: This is a key defensive "art" where you reverse your tank against a building or obstacle at an angle. By showing only your highly-angled side armor and hiding your front hull, you bait enemies into firing shots that will likely ricochet.
In the next major armored engagement, do not watch the tanks charging the hill. Watch the ones reversing off it. Those are the hunters. The rest are just moving cover. knockout classified the reverse art of tank warfare updated
The reverse art of tank warfare has been applied in various modern conflicts, including: : This is a key defensive "art" where
And for the first time, the Reverse Art of Tank Warfare was no longer classified. It was written in fire and oil across the Gap, a new rule for a new kind of war: The deadliest direction is the one you aren’t watching. Watch the ones reversing off it
While the Anvil retreats, a networked drone (or an FPV recovery team) identifies the source of the incoming fire—the enemy ATGM team or advancing tank. Data is transmitted via secure datalink to a hidden Hunter-Killer team.
Historically, tank destroyers (like the German Jagdpanther or the American M10) sacrificed a rotating turret for a lower profile and a big gun. The "Reverse Art" uses terrain and velocity instead of a fixed casemate. By updating the reverse art, a standard MBT can mimic the defensive lethality of a tank destroyer without losing its offensive capability.