At Kursk, the powerful German 88mm gun coupled with the heavy armor of the Ferdinand, punched right through the Soviet tanks, and right into the infantry behind. The main problem was that the Ferdinand lacked a hull mounted machine-gun, and the surviving Ferdinands had to target individual soldiers with their main gun in order to safely withdraw from the assault. The Elephant was the new upgrade that added a gunner and was the difference between the two models. And German troops used to say that the easiest way to take out an Elephant, was for it to tow another Elephant, lol.
That is really hard to imagine going through and also good video by JJ. Who knows what other videos he'll do maybe the B-52 Bomber, M2 Browning Machine Gun, DSHK Machine Gun , MIG Jets and who knows what other topics out there.
Yup. Germans also added better, bigger commander cupola to Elefant, so he had a better orientation and situational awarness, than in Ferdinand. That and MG-34 mounts are two main visual differences between these two, that I have mentioned.
That wasn't the "main" problem. The "main" problem was the Ferdinant/Elefant was using a drivetrain rated for 45 tons, shoehorned into a 55 ton vehicle and then grandfathered into a 65 ton vehicle without any upgrade or modification at all. They were rolling fire hazards. The Ferdinand was a one-off design: there was no logistical or maintenance capability for 65 ton vehicles, and to deal with one required the full effort of an entire recovery company (to the neglect of a dozen other vehicles). When the Germans were still pushing at Kursk that was the kind of luxury the Germans could afford, since they were tough and they could leave M-killed vehicles until dusk then work all night on getting them out. But the moment they fell back on the defensive the vast majority of the Ferdinands ended up being blown to avoid capture. I'm sure they were sick of looking at them by that point anyway.
@@raketny_hvost That is also something to think about when dealing and a disaster situation there and who knows what other topics for JJ to deal with like the DSHK machine gun, M2 Browning and many other topics to deal with.
Clarification since I was confused in this when I first learned about the tank: All of the remaining Ferdinands who received hull machine guns and cupolas were redesigned as Elefants. So that is the difference between the two tanks.
The Germans *really* liked renaming vehicles and other equipment during the war, so they probably had at least a dozen different names in official documents.
That is only partially correct. The name change was not made to denote the modifications (mg, cupola, ...). It happened independently although at roughly the same time.
Damn for that range, It's frightening seeing your comrade in a tank row just instantly erupts it's turret and burst in flames. That element of fearing the unknown comes to place
Only two of these vehicles survived the war. One Ferdinand was captured by Soviet forces at Kursk, and it was sent to NII BT testing facility in Kubinka, Moscow for testing. It was on display at the Kubinka Tank Museum outside Moscow. Its gun mantlet was painted red. Its chassis number was unknown, either No. 150090 or No. 501. An Elefant, numbered "102" of sPz. Jgr. Abt 653, was captured at Anzio by the Americans, and is now part of the United States Army Ordnance Training Support Facility's collection at Fort Gregg-Adams, VA. The example at Fort Lee was restored to display condition in 2007-2008,[14] as documented on the show Tank Overhaul, but not in its original paint scheme.[15] The Fort Lee Elefant was loaned to the Bovington Tank Museum in Dorset, UK as part of the museum's "Tiger Collection" display from April 2017 until January 2019, and later returned to the United States. This display brought all the members of the Tiger family together in one place for the first time (the Sturmtiger was represented by its gun).
Hope all you guys are doing well tonight. Anyway The jadgpanther is so gorgeous (as far as tank destroying vehicles go) that I have both versions. I have the normal Ferdinand and sadly i dont have the Elefant despite elephants being my favourite land animal. Thank goodness for tank games getting me so interested in armoured warfare.
Yes and also I know there are many topics out there and also speaking of tanks may want to do videos of the Russian Soviet T-54/55 tanks if you're thinking about that subject in the future.
Thank you JJ and also other topics I mentioned earlier like the MIG Jets, Skycrane helicopter, B-52 bomber, M2 Browning and DSHK Machine Guns and also may do ones on M1 Abrams tanks among who knows what other topics for the channel.
I think we're all forgetting when 7 out of the eight in one region (of Kursk) caught fire within minutes of engaging because of the whole engine issue...
Kursk was the Elefants proving ground as it was rushed into the battle before all testing could be completed. The British had decoded German intelligence regarding the upcoming push into the Kursk salient. They handed this information over to the Soviets. Dates, battle plans, divisions, troop strength, reserves, armor, etc... everything. This gave the Soviets months to prepare anti-tank ditches, zeroed in artillery zones, massed aircraft, tank traps, etc etc. Considering all this... the Elefant (Ferdinand) did very well. Awesome video as usual, Johnny!
Called "Dumbos" in our Axis&Allies house rules because 1 Elefant division costs the same as 2 divisions of StuG III but they look cool on the board and have niche utility.
Great video as always. In regards to the Elefant and Ferdinand though, particularly with the Elefants as they were heavier, the engine being underpowered was perhaps a bigger killer of the tanks than the Red Army itself. Many tanks would have their engines combust under their own weight, especially with the stress of climbing slopes. Comparatively, since these guns were most often used to support other tanks that had machine guns, the lack of an anti-infantry weapon was a less meaningful problem.
@@Dreachon the Ferdinand weighed just over 65 tonnes. The Elefant had wider tracks, a machine gun, and more frontal armour compared to the Ferdinand, increasing its weight marginally but not improving the engine stress issue with improved cooling, etc.
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq One of them makes you want to dive into the nearest hole and curl up in the fetal position with your hands over your head. (The other is the 88.) 😉
Along with most Ferdinands (later called Elefants) being taken out by their own reliability issues, another borderline hilarious thing about those tank destroyers is the story behind why they were using Tiger heavy tank hulls. Porsche's Tiger tank design was competing with another Tiger tank design (the one that eventually got adopted) to get adopted by the German military. Because of Porsche's relations with the Austrian Painter Mustache Man, hulls for the Porsche design were ordered (and made) before a winner was even picked. However, his design was so unreliable that the German military went with the rival Tiger tank design anyway. Instead of melting down the Porsche Tiger hulls, it was decided it would be easier and less wasteful to just reuse them for another vehicle (hence the creation of the Ferdinand tank destroyer).
Not a spectacular tank, but a useful one that proved its worth and to use a chassis Porche made so many of. A favorite of mine of German TDs that I really like learning about. Plus it served me well in Sudden Strike 4, being my last 2 surviving tanks in the Kursk level. Imagine scouting with a Ferdinand so its twin can fire at the enemy. I'm surprised you didn't use footage of it in Girls und Panzer while you used the clip showing both the Jagdpanther and Tiger II. Missed opportunity there, but not a serious issue.
This thing was built because Porche was too confinident in its design and started making hulls before the trials completed, where it was discovered that its engines were worthless for a vehicle of that size. Due to its poor engine it had a habit of overheating and bursting into flames. The lack of an MG was not a issue initially as it was intended for Tank destroyers to be behind the line, thus not needing a mg as the infantry would have cleared enemy infantry from the area it would be firing from.
its funny, the thing can take out like 10 t34s, but then died half way up on a 20 foot hill. the germans had their priorities, transmissions were not one of them
Reminds me of that “Gate Jietai” anime where Princess Pona described the tanks as “steel elephants”; if she were to see this, then she would’ve called it a “Greater steel elephant”!
Even you didn't believe the pun at the end. ;) The Elephant was revolutionary, but as usual, over-engineered and prone to breakdowns. And there wasn't enough of them.
@4:14 the elefant in it's natural habitat - tracked on the steppes of russia, a soviet mg crew preventing the crew from escaping, and, without it's own mg to fire back, it waits for an infantry squad to neutralize it. meanwhile, 1,800 km away, an asshole thinks that what his military needs is an even larger tank, slower, with an even more overstressed drivetrain, which is helpless against the enemy's overwhelming air power
I always like Elefants on my side when I game. If you can get one up on a hill, it pretty much commands the map, and unless the other side has heavy artillery, it's pretty much unkillable unless the other side can get people behind it.
Tip: Porsche is NOT pronounced "Porsch", but like PorschEE. I recommend watching the video from Feli from Germany about the pronunciation of german Brands.👍
Yah we say Adidas different in Canada too. It's just the vernacular pronunciation where I live. Not technically correct, but that's language sometimes.
it seems inconceivable Germany did not fit original Ferdinands with MG defensive armament .. and mechanical failure- shown up with the Porsche Tiger prototypes - were prevalent . Elefants served in Italy in 1944 and later Germany in last ditch defence of Germany - Russians often referred to German heavy TDS as "Ferdinands" generally
This vehicle is simply another in a long line of heavy, unreliable vehicles made by the Germans during the war. The Stugs and up to the PzKpfw IVs were fine, but the heavies that followed were unreliable trash constantly breaking down, complete with part shortages since there were too many wild variants out there with little in common. Not to mention fuel hogs for a nation that was already starving for fuel. Abysmal failures all of them.
I imagine coming up against one of these in Italy would still make your blood run cold. Set up in a defensive position, it could still do some damage. Like you said, dwindling supplies made them less effective, thankfully.
Sadly living on a farm my internet is trash so my old gaming days are done until they run a cable out to my house =( Currently playing offline Heroes of Might and Magic III lol
the tiger 2 is the most heavy armoured tanks it was use to destory soviet and american tanks only few 100s of these were every made making the most poupluer ww2 tanks for the germans
Russian Soldier: “Tigers, Panthers and Elephants. My mother thought I was going to the Berlin Zoo.”
Their was one elefant that survived all the shit on the west east and south fronts and saw itself defending Berlin
Technically wherever that soldier was fighting he could have actually gone to the Berlin Zoo
@@TheAlmightyToaster01 wouldn’t all the animals be dead especially the big cats
@@ryleeculla5570... going through all the shit ain't peanuts.
At least there wasn't a Mouse or Rat.
German engineers: "these Porsche hulls really struggle with their weight, let's make them even heavier"
Hill - Allow me to introduce myself
Elefant - *Scream*
At Kursk, the powerful German 88mm gun coupled with the heavy armor of the Ferdinand, punched right through the Soviet tanks, and right into the infantry behind. The main problem was that the Ferdinand lacked a hull mounted machine-gun, and the surviving Ferdinands had to target individual soldiers with their main gun in order to safely withdraw from the assault. The Elephant was the new upgrade that added a gunner and was the difference between the two models. And German troops used to say that the easiest way to take out an Elephant, was for it to tow another Elephant, lol.
That is really hard to imagine going through and also good video by JJ. Who knows what other videos he'll do maybe the B-52 Bomber, M2 Browning Machine Gun, DSHK Machine Gun , MIG Jets and who knows what other topics out there.
Yup. Germans also added better, bigger commander cupola to Elefant, so he had a better orientation and situational awarness, than in Ferdinand. That and MG-34 mounts are two main visual differences between these two, that I have mentioned.
That wasn't the "main" problem. The "main" problem was the Ferdinant/Elefant was using a drivetrain rated for 45 tons, shoehorned into a 55 ton vehicle and then grandfathered into a 65 ton vehicle without any upgrade or modification at all. They were rolling fire hazards.
The Ferdinand was a one-off design: there was no logistical or maintenance capability for 65 ton vehicles, and to deal with one required the full effort of an entire recovery company (to the neglect of a dozen other vehicles). When the Germans were still pushing at Kursk that was the kind of luxury the Germans could afford, since they were tough and they could leave M-killed vehicles until dusk then work all night on getting them out. But the moment they fell back on the defensive the vast majority of the Ferdinands ended up being blown to avoid capture. I'm sure they were sick of looking at them by that point anyway.
This piece of trash didn't even have 360° view and was used as assault heavy instead of TD lmao. Common Reich L
@@raketny_hvost That is also something to think about when dealing and a disaster situation there and who knows what other topics for JJ to deal with like the DSHK machine gun, M2 Browning and many other topics to deal with.
Clarification since I was confused in this when I first learned about the tank: All of the remaining Ferdinands who received hull machine guns and cupolas were redesigned as Elefants. So that is the difference between the two tanks.
Yes, correct
The Germans *really* liked renaming vehicles and other equipment during the war, so they probably had at least a dozen different names in official documents.
That is only partially correct. The name change was not made to denote the modifications (mg, cupola, ...). It happened independently although at roughly the same time.
Adding Bugs to the video is a great call
Damn for that range, It's frightening seeing your comrade in a tank row just instantly erupts it's turret and burst in flames. That element of fearing the unknown comes to place
Only two of these vehicles survived the war.
One Ferdinand was captured by Soviet forces at Kursk, and it was sent to NII BT testing facility in Kubinka, Moscow for testing. It was on display at the Kubinka Tank Museum outside Moscow. Its gun mantlet was painted red. Its chassis number was unknown, either No. 150090 or No. 501.
An Elefant, numbered "102" of sPz. Jgr. Abt 653, was captured at Anzio by the Americans, and is now part of the United States Army Ordnance Training Support Facility's collection at Fort Gregg-Adams, VA. The example at Fort Lee was restored to display condition in 2007-2008,[14] as documented on the show Tank Overhaul, but not in its original paint scheme.[15] The Fort Lee Elefant was loaned to the Bovington Tank Museum in Dorset, UK as part of the museum's "Tiger Collection" display from April 2017 until January 2019, and later returned to the United States. This display brought all the members of the Tiger family together in one place for the first time (the Sturmtiger was represented by its gun).
"I hope you found the video... relefant?"
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Ok Johnny: I guess that the Elefant wasn't 'relefant' after all 😉 Keep it going, mate!
A career in stand up beckons.😅😅.
*ACTIONABLE PUN DETECTED* (cue shock gloves)
Hope all you guys are doing well tonight. Anyway The jadgpanther is so gorgeous (as far as tank destroying vehicles go) that I have both versions. I have the normal Ferdinand and sadly i dont have the Elefant despite elephants being my favourite land animal. Thank goodness for tank games getting me so interested in armoured warfare.
Ok that ending was too funny to not comment again. Thanks Johnny 😂
Lol thanks for dropping in 🙏🥸
Yes and also I know there are many topics out there and also speaking of tanks may want to do videos of the Russian Soviet T-54/55 tanks if you're thinking about that subject in the future.
Thank you JJ and also other topics I mentioned earlier like the MIG Jets, Skycrane helicopter, B-52 bomber, M2 Browning and DSHK Machine Guns and also may do ones on M1 Abrams tanks among who knows what other topics for the channel.
I had an Elefant when I was 11. Self-built with plastic and glue from the Italeri brand, scale 1:35. It was an impressive kit.
I've had the 1:72 version of that kit sitting on a shelf for years, waiting. Maybe some day...
'The slowest Porsche in the world!'
I think we're all forgetting when 7 out of the eight in one region (of Kursk) caught fire within minutes of engaging because of the whole engine issue...
Kursk was the Elefants proving ground as it was rushed into the battle before all testing could be completed.
The British had decoded German intelligence regarding the upcoming push into the Kursk salient. They handed this information over to the Soviets. Dates, battle plans, divisions, troop strength, reserves, armor, etc... everything. This gave the Soviets months to prepare anti-tank ditches, zeroed in artillery zones, massed aircraft, tank traps, etc etc.
Considering all this... the Elefant (Ferdinand) did very well.
Awesome video as usual, Johnny!
Called "Dumbos" in our Axis&Allies house rules because 1 Elefant division costs the same as 2 divisions of StuG III but they look cool on the board and have niche utility.
I didnt know I needed a video but I did, Thank you
"Slowest. Porsche. Ever."
Yet approximately the same ass-heavy weight distribution as the 911.
I contacted Porsche if they still make this one, they won't answer my question
Great video, good to see Girls und panzer featuring In such well made videos
Great video as always. In regards to the Elefant and Ferdinand though, particularly with the Elefants as they were heavier, the engine being underpowered was perhaps a bigger killer of the tanks than the Red Army itself. Many tanks would have their engines combust under their own weight, especially with the stress of climbing slopes. Comparatively, since these guns were most often used to support other tanks that had machine guns, the lack of an anti-infantry weapon was a less meaningful problem.
The Elefant wasn't heavier than the Ferdinand
@@Dreachon the Ferdinand weighed just over 65 tonnes. The Elefant had wider tracks, a machine gun, and more frontal armour compared to the Ferdinand, increasing its weight marginally but not improving the engine stress issue with improved cooling, etc.
5:21 - 🤦♂ Oh, that was painful.
They had the 88mm guns. I have my puns.
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq One of them makes you want to dive into the nearest hole and curl up in the fetal position with your hands over your head. (The other is the 88.) 😉
Along with most Ferdinands (later called Elefants) being taken out by their own reliability issues, another borderline hilarious thing about those tank destroyers is the story behind why they were using Tiger heavy tank hulls.
Porsche's Tiger tank design was competing with another Tiger tank design (the one that eventually got adopted) to get adopted by the German military. Because of Porsche's relations with the Austrian Painter Mustache Man, hulls for the Porsche design were ordered (and made) before a winner was even picked. However, his design was so unreliable that the German military went with the rival Tiger tank design anyway. Instead of melting down the Porsche Tiger hulls, it was decided it would be easier and less wasteful to just reuse them for another vehicle (hence the creation of the Ferdinand tank destroyer).
Finally talking about the elefant in the room.
They call it, "Snot tank".
It sized like a nose, but shoots cannon.
Was anybody else thinking of all the ole phant scenes in LOTR during this whole video too? 😂
They'll never believe me back home at the Shire.
Go Johnny, go Johnny, go! Go Johnny, go Johnny, go! 🇨🇦
Wait no, relefant? Boooooo
Rock ,,n ..roll..baby...❤❤😅😅😅
That pun at the end - lol! Sounded like you regretted it as the words were coming out of your mouth!
Lol I couldn't think of anything better and was late for something
The "e" in Porsche isn't silent
It's just a vernacular I wouldn't worry about it.
haha, your relefant elephant deserved a thumbs up
Not a spectacular tank, but a useful one that proved its worth and to use a chassis Porche made so many of.
A favorite of mine of German TDs that I really like learning about. Plus it served me well in Sudden Strike 4, being my last 2 surviving tanks in the Kursk level. Imagine scouting with a Ferdinand so its twin can fire at the enemy.
I'm surprised you didn't use footage of it in Girls und Panzer while you used the clip showing both the Jagdpanther and Tiger II. Missed opportunity there, but not a serious issue.
Thought most people could pronounce Porsche by now
Not in Canada. We all typically pronounce it wrong. A cognate, I suppose.
Charlie Sheen did it well in 1987's "No Man's Land".
This thing was built because Porche was too confinident in its design and started making hulls before the trials completed, where it was discovered that its engines were worthless for a vehicle of that size.
Due to its poor engine it had a habit of overheating and bursting into flames.
The lack of an MG was not a issue initially as it was intended for Tank destroyers to be behind the line, thus not needing a mg as the infantry would have cleared enemy infantry from the area it would be firing from.
Almost forgot to like until I heard the "relephant" bit in the end.
This Elefant was a big baby. Sinking in mud draining theoil pipe! Never seen it in a warmovie though....!
Johnny: (says a bunch of historical facts)
Johnny's Commenters: "Yes, but in the lunch room I herd *WEHRABOO* is teh coolest."
Love the saucy video at 1:44
When it worked it did pretty well, but it was a mechanical nightmare.
My favorite Tank!
2:10 ... physics, you fookin childrens.
Cause that's how the Elefant do. Relefant? Alright. Catch ya on the next one.
0:28 In German the _e_ at the end of words isn't silent so it's _Porsche_ ([ˈpɔʁʃə]) and not _Porsch._
The German-language version does pronounce it that way. You probably watched the English-language version.
@@mbryson2899 What do you mean?
Also it's a name, therefore there's a right way to pronounce it, the native pronunciation.
Yet here you are, spelling "Deutsch" as "German."
How do you pronounce "Jaguar?"
@@mbryson2899 Not if it's a surname like e.g. _George Deutsch,_ the former NASA press officer...
@@BlackWater_49 You definitely watched the wrong version for your taste.
Come back next week to find out how the Germans named their biggest and most advanced tank as Der Johnny.
I love you Johnny
I also tend to comment this in the channels i watch. Cheers!
Love you too! 🎉
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsqoh well....peace, love and understanding from the music metropolis of Merseyside...E...😊😊
Your channel is awesome
Please make a video on the WW2 German Luchs (linx) tank. It is the coolest little reconnaissance tank of that era!
Bo time gaming makes a return once again, love the video Johnny Johnson, have a great day
its funny, the thing can take out like 10 t34s, but then died half way up on a 20 foot hill. the germans had their priorities, transmissions were not one of them
Raise your tankards for the Elefant tank!
Reminds me of that “Gate Jietai” anime where Princess Pona described the tanks as “steel elephants”; if she were to see this, then she would’ve called it a “Greater steel elephant”!
Even you didn't believe the pun at the end. ;) The Elephant was revolutionary, but as usual, over-engineered and prone to breakdowns. And there wasn't enough of them.
Hey Thanks, Johnny
Awwwww yeaaahhh, look at that monstrosity
I liked this spg, (as a modeller or diecast modell collector) but it was rathe cumbersome. On the other hand it was a first hybrid :)
@4:14 the elefant in it's natural habitat - tracked on the steppes of russia, a soviet mg crew preventing the crew from escaping, and, without it's own mg to fire back, it waits for an infantry squad to neutralize it.
meanwhile, 1,800 km away, an asshole thinks that what his military needs is an even larger tank, slower, with an even more overstressed drivetrain, which is helpless against the enemy's overwhelming air power
Who remembers camping in these in COD?
Nice tank indeed!
Great video
You have a typo at 2:40. The cartoon’s title is ‘Prince Violent.’
I always have at least one typo 🙃
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq At least it was correct later on.
Such a unique looking tank in my opinion.
2:48 front armor damaged!
German tank destroyers: The Jagdpanzers, the Panzerjägers, and the Elefant.
Could you do 1 about the Christmas truce
Yes White Tiger was a very odd movie.
What was I supposed to think of that scene at the end?! The one with Hitler and Trotzky by the fireplace, what was that point?!
@@paulwee1924dus I still haven't got a clue about it or what it was setting up.
LSD fairy tale from Moscowywood. @@killzoneisa
One of many tank destroyers used by Kuromorimine Girls' Academy.
This thing was as heavy as a mark 4 land ship but has better gun and armor
Video suggestion can you do Sylvia IS 3
Thanks dont see alot anout this tank thankyou
Who was in charge of armaments... oh... wait...
I always like Elefants on my side when I game. If you can get one up on a hill, it pretty much commands the map, and unless the other side has heavy artillery, it's pretty much unkillable unless the other side can get people behind it.
very Rel🐘 thank you Johnny
What film was featured in the clip?
Just the top left corner as clips play
What are your sources
Tip: Porsche is NOT pronounced "Porsch", but like PorschEE. I recommend watching the video from Feli from Germany about the pronunciation of german Brands.👍
Yah we say Adidas different in Canada too. It's just the vernacular pronunciation where I live. Not technically correct, but that's language sometimes.
@JohnnyJohnsonEsq yes, btw I really enjoy your videos!
Thanks man! I'll keep working on my German 🇨🇦 🇩🇪
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq nice👍
it seems inconceivable Germany did not fit original Ferdinands with MG defensive armament .. and mechanical failure- shown up with the Porsche Tiger prototypes - were prevalent . Elefants served in Italy in 1944 and later Germany in last ditch defence of Germany - Russians often referred to German heavy TDS as "Ferdinands" generally
This vehicle is simply another in a long line of heavy, unreliable vehicles made by the Germans during the war. The Stugs and up to the PzKpfw IVs were fine, but the heavies that followed were unreliable trash constantly breaking down, complete with part shortages since there were too many wild variants out there with little in common. Not to mention fuel hogs for a nation that was already starving for fuel.
Abysmal failures all of them.
The jokes, man! they just keep coming back
Heffalump.
Snuffleupagus.
These beasts later served both in Italy and on the southern east front (roughly in the same area the Russo-Ukrainian war is taking place right now).
Movie name please?
Su Da Wondrous Beast De Le Elefant,
De Cannon Mo Killa Den A Dilettante -
No. 1 Fan Johnny - John 14:6
Some of these tanks a very funny.
How they call them by animals, such as a tiger tank, leopard, panther and elephants
Your bad jokes, JJ are very much……..the elephant in the room!
Please if you can, also use R.U.S.E. gameplay to show weapons, tanks or tacticts, it was an amazing WWII RTS game!!
Classic german design: perfect and reliable but complicated and overengineered
I play sudden Strike 4
I imagine coming up against one of these in Italy would still make your blood run cold. Set up in a defensive position, it could still do some damage. Like you said, dwindling supplies made them less effective, thankfully.
plural of 'Elefant' is 'Elefanten'
heheeh, nice one at the end
65 tonnes isnt 10x more, than Tiger I weight lol
Ten _tons_ more, not ten _times_ more. Listen again.
You forgot about the one Ferdinand ace that had 34 kills painted on the barrel
Japan made a better Ferdinand/Elefant also known as the Ho-Ri screw you I wasn't completed.
Do you still have time to play Warthunder, JJ?
Sadly living on a farm my internet is trash so my old gaming days are done until they run a cable out to my house =( Currently playing offline Heroes of Might and Magic III lol
Please do the Maus next, Johnny. And we might even forgive you for that stinker of a dad joke at the end. (Just kidding, that one was bad) 🤣🤣🤣
We 🇩🇪 building 🤡 tanks at this point
And you mangled Elephant completely 😅🤗
E le fand(pronuced like find just with a)
My favorite tank destroyer. F 🐺🐺🐺🐺
the tiger 2 is the most heavy armoured tanks it was use to destory soviet and american tanks only few 100s of these were every made making the most poupluer ww2 tanks for the germans
Father of pzh2000
Damn you!
Wo ist die m16?!
And war thunder