Tank Fighter 2

Tank Fighter 2 is a free-to-play, browser-based strategy title built around tank battles where PvP is the main attraction, supported by base management and a surprisingly deep layer of loadout tweaking. You build up a headquarters, research gear, and then roll out in a personalized tank alongside recruitable units, aiming to outplay other commanders across several match types.

Publisher: Sunset Games
Playerbase: Medium
Type: Browser-Based Strategy
Release Date: November 18, 2016
Pros: +Low barrier to entry with a lightweight Flash client. +Good selection of tanks, weapons, and support units. +Several modes that encourage different strategies.
Cons: -Visuals feel dated and fairly plain. -Monetization can tilt competition. -Progression and fights can feel sluggish.

Tank Fighter 2

Overview

Tank Fighter 2 Overview

Tank Fighter 2 is a free-to-play strategy tank combat game playable through Facebook, designed around Flash Player so it can run directly in a browser. The core loop alternates between developing your headquarters and taking that investment into combat, where you pilot a tank in real time while also coordinating additional units.

On the management side, you expand and upgrade buildings to improve resource income and unlock more options for production and research. That progression feeds into your battlefield tools, letting you access new tanks, improve existing chassis, and open up additional technologies that shape how you fight.

In matches, movement is handled with WASD controls, while aiming and firing is done with the mouse, giving it an arcade feel despite the strategy framework behind it. Loadouts are a big part of the identity here, with equipment that ranges from straightforward ballistic upgrades to more specialized choices like miniguns, flamethrowers, and homing missiles. You can take your build into both PvE and PvP encounters across modes such as duels, base attacks, survival, and team-focused battles including four-player team deathmatch.

Beyond your personal tank, you also recruit and field supporting forces. These unlockable units include infantry, ground vehicles, and even aircraft like fighter jets, all of which can be directed to pressure opponents, cover angles, or help crack defenses. The end result is a game that tries to blend hands-on driving with broader tactical planning, especially once players start counter-building against common threats.

Tank Fighter 2 Key Features:

  • Pilot Tanks with Direct Controls – drive into combat using WASD movement and mouse aiming, then combine weapon fire with squad commands to control the pace of a fight.
  • Headquarters Progression and Defense – grow your base through upgrades and customization, turning it into a stronger resource engine that unlocks more technology, tanks, and production options.
  • Build a Mixed Army – unlock and recruit multiple unit types, from infantry and light vehicles to air support, and use them to complement your tank build and battlefield plan.
  • Several Ways to Fight – switch between modes like base attacks, duels, deathmatch variations, and survival, each pushing different equipment choices and team roles.
  • Wide Equipment and Vehicle Choices – research and buy tanks and units with distinct strengths, then combine gear and squad composition to respond to what opponents bring.

Tank Fighter 2 Screenshots

Tank Fighter 2 Featured Video

Tank Fighter - Drive The Tank. Command Your Army. Lead The Path To Victory!

Full Review

Tank Fighter 2 Review

Tank Fighter 2 aims for a hybrid that is not especially common in browser games: a base-building meta layer that meaningfully affects a more action-oriented, top-down tank shooter. When it works, the game delivers satisfying moments where a well-prepared loadout and a smart unit call decide the engagement. When it does not, the limitations of its pace, visuals, and monetization become harder to ignore.

Combat feel and controls

The moment-to-moment driving is straightforward and easy to grasp. WASD movement combined with mouse aiming makes it feel closer to an arena shooter than a traditional turn-based strategy game. Firing and positioning are readable, and the game’s emphasis on targeted weapon attacks helps battles feel intentional rather than purely chaotic.

The drawback is that combat can feel a bit slow, particularly when you are still building up your tech and are limited to less exciting equipment. Matches can also hinge heavily on raw stats once players are unevenly geared, which reduces the impact of mechanical skill in some situations.

Customization and progression

Customization is the strongest long-term hook. Tanks and weapons provide meaningful differences in how you approach fights, and the ability to tailor armor, firepower, and tech gives players room to specialize. The presence of varied weapon types (including options like flamethrowers and homing missiles) encourages experimentation, especially when you are trying to counter a common setup in PvP.

The base-building layer supports that experimentation by making upgrades feel like more than cosmetics. Buildings and research are essentially the pipeline that determines what you can field and how quickly you can improve it. That said, the overall progression can be grindy, and it is not hard to see how spending can accelerate what would otherwise be a longer climb.

Units and tactical depth

Adding infantry, vehicles, and air units gives Tank Fighter 2 a wider tactical ceiling than many small-scale tank arena games. Support units can create pressure while you reposition, help you finish targets, or contribute to base attack scenarios where the battlefield is not just a flat arena.

The AI and command layer are fairly simple, so it is not a full RTS experience. Still, choosing which units to bring and when to deploy them can swing fights, particularly in team modes where coordinated pressure matters.

Modes and replay value

The mode selection is a clear plus. Dueling and deathmatch variants suit players who want quick PvP, while survival and base attacks give a different rhythm and incentive to think about durability, attrition, and composition. Four-player team deathmatch also changes how you evaluate equipment, since survivability and utility can matter as much as burst damage.

Presentation and monetization

Visually, the game is functional but unremarkable, with graphics that feel dated. It is readable enough for competitive play, but it does not deliver much spectacle.

The bigger issue is balance pressure from pay-to-win elements. Even if smart play can overcome disadvantages at times, the game can create situations where gear gaps are too influential, especially in PvP. Players looking for a purely skill-first competitive environment may find that frustrating.

Who is it for?

Tank Fighter 2 is best suited to players who enjoy browser-based PvP with progression and customization, and who do not mind slower advancement or a monetization model that can speed things up. If you want a lightweight tank battler with base growth on the side, it offers a distinct blend, even if it comes with trade-offs.

Links

Tank Fighter 2 Online Links

Tank Fighter 2 Official Website
Tank Fighter 2 Facebook

System Requirements

Tank Fighter 2 System Requirements

Minimum Requirements:

Operating System: Windows XP / Mac OSX 10.6 / Ubuntu 14.04 or better
CPU: Intel i3 or AMD Phenom/Athlon II or better
RAM: 1GB
Flash Version: 11.1 or higher

Because Tank Fighter 2 runs in the browser as a Flash-based MMO, it is not demanding for most systems. It was tested successfully on Internet Explorer, Opera, Firefox, and Chrome, and it should perform fine on any current, standards-compliant web browser.

Music

Tank Fighter 2 Music & Soundtrack

The soundtrack and sound design are serviceable and primarily geared toward clarity, with effects that help communicate weapon types and impacts during fights. Music is generally kept in the background, acting more as atmosphere than a standout feature, which fits the game’s focus on PvP awareness and match flow.

Additional Info

Tank Fighter 2 Additional Information

Developer: Sunset Games
Publisher: Sunset Games

Release Date: November 18, 2016

Development History / Background:

Tank Fighter 2 was both developed and published by Sunset Games, a Facebook-focused studio also associated with the original Tank Fighter and Lily & Brix: Time Adventure. The first Tank Fighter arrived on Facebook in 2012, and the sequel followed four years later with a release on November 18, 2016. Compared to the original, the follow-up introduced a refreshed design, improved performance, additional tanks and weapons, tank storage, built-in chat, and new multiplayer options such as four-player team deathmatch, alongside other quality-of-life additions.