Game Pigeon Tanks Calculator

Estimate tank shots with wind and terrain settings. Review angle, power, damage, and hit chance. Tune each round with simple tactical numbers before firing.

Calculator Inputs

Formula Used

This tool uses an estimated projectile model. Game physics may differ, so treat the answer as a tactical guide.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the target distance between your tank and the enemy tank.
  2. Add elevation difference. Use a positive value when the target is higher.
  3. Set wind strength and direction.
  4. Add cover, armor, health, blast radius, and obstacle height.
  5. Select the weapon style and shot arc.
  6. Press Calculate and review angle, power, hit chance, and expected damage.
  7. Use CSV or PDF buttons to save the current result.

Example Data Table

Scenario Distance Wind Arc Weapon Suggested Use
Close flat shot 120 2 helping Low Fast small shot Use light power and quick contact.
Medium normal shot 240 6 opposing Balanced Standard shell Add power and track wind carefully.
Hill barrier shot 310 4 crosswind High High mortar Clear the obstacle with a high arc.
Finish attempt 190 1 calm Balanced Heavy shell Try direct damage when confidence is high.

Game Pigeon Tanks Strategy Calculator

This calculator helps you plan a shot before you fire in Game Pigeon Tanks. It does not replace practice. It gives a structured estimate. You can compare distance, wind, elevation, cover, and weapon style. The result shows a suggested angle, power, hit chance, damage, and likely shots needed.

Why These Inputs Matter

Tanks rewards small adjustments. A short shot may fail if wind fights the shell. A high target may need extra power. A protected target may take less damage. Fast movement also lowers confidence. By entering these values, you turn guesswork into a repeatable plan. The tool is useful after a miss. Change one value at a time. Then compare the new recommendation.

Using the Result

Start with the recommended angle and power. Use balanced arc for normal play. Use high arc when hills or barriers block the line. Use low arc when the path is open and the target is close. The hit chance is only an estimate. It combines wind, movement, cover, and blast radius. A wider blast can forgive small errors. Heavy weapons may need cleaner contact, but they can finish rounds faster.

Better Round Decisions

The expected damage value is important. It tells you what a shot may do after chance and armor are considered. The shots to finish estimate helps you decide whether to attack, reposition, or choose another weapon. If the number is high, try a safer angle or a larger blast weapon. If confidence is strong, a direct shot can be worth the risk.

Practical Tips

Record common distances and powers. Use the example table as a starting guide. When wind changes, avoid using the same power blindly. For crosswind, increase your safety margin. For opposing wind, add power. For helping wind, lower power slightly. Keep notes after each turn. Over time, your personal table will become more accurate than any generic estimate.

Accuracy Limits

Game physics can feel inconsistent because screen size, touch timing, and match conditions vary. Treat every output as a smart starting point. Confirm it with a test shot when possible. Save the CSV after good rounds. Review the PDF before rematches. Small records create better instincts. Better notes make future shots easier.

FAQs

Is this an official Tanks formula?

No. It is an estimation tool. It uses common projectile logic, wind correction, cover reduction, and damage weighting to create a practical shot guide.

What does target distance mean?

Target distance is the rough horizontal gap between your tank and the enemy tank. Use the same scale each time for better personal results.

How should I enter elevation difference?

Use a positive value when the enemy is above you. Use a negative value when the enemy is below your tank position.

Why does wind change power?

Helping wind may carry a shot farther. Opposing wind may reduce travel. Crosswind mainly lowers confidence because it adds sideways uncertainty.

Which arc should I choose?

Use low arc for open close shots. Use balanced arc for most rounds. Use high arc when hills, walls, or terrain block the path.

What is expected damage?

Expected damage combines direct damage with estimated hit chance. It helps compare risky strong shots against safer splash shots.

Why are shots to finish rounded up?

You cannot fire part of a shot. The calculator rounds upward to show the likely full number of shots needed to defeat the target.

Can I save my result?

Yes. Use the CSV button for spreadsheet records. Use the PDF button when you want a simple result sheet for later review.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.