Why can't people just understand that it's a movie, not a tank warfare simulation recorded on film.
Already gave my review of Fury
on this thread.
Nevertheless the Tiger Ambush was believable enough to be satisfying. Tank nuts need to tone their rhetoric down.
Besides, as many have pointed out, the Sherman E8 could easily penetrate the Tiger I armour at those ranges (Less than 1Km). Moreover the Sherman E8 was faster and had better suspension allowing for semi-accurate firing on the move at point blank range (20-50 m), a Tiger can't hit the broadside of a barn while moving,
hell even current gen MBTs have trouble reliably hitting long distance targets at speeds superior to 20 km/h(Scratch that, did some digging, the only tank capable of engaging long distance targets on the move, accurately and consistently, is the AMX-56 Leclerc hitting targets 3 to 4 Km away speeding at 50 km/h on any terrain type). Lastly, Fury is set in April 1945, by then the Germans had a serious shortage of Tungsten/Wolfram (Portugal was no longer supplying it, switched to the Allies). Consequently they had inferior ammunition whereas the USA had plenty of high quality armour piercing ammunition, that's a perfectly plausible reason for the Tiger failing to penetrate Fury during the engagement. Also take in mind that Fury's crew was as veteran as you can get in the US Armed Forces during WW2.
In tank warfare, at the tactical level, is the better crew not the better tank that has the edge during an engagement as long as it's not an asymmetrical one, such as a T-70 knocking out out a Tiger I, lol that would be dubiously comical even if the T-70 had the most veteran crew ever.
On another topic, why do people think Germany was the most technologically advanced country during WW2?
That's a big misconception, I think people correlate too much technology with mechanical engineering. Yeah cars and tanks look impressive and advanced to the average joe, but the Germans did not achieve any technological breakthrough there, every other belligerent during that conflict had tanks, some even better ones. At the start of WW2, the most technologically advanced nation was the British Empire, they were the only country with an operational and extensive RADAR network, when no other country had established one, which gave them an immense advantage during the Battle of Britain, they also cracked the enigma machine. Fancy panzers did not achieve any strategic breakthrough on the Axis side. Then by the end of the war, the most technologically advanced nation was the USA. the Manhattan project achieved the splitting of the Atom and the introduction to a whole new Era, the Atomic Era, you don't get more advanced than that! What's more advanced than nuclear weapons & energy (Sure the Soviets did catch up quickly though). German scientists had nothing on the USA ones, there is no more impressive feat than the Manhattan project during WW2 it changed Warfare and the World forever.
Contrary to popular belief, where the germans did excel and had an advantage compared to other nations was chemistry, not mechanical engineering, just look how many chemistry nobel laureates were from the German Empire/Weimar Republic from 1901 to 1939.
Then they weaponized chemistry, first during WWI they came up with mustard gas and sarin to clear up trenches before any other belligerent. Then well, they gassed 7 million people during WW2... Furthermore their expertise on chemistry meant they had the most advanced rocketry systems in the World!
How do you think they came up with a proper propellant for rocket launchers like the panzerschrecks, panzerfaust (Whereas allies still relied on recoilless or springs AT handheld systems to deliver the explosive payload), the V1/V2 rockets; and finally with jet fuel to introduce the first jet fighter (Messerschmitt Me 163 Komet) in late 1944?! The Germans had the best chemists and rocketry scientist, that's why the USA and Soviets competed tooth and nail to get them in order to speed up their respective Space and ICBM programs! Nobody was interested in their panzers and engineers, both the Soviet Union and the USA had better mechanical engineers and designed better tanks (especially the soviets until the late 1980s).
Conclusion: German equipment was not overall the best nor the most advanced during WW2 (it was consistently very good tough), but they did have noteworthy niche with rocketry and chemistry.