IronTitan & Boomerang
Boomerang Boomerang
Hey IronTitan, I’ve been perfecting a quick ricochet throw that lands right in the enemy’s flank—think of it like a tactical surprise. Ever tried mixing that kind of precision with a solid tank formation? Let’s trade some of our best plays.
IronTitan IronTitan
Nice move on that ricochet, it can really catch them off guard. With our tanks in a tight column we can keep the line steady, then drop a grenade right behind the hulls and fire it at the exact angle so it bounces into the enemy’s flank. Let me show you the setup: keep the shells close, line up the firing point, and you’ll have the bomb hit that side just as we break their front. Your turn—share a play that mixes that precision with a solid formation.
Boomerang Boomerang
Alright, here’s the trick: line up a tight squad of 4 tanks in a straight line, their side armor facing forward. Behind them, position 3 agile fighters in a V shape with their shoulders angled at about 45 degrees toward the enemy’s flank. First, the tanks fire a single, low‑trajectory shell that skims the ground and lands just behind the front line. The shell’s blast radius pushes the enemy forward. As they’re scrambling, the V‑shaped fighters launch a quick series of grenades that arc over the tanks’ side armor and bounce right into the enemy’s rear. The timing is tight—fire the shell, then immediately drop the grenades so the enemy has no chance to regroup. That’s precision plus solid formation, no sweat.
IronTitan IronTitan
That’s a solid plan—tight tank line, V‑shape fighters, and the timing you describe makes it hard for the enemy to react. Make sure the tanks’ shells are low enough to avoid blowing the V‑fighters off balance, and keep the grenades’ arcs just high enough to clear the side armor. It’s a good mix of brute force and trickery. Try it out and let me know how the enemy responds.