-Press space to fire the main gun. The gun reloads every 7 seconds. -Because the coaxial MG-34 and the 7.5cm gun on the tank's mantlet is covered by the 12.8cm gun barrel from the view from the left side, both of them are not featured in this project. Sorry to any inconvenience. That's all really :/
Please note that the Nazi Iron Cross is painted on almost all WW2 German tanks (I don't know if its allowed or not but if you don't like it please tell me in the comments and I will remove it) and the MG-34 machine gun is on the other side and covered by the gun barrel, so it's not shown. I created this project myself. Everything is 100% by me. The sounds are found on an online sound source (I forgot the name of it). If you used any of my art, you should give credit. It took me a long time to create each tank. History: The Panzerkampfwagen (PzKfw) VIII "Maus" was an German super heavy tank, designed in April 1944 by Porsche. The Maus was the Wehrmacht (The German Army name in WWII) superweapon on the battlefield, with its 128mm KwK cannon able to knock out most tanks in a single hit, and two MG-34s able to cripple entire infantry assaults. The tank could even survive bombs with its 8-inch frontal armor, and most 75mm AP tank shells from the enemy tanks ricochet off its thick heavy armor. Even the tank's back armor was thicker than the PzKfw VI Tiger I's frontal armor. The tank was extremely heavy, weighing about 188 to 200 tons, and will definitely break any bridge it drives across because of its weight, but the tank was so big it could drive through shallow rivers without too much of a problem. Six tank crew (commander, gunner, two loaders, driver, and radio operator) operate one Maus tank. The tank was really slow as it could only drive up to 11-12 mph (18-20 km/h). Why was the tank never built? Luckily, the tank was never mass-produced, otherwise the war would have shifted in Germany's favor and the Soviet Red Army would never be able to reach and capture Berlin. Even if it was to be mass-produced, only a maximum of five Maus tanks could be produced per month due to the amount of resources, manpower, and time needed for each tank. Allied bombing raids from 1943-44 on tank factories disrupted Germany's war effort and destroyed supplies and resources needed for the tanks. However, the tanks entered prototype stage, and two prototype models, V1 and V2, were built. V1 had a chassis and a dummy turret, while V2 had both the chassis and a turret with a functional working 128mm cannon. Hitler wanted the gun barrel to be 152mm, but it was too big for the tank and the 128mm cannon fitted easier. V2 was destroyed by the Germans as the Soviet army approached the factory grounds because they didn't want the tank to fall into the wrong hands and used against their German army. And when the Red Army studied the remains of V2's chassis, they mounted V2's turret on the V1 chassis. The tank was painted back its original German army camouflage colors, restored, and could be viewed today in the Kubinka Tank Museum in Russia.