Skylarr, on 19 August 2012 - 08:33 AM, said:
I copied and pasted the info from wiki. I did not realize at the time it said the germans used them. They were only on the drawing board.
They didn't use them and my quote was tongue-in-cheek, sorry if it wasn't clear. The quote I made refers to the smaller one, 188-ton Maus, of which there was only one complete.
The reason for that is that a heavy tank is good, but after reaching a certain weight, a tank becomes just a pile of fail and dead weight, huge bullseye that can be immobilized by a minor failure. It's same as how you'd want your heavyweight wrestler to weigh around 100 kg, 150 is pushing it and the guy had better be tall, but 200+ kg would likely mean that a person is more sick than strong. Run around him for a while, he'll gas and fall over by himself.
The German engineers simply realized how fail the design was and scrapped it at the 188 ton mark, never getting around to building 1500 ton ones. It's the same deal with superheavy mechs... it has 3 gauss rifles, big whoop. So do three Hollanders, and they're fast enough
not to be instantly obliterated by any piece of artillery within a 50 mile radius.
I don't like the protos and LAMs because I believe them to be conceptually
stupid, and wouldn't mind them to be redacted to kingdom come. Super-heavy mechs, on the other hand, I believe stupid in-universe. I don't mind them that much - that problem fixes itself. Can't move, can't turn, has a firepower of half-a-heavy-lance. It's going 21 kph, you can outrun it on a bicycle. Beating this is just the matter of time and a bit of patience.
Edited by Alex Wolfe, 19 August 2012 - 09:34 AM.