Use glass that is AT LEAST 3/4" thick. There is NO WAY 1/2" glass will support that weight load. To be clear, the amount of force exerted on the walls of an aquarium is the same, no matter what the shape of it is. You still have 200 gallons weight and force wise to deal with, regardless of how tall/wide/long it is. 200 gal is 200 gal. It kind of reminds me of the old engineering joke, what weighs more, a pound of water or a pound of ice. A pound is a pound is a pound. (Unless your weighing gold, but that's another story.)
Is the tank being built into a wall? Or is it freestanding? If it's going into a wall, you might get away with thinner glass on the sides that have supports behind them.
If it were me, I'd use tempered glass too.
IMO, The most critical part of any aquarium, structurally, is the quality of the joints, where the two pieces of glass meet. Each of those joints is going to be the weakest part, structurally, and where an aquarium is most likely to fail, given there are no cracks in the glass.
HTH. I can do a stress load analysis for you, just drop me an email.