Base on Wheels: Difference between revisions

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* ''[[Eberron]]'' has Argonth, which patrols the border of Breland. Though it's not on wheels so much as it [[Magitek|hovers]].
* ''[[Eberron]]'' has Argonth, which patrols the border of Breland. Though it's not on wheels so much as it [[Magitek|hovers]].
* In ''[[Warhammer 40,000]]'', if we discount the titans (which are literal base-cathedral-killing machines on legs) we are left with super-heavy tanks: When a tank is so big, that firing all weapons on the damn thing can only be described as a broadside, then you have a base on wheels.
* In ''[[Warhammer 40,000]]'', if we discount the titans (which are literal base-cathedral-killing machines on legs) we are left with super-heavy tanks: When a tank is so big, that firing all weapons on the damn thing can only be described as a broadside, then you have a base on wheels. Well, tracks. Imperial Guard can use tanks from Leman Russ (MBT) variants and up as mobile command centres. In the game that's implemented as replacing your commander with Tank Commander, which obviously improves your warlord's survivability from unaugmented human (usually) to attached armored vehicle.
** The monastery-fortresses of the Iron Hands space marines are literally (massive, massive) Bases on Wheels.
** The monastery-fortresses of the Iron Hands space marines are literally (massive, massive) Bases on Wheels.
** An let's not forget the Necron's Monoliths. Which are less Bases on Wheels and more mobile floating (and teleporting) tombs of death and destruction.
** An let's not forget the Necron's Monoliths. Which are less Bases on Wheels and more mobile floating (and teleporting) tombs of death and destruction.