's Real Virtuality engine. It features both German and Soviet single-player campaigns. Occasionally they have to fix the car with their own hands fortunately, they are very good at welding.Iron Front: Liberation 1944 is a tactical shooter video game set in World War II Eastern Front. Vladimir drives an old Soviet Niva four-by-four. When working for the club, they sold a German armored vehicle, an SdKfz 252, to a collector in Britain, and a Soviet heavy tank IS-2 went to a private collection in Latvia. At the time it was built it was the fastest tank. On the wheels it can go 70km/h and on its tracks 55km/h,” says Vladimir. The BT-7 the team helped bring back to life is the only working specimen in the world. The sales permit is only issued if there are more than two examples in the country. Where do these tanks go, after they have been restored? Some of them settle on plinths as monuments (practically every Belarusian town has one), while some become museum exhibits in Belarus or Russia. The KV-1 we have followed in this story was restored to help mark the 75th anniversary of Kolobanov’s battle. In August 1941 the crew of the Soviet tank commander Kolobanov in a KV-1 knocked out 22 German tanks within 30 minutes after setting an ambush near the city of Leningrad. The KV-1 was feared by the Germans because its armour was too thick for their standard shells. He was absolutely right – the BT-7 was discovered 10 metres (33ft) away from the current spring. Vladimir suggested that the tank had been blocking the spring and the water had found a new route. Older locals said the vehicle had sunk into soft ground near a spring, but nobody knew the exact location. One day, some people asked him to find and lift up a BT-7 tank, that had been stuck in the marshes since 1942. Some years ago Vladimir Yakushev worked as a collective farm engineer.
The world’s biggest plane may have a new mission.The pilot who stole a secret Soviet jet.The family, the Yakushevs are the most famous “tank-hunters” in Belarus. With photographer Anton Skyba, I was able to witness one heavy Soviet tank, a KV-1, being restored after its recovery – and its participation in a re-enactment of a World War Two battle. One Belarusian family has been looking for tanks littered all over the country’s vast marshes and restoring them. Now, more than 75 years after the fighting, both Soviet and German tanks are being lifted from the marshes in Belarus.
Huge battles were fought, leaving the land strewn with dead bodies and ruined machines. German tanks roared across the Soviet border giving the enemy no time to recover.Īs the Soviets reeled under the surprise attack, the most powerful German formations swept through what is now Belarus. When the German army attacked the Soviet Union in the summer of 1941, tanks were a crucial factor in their initial success. What you won’t find is any reference to, well, you-know-what. You’ll find everything from the story about the world’s greatest space mission to the truth about whether our cats really love us, the epic hunt to bring illegal fishermen to justice and the small team which brings long-buried World War Two tanks back to life. We’ll be revisiting our most popular features from the last three years in our Lockdown Longreads.
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