Destruction of the unsinkable Super Battleship YAMATO. Operation Ten-ichi-Go

World War 2 in Colour March 22, 2022
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World War 2 in Colour brings you cinematic short military history documentaries by bringing together rare footage of Warfare to describe the greatest battles of WW2. By using the very latest colorization techniques it is now possible to show WW2 as it has never been fully seen before. As footage of actual events are not always available, World War 2 in Colour has to sometimes utilize similar historical images and footage from previous battles. The vast majority of WW2 film footage was silent, so sound effects and soundtracks for historical and emotional impact have had to be utilized. With the advances in computer generated images in recent years it is now possible to show with accurate historical detail what took place even though no actual film footage of the event exists. All content on World war 2 in Colour is researched, produced, and presented in historical context for educational purposes. we do our best to keep it as visually and factually accurate as possible.

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When designed in 1936, it was believed the Yamato would be unsinkable. She weighed a massive 72 thousand tones and had thickest amour of any ship constructed. But on the 7th of April 1945, she would face a force she simply wasn't designed to withstand. Operation Ten-ichi-Go called for the Yamato and her escorts to fight their way to Okinawa and then beach themselves and fight as unsinkable shore batteries until they ran out of ammunition or were destroyed. any surviving crew members would disembark and fight to the death as infantry against American ground forces.

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