@Variable:
We could do either one, but the Shinhoto version seems more appropriate.
If you are only doing 1 tanks, do a Type 97 Chi-Ha Shinhoto
If 2 tanks, do a Type 95 (light) and a Type 97 medium (either model, but I’d say preferably the Shinhoto)
If 3 tanks, do a Type 95 (light) a Type 97 (either model, but I’d say preferably NOT the Shinhoto) and a Type 3 Chi-Nue (medium-heavy)
3 tanks might be overkill for Japan, but you did say that you were trying to do ALL the sculpts for Japan and you do have 3 levels of tanks for most of the nations you’re doing…
Whatever you do DON’T do the Type 89 which by Japanese standards wasn’t considered a “light” tank but rather a medium (but was a really old and weak one.)
The Type 3 Chi-Nu mounted one Type 3 75 mm Tank Gun, one of the largest guns ever to be fitted on a World War II Japanese tank. i would love to see that as the medium tank for japan or even as a heavy tank for japan since they didn’t really have any heavy tanks that weren’t experimental.
I agree IF you’re going ahead and doing 3 tanks. It didn’t see action, but would’ve if the US had invaded Japan, and was the closest thing to a tank competitive with a Sherman that the Japanese had in any significant numbers of at all. I suppose an argument could be made for a prototype, since some of the tech units you’re doing for, say, Germany, weren’t really used, perhaps, and the Chi-Nu is hardly a direct competitor with, say, a Tiger or a JS-II… (by objective late-war standards it still barely qualifies as a “medium” much less a “heavy”) but I’d still rather see the actually produced units before the prototypes unless there’s a really compelling reason for it, and I don’t see a compelling reason for a Japanese heavy tank.