Compare ConnecTank prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by YummyYummyTummy. Published by Natsume Inc.. Released on 9/28/2021. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action, Casual, Strategy.

Conveyor-belt puzzle meets couch co-op chaos inside a giant tank - ConnecTank earns its niche, but solo players should know the difficulty ceiling is low.

I'll be upfront: ConnecTank is the kind of game I would normally pass right over in a storefront. A real-time puzzle title about connecting conveyor belts inside a tank, developed by the studio behind the Fallen Legion series, sounds like an odd pivot. Thirty minutes in, though, the core hook started to click. The central mechanic asks you to physically rearrange conveyor belt segments on your tank's interior deck in real time, routing scrap to a crafting station to produce the right ammo type, then feed that ammo to the cannon before the enemy tears through your hull. Layer on fire suppression, monster incursions, and belt breakdowns happening simultaneously, and what sounds like a dry logistics exercise becomes something surprisingly kinetic. The game spans over 100 procedurally influenced missions across the world of New Pangea, where you work for one of three rival tycoon factions. Each tank you unlock carries its own strengths, weaknesses, and ammo profiles, and there are more than 70 of them to collect by stripping parts from defeated opponents. The route-selection layer between battles adds a lightweight strategic dimension: do you take the path with weaker enemies and worse loot, or push into harder territory for better ammo unlocks? That overmap decision loop is where the actual strategic texture lives, and for players who enjoy optimising upgrade paths it provides a genuine secondary game on top of the battle system itself. The story, written by Patrick Baker of Regular Show, packs in plenty of satirical jabs at corporate greed through characters like the literally rotund capitalist Finneas Fat Cat XV. The writing earns its laughs consistently, and the comic-book cutscene art is sharp. The honest caveat is difficulty. Once you have a functional conveyor chain established in a battle, most encounters stop pushing back hard enough to threaten it. Monsters and part breakdowns exist to disrupt your rhythm, but in practice they rarely land with enough force to actually derail a competent run. For solo players who want escalating pressure across a full campaign, that ceiling shows up earlier than it should. The meta-strategic layer of route planning does inject some decision weight, but it cannot fully compensate for battles that begin to feel repetitive once your process is internalised. Critics were split on this point, with some finding the controlled chaos addictive and others noting the battles make up the bulk of the runtime without evolving enough to sustain full solo engagement. Where ConnecTank genuinely shines is in local co-op with two to four players. Splitting responsibility across the tank deck, shouting about which belt rotation is needed, and scrambling to suppress a fire while someone else tries to keep ammo flowing - that emergent coordination is the specific experience the game was built around, and it delivers. The art palette is clean and readable even during hectic screen states, the top-down grid layout avoids visual clutter, and the folksy soundtrack creates an oddly calm counterpoint to the surrounding mayhem that actually works in practice. Remote Play Together support means you can replicate the couch session digitally if local play is not an option. If you have a regular group looking for something with a small learning curve and genuine laughs built into the script, ConnecTank punches above its low profile. Approach it as a solo strategy experience expecting prolonged challenge, and it will run out of resistance faster than you want it to. Diego, Scout Team

ConnecTank
ActionCasualStrategy

ConnecTank

Sep 28, 2021YummyYummyTummyNatsume Inc.
GamerScout Says

Conveyor-belt puzzle meets couch co-op chaos inside a giant tank - ConnecTank earns its niche, but solo players should know the difficulty ceiling is low.

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About ConnecTank

I'll be upfront: ConnecTank is the kind of game I would normally pass right over in a storefront. A real-time puzzle title about connecting conveyor belts inside a tank, developed by the studio behind the Fallen Legion series, sounds like an odd pivot. Thirty minutes in, though, the core hook started to click. The central mechanic asks you to physically rearrange conveyor belt segments on your tank's interior deck in real time, routing scrap to a crafting station to produce the right ammo type, then feed that ammo to the cannon before the enemy tears through your hull. Layer on fire suppression, monster incursions, and belt breakdowns happening simultaneously, and what sounds like a dry logistics exercise becomes something surprisingly kinetic. The game spans over 100 procedurally influenced missions across the world of New Pangea, where you work for one of three rival tycoon factions. Each tank you unlock carries its own strengths, weaknesses, and ammo profiles, and there are more than 70 of them to collect by stripping parts from defeated opponents. The route-selection layer between battles adds a lightweight strategic dimension: do you take the path with weaker enemies and worse loot, or push into harder territory for better ammo unlocks? That overmap decision loop is where the actual strategic texture lives, and for players who enjoy optimising upgrade paths it provides a genuine secondary game on top of the battle system itself. The story, written by Patrick Baker of Regular Show, packs in plenty of satirical jabs at corporate greed through characters like the literally rotund capitalist Finneas Fat Cat XV. The writing earns its laughs consistently, and the comic-book cutscene art is sharp. The honest caveat is difficulty. Once you have a functional conveyor chain established in a battle, most encounters stop pushing back hard enough to threaten it. Monsters and part breakdowns exist to disrupt your rhythm, but in practice they rarely land with enough force to actually derail a competent run. For solo players who want escalating pressure across a full campaign, that ceiling shows up earlier than it should. The meta-strategic layer of route planning does inject some decision weight, but it cannot fully compensate for battles that begin to feel repetitive once your process is internalised. Critics were split on this point, with some finding the controlled chaos addictive and others noting the battles make up the bulk of the runtime without evolving enough to sustain full solo engagement. Where ConnecTank genuinely shines is in local co-op with two to four players. Splitting responsibility across the tank deck, shouting about which belt rotation is needed, and scrambling to suppress a fire while someone else tries to keep ammo flowing - that emergent coordination is the specific experience the game was built around, and it delivers. The art palette is clean and readable even during hectic screen states, the top-down grid layout avoids visual clutter, and the folksy soundtrack creates an oddly calm counterpoint to the surrounding mayhem that actually works in practice. Remote Play Together support means you can replicate the couch session digitally if local play is not an option. If you have a regular group looking for something with a small learning curve and genuine laughs built into the script, ConnecTank punches above its low profile. Approach it as a solo strategy experience expecting prolonged challenge, and it will run out of resistance faster than you want it to. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayercooplocal-coopachievementscloud-savestier:aaaCouch Co-opConveyor Belt MechanicsProcedural MissionsSatireReal-Time PuzzleTank CustomisationRemote Play TogetherFamily-Friendly

Steam Deck & Linux

ProtonDB Platinum

Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 3 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 10
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 550 Ti
Processor
Intel Core i5-2400 @ 3.1 GHz or AMD FX-6300 @ 3.5 GHz or equivalent

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 970
Processor
Intel Core i7-4770 @ 3.4 GHz or AMD Ryzen 5 1600 @ 3.2 GHz or equivalent

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
YummyYummyTummy
Publisher
Natsume Inc.
Release Date
Sep 28, 2021

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Frequently asked questions about ConnecTank

Where can I buy ConnecTank cheapest?

Compare ConnecTank prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is ConnecTank available on?

ConnecTank is available on PC, Xbox.

When was ConnecTank released?

ConnecTank was released on 28 September 2021.

Who developed ConnecTank?

ConnecTank was developed by YummyYummyTummy and published by Natsume Inc..