Tank Battles is an accessible and cheap arcade title, but the lack of player progression means it gets stale quickly.

User Rating: 6 | Tank Battles PS3
Tank Battles (or Battle Tanks, in North America) is a bit like bulk buy of the Playstation Store – while not focusing on an intricate experience, it's a cheap and cheerful title that gives you enough value for money. In a nutshell, players control a tank each -- the left stick to steer the tank, the right for aiming the turret – and must annihilate each other using mines and good old fashioned shooting, picking up a variety of basic power-ups on the way like invincibility and homing missiles. Kills are one-shot and your own bullets can kill you, so keeping on the move and quick reactions are essential. Bullets can be bounced off walls and pressing L1 brings up a line to predict your angle. If you have ever played the 'Tanks!' mini-game on Wii Play, you'll be instantly familiar. The idea is overly simple but this means that anyone can jump in and have a good time right away. A nice touch is that when a player loses all their lives they are transformed into a stationary flamethrower or rocket launcher turret. Once killed again, they're out of the game for good, but it's a fresh way of giving downed players another hand in how the match plays out.

The main course of the game is that 1-4 players can battle it out online in deathmatch, team deathmatch and capture the flag modes, but the number of other users is a bit pitiful as finding 3 other players takes an age. There's also a single player campaign mode where you take on AI tanks and completing these missions awards you skins for your tank, though they make no impact. This can also be tackled in local co-op with a friend, a good idea since the later levels can be very tricky. For a price of £5.49, the offering of 50 single and multiplayer maps is quite astounding. Some are too similar to be interesting, but some do throw obstacles such as conveyor belts sliding gates and even portals into the mix, just to make things more hectic.

Graphics-wise, Tank Battles is nothing special. Maps and the tanks themselves are quite small which means any skin you have equipped can't be seen that well anyway, the visuals look a bit squished even on an HD TV and it's sometimes hard to tell what you can and can't drive over. With so many bullets flying about at once, it's hard to keep track of them (and your own) and shots can often feel cheap. Surviving becomes more of a case of luck, and so the game is more frustrating than it should be.

Disappointingly, none of your statistics are recorded. This is no major tragedy what with the pick-up-and play nature of Tank Battles, but a rank system would have been a nice touch, and you'll never know how close you are to achieving certain trophy-awarded feats, such as winning 99 online matches.

Overall, Tank Battles is a good example of a short-term arcade multiplayer which is best enjoyed with a few friends over at your house for a laugh. While it's not meant to be taken too seriously, the lack of any form of player development means that the game gets very stale over time. Still, it's an accessible, no-frills title and is recommended for the casual gamer.


- By Hayley Woollard.