Uhmm no it's not I have already been through man of the obvious clues but if you can't see the pixalation fine I will go through the physical reasons why it is CGI.
First off, see that shroud covered heavy machine gun above the commanders cupola? Those are not fitted at the factory or even depot. That piece of equipment was likely as not made 30 years ago and has already been assigned to the unit slated to recieve new T-96's in place of the their older tanks, because it is already issued to an older tank or assigned to a tank crew. You don't replace machine guns every time you build a new tank. There are still M-2 HMG's in US service that saw duty in WW2. There are HMG's in the PLA that fought vs Vietnam etc.
Secondly, those tanks tracks stacked like cordwood, thats a big no no. Each section of track pad has a track guide that sticks up like a giat tooth. These guides run inbeteen the road wheel sets and help the track on the rollers and not simply sliding off with every turn. Laying them one on top of the other will bind them together. Standard practive for new tracks is to either stack them in indiviual blocks or roll them and place them on pallets. In the CGI picture how exactly ar ethe workers suppose dot get the tracks apart with a minimum of effort and interferance with other activites going on around them if the tracks are all bound up?