I Made the TITANIC into a Battleship?! (Ships of War Gameplay Sinking Ship)

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Published 2021-10-08
I Made the TITANIC into a Battleship?! (Ships of War Gameplay) A physics-based sinking ship strategy game with player-made warships and submarines. Build the most effective warships and use them to sink the enemy during battles. Conquer the ocean by deploying your ships in strategic locations on the sea in round-based scenarios.

Links
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Intro Song:
Music by: MDK
Song Title: Super Ultra (Smooth Jazz Remix)
www.facebook.com/MDKOfficial
youtube.com/MDKOfficialYT
Buy the song here: www.mdkofficial.bandcamp.com/
Free Download: www.morgandavidking.com/free-downloads

Intro made by    / @sharkfxyt  

All Comments (21)
  • @wacky_duck1095
    fun fact: Olympic was converted into a troop carrier ship in WW1, She was fitted with 12 pounders and 4.7-inch guns
  • @TheKillerkille
    The term Destroyer comes from their original name and purpose. In the early 1900's people were making lots of torpedo boats to torpedo larger ships like battleships and cruisers. (Note, not like a PT boat from WWII these things were a quite a bit bigger and able to go out to sea.....well not too far on internal coal but that's another matter.) So the larger navies with battlefleets (Read Britain). Took one look at that, and said. So we'll just make a slightly bigger one of those to Destroy them. So the Torpedo Boat Destroyer was born. They grew in size, and became the fast fleet screen we know and love from the WWII period.
  • “Maybe not something quite as big”. Proceeds to select a ship that is several times bigger and more powerful than his ship.
  • @steelyjedi1079
    When you lose the Bismarck in this game mode “At the bottom of the ocean, the depths of the abyss They are bound by iron and blood The flagship of the navy, the terror of the seas His guns have gone silent at last” (Guitar solo)
  • @nicazer
    While this game looks interesting... the Atlanta class was a light cruiser built with dual-purpose 5" guns instead of the traditional 6" gun. In this game, it has 12" guns. That would make it a battlecruiser, like the Alaska. Bismarck had 15"s, in this they have 18"s. The list goes on. Would not recommend if you're interested in "realistic" ship design.
  • @brianstabile165
    When your given a troop transport “Kill fight die last that’s what a soldier should do”
  • @2002Durango
    These are the best edits made by the editor yet!
  • Fun fact : the Bismarck ammo racks. (btw if you don’t know what ammo rackking is, it’s like it just pierces the armor or a big explosion reaches the ammo rack and explodes it basically explodes all of the other ammo)
  • 5:34 From the mist, a shape, a ship, is taking form And the silence of the sea is about to drift into a storm Sign of power, show of force Raise the anchor, battleship's plotting its course
  • @Halal_Butcher
    Can I just say that at 15:20 the plane dropped a bomb straight into the boiler
  • @TankBossKiller
    In the nice old days of WW2 your line of ships would be Destroyers>Light Cruisers>Heavy Cruisers>Battleships>Aircraft carriers and you can throw in a sub wherever But in more modern times its Light Cruisers>Destroyers>Heavy Cruisers>Submarines>Aircraft carrier
  • History fact: Fletcher-class Destroyers were named for US Navy Admiral Frank Fletcher, a recipient of the Medal of Honor and twice recipient of the Distinguished Service Cross. The Fletchers were the largest destroyer-class vessel ordered by the US Navy for WWII to replace the older Clemson-class (Four-stacker) warships and the disappointment with the Porter and Somers classes. Principle Armament includes 5x 5inch dual purpose (Anti-ship/ Anti-air) cannons, torpedoes, depth charges, AA armament. Armor defense was generally 1/2in to 3/4in steel. Variants of the Fletcher include the Allen M. Sumner and Gearing classes which placed the single 5in guns into three twin-mounted turrets to make room for more AA armament as an 'anti-kamikaze' configuration. KMS Blucher, has 16in Naval Guns. One of those shells hitting a destroyer would be like pitting a Volkswagen beetle against the Union Pacific 4019 'Big Boy' 4-8-8-4 locomotive at full steam. Also, destroyers seldom go gun-to-gun with heavier ships, relying on maneuverability and torpedoes to take on capital ships. There are exceptions of course.
  • @SubaruPieter
    From big to small: Battleship-Battlecruiser-Heavy Cruiser-Light Cruiser-Destroyer
  • Per your request in video, a list of ship classes measured by size and tonnage. I'm no expert but the listing goes something like this (it may also be out of date as I'm including defunct (seldom used or obsolete WWI/ WWII) classes and examples of such vessels: Lightest I Corvette/ Gunboat I Destroyer Escort I Destroyer========Fletcher-class I Fleet Submarine I Heavy Destroyer I Frigate I Light Cruiser=====USS Atlanta (technically an AA cruiser due to small-caliber, dual-purpose cannons) I Auxiliary Cruiser/ Merchant Raider (primarily used by Germany) I Cruiser I Heavy Cruiser====KMS Blucher I Battlecruiser=====HMS Hood I Escort Carrier I Fleet Carrier======USS Yorktown I Dreadnaught I Battleship========KMS Bismarck I Fast Battleship====USS Iowa V Super Battleship===IJN Yamato (the only vessel class to be armed with 18in cannons in history) Heaviest
  • @mrpediepie9992
    destroyers are the ones that protect the Mother Ship, the carrier. So, the destroyers should be really strong, sometimes, if you go against a battleship with only ONE destroyer, your dead.