Apps Games Articles
World of Tanks Blitz -PVP MMO
Wargaming Group
Rating 4.2star icon
Editor's summary
Editor rating
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half star icon
4.5

One-line summary World of Tanks Blitz is one of the most satisfying mobile PvP action games around thanks to its excellent tank combat and huge vehicle roster, but uneven matchmaking and some grind-heavy, premium-cluttered edges keep it from being an easy recommendation for everyone.

  • Installs

    100M+

  • Developer

    Wargaming Group

  • Category

    Strategy

  • Content Rating

    Teen

  • Latest version

    9.0.0.1043

  • Package

    net.wargaming.wot.blitz

Screenshots
In-depth review
World of Tanks Blitz has been around long enough that it could easily feel dated, bloated, or simply outclassed by newer mobile shooters. After spending time with it again, what stood out most is how confidently it still delivers on its core promise: this is a tank battler that actually feels good to play. Not just flashy, not just busy, but mechanically satisfying in a way many mobile action games never quite manage. The first thing the game gets right is the feel of combat. Tanks have weight. Movement is deliberate without feeling sluggish, aiming has just enough tension to make every shot matter, and armor interactions create a constant sense that positioning matters as much as raw firepower. When you angle a hull correctly, bait a shot into your armor, then punish the enemy on reload, Blitz feels clever rather than chaotic. That is the hook. Even after multiple matches, it remains enjoyable because wins rarely come from mindless rushing alone. The game wants you to think. That tactical layer is helped by the sheer variety of vehicles. The roster is huge, and it does not take long to notice that different tanks genuinely encourage different habits. Some are forgiving bruisers that let you bully corners, while others reward patience, flanking, or careful support play. Progressing through the tech tree gives the game a strong long-term pull because unlocking a new tank is not just a visual reward; it often changes how you approach battle. That variety is one of the app’s biggest strengths, and it helps explain why the game can hold attention for months rather than days. Visually, Blitz also still impresses. On a capable phone, the models are detailed, explosions have impact, and the battlefield is readable without turning into visual mush. It is especially good at delivering those little moments mobile games often miss: a shell landing with a heavy thunk, a turret popping off dramatically, a close-range duel where both tanks are barely holding on. The presentation is polished enough to make each match feel substantial. Menus are generally straightforward too, and once you settle into the garage-battle-upgrade loop, the flow becomes second nature. That said, this is not a flawless game, and its frustrations are very real. The most persistent issue is matchmaking. In a game this team-dependent, one lopsided roster can make a match feel decided before it really begins. You can play smart, take good angles, and still get steamrolled because your side collapses in under two minutes. That kind of inconsistency is part of online PvP, of course, but Blitz has enough of these uneven battles that the problem becomes hard to ignore. It is not enough to ruin the game, but it is enough to sour a session. The map design can also be a mixed bag. Some arenas create tense, enjoyable engagements where lane control and timing matter. Others feel cramped, especially if you prefer lighter, more mobile tanks that should thrive on scouting and repositioning. In those matches, the battlefield can feel too compressed for stealth or long-range play to really breathe. You end up spotted quickly, funneled into predictable lanes, or forced into brawls that flatten the class differences that make the tank roster interesting in the first place. The economy and monetization sit in a middle ground. Blitz is far from the worst free-to-play game on mobile, and it is very possible to enjoy it without spending money. That matters, and the game deserves credit for it. Still, after extended play, the premium presence becomes hard to miss. Premium tanks, bundles, and event-driven incentives are woven deeply into the experience. None of that automatically makes the game pay-to-win in a simplistic sense, but it does create a feeling that the cleanest, fastest, and flashiest route through the game often points toward spending. For casual players, the grind can occasionally feel a bit harsher than ideal. I also ran into the kind of technical roughness that long-running online games sometimes collect over time. Most matches ran fine, but occasional lag spikes or odd interface hiccups can be especially painful here because this is a game where timing and aim matter. A brief stutter at the wrong moment can cost a duel. It is not constant, but when it happens, it is noticeable. Where Blitz really succeeds is in making mobile sessions feel meaningful. A match is short enough to fit into a break, but involved enough to feel like an actual battle rather than disposable tap-and-win filler. That balance is surprisingly rare. If you like vehicle combat, class-based PvP, or games where positioning matters as much as reflexes, there is a lot to enjoy here. It is especially good for players who want a deeper action game without needing a full console setup. Who is it for? Players who enjoy strategic shooters, progression systems, team play, and the distinct feel of armored combat will get a lot from it. It is also a strong fit for those who like gradually mastering different playstyles across a large roster. Who is it not for? If you want perfectly fair matchmaking, ultra-relaxed casual sessions, or a pure skill game untouched by grind and premium nudges, Blitz may wear you down. Likewise, anyone looking for huge maps and long-form tactical pacing might find some battles too compact and too quick. Overall, World of Tanks Blitz remains one of the better large-scale mobile PvP games because the fundamentals are genuinely strong. The combat is weighty, the tank variety is excellent, and the presentation still lands. Its biggest flaws—uneven matchmaking, map-size limitations for some playstyles, and free-to-play friction—do not erase its strengths, but they do stop it short of greatness. Even so, if the idea of tactical tank duels on mobile sounds appealing, this is still one of the first games I would point you toward.