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AlexanderVenturi — Weapons sheet 1

Published: 2009-11-30 05:20:18 +0000 UTC; Views: 854; Favourites: 11; Downloads: 19
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Description Pistols and Shotguns

1. XKV-98 “lasmaturge” – Eversor Industries. Uses superheated hydrogen to melt through enemy armour and soldiers alike. The only real danger with the gun is a meltdown initiated by the capricious nature of the plasma heating mechanism and the heat generated by rate of fire. The gun is reloaded by replacing the hydrogen canister. Used primarily by officers and assault troops.

2. X22 “Eagle Magnum” – Markov & Sons. Chambers “4-40X Express” shells and has a clip size of 5. The X22 has a shield over the muzzle to prevent shards from an explosion from hurting nearby troops, and a modified frontal grip to compensate for the massive recoil. The shells are gas-expanding and a well-placed shot can eviscerate a soldier. Used by artillerists and officers.

3. R-3 “Krokodil” – Eversor Industries. Prototype railgun that has been scaled down into a pistol form. The clip forms the grip of the gun, and contains ten shots. The fusion battery for the gun contains only enough power to fire twice, so five batteries must be carried to fire ten shots. Despite its drawbacks, the R-3 can accelerate shells to massive speeds; more than enough to punch through tank armour. Used by tank commanders and covert-operations soldiers.

4. M-95 “Maygar” – Markov & Sons. General-use firearm that can fire any calibre of bullet designed for the M-series, with a decent accuracy over 150-200 metres. The M-95 is a tried and true weapon of war; thick, resilient and unrelenting. Its clip size of 24 coupled with its burst fire capability makes it a tough customer to contend with. Used by all infantrymen.

5. T-5 Siege Gun “Hammer” – Markov & Sons. The T-5 was initially designed to fire a single thermobaric shell in a siege situation. Rechambering the gun to fire shotgun ammunition meant that it could be deployed anywhere with devastating effect. It is extremely heavy and very difficult to aim, and it has a tendency to jam when feeding certain shotgun shells, but it is a devastating weapon in close-quarters where its scope of harm is at its greatest. Used by assault gunners and defence gunners.

6. SIG-12 “Juror” – Phillips International. A military revisitation of a civilian sporting shotgun, the juror is designed to fire solid slugs, instead of spread ammunition. It holds six shells in each clip, and has an auto-loader mechanism in the gun’s firing assembly. The shell ejects downward, so the gun can be fired from any position with decent effect. When equipped with a scope, the shotgun becomes a mid-to-long range sniper rifle, albeit without the pinpoint accuracy. Used by all infantrymen.

7. SIG-74 “Bahamut” – Phillips International. The SIG-74 is a fully modular weapon designed to fire shotgun shells. It can be used in any theatre regardless of conditions. In its most practical form, as pictured, the gun can fire shotgun shells at full-automatic or burst-fire modes, and carries a clip of 30 shells. Also pictured is the gun in its pistol modification, with reinforced barrel (for scale purposes mainly, the pistol is the same size as the Maygar.) Used by assault gunners and orbital drop troops.

8. R-94 “Leonard” – General Armaments International. The R-94 was the G.A.I.’s first attempt at making a mobile railgun. Largely, it was a success: the R-94 is able to hold four shots, with four shots to the battery as well, and is light enough to be used by a single infantryman in any situation. The gun’s electrokinetic assembly is covered by a lead barrel, that surprisingly enough does little to offset the weight of the gun, and the rest of the gun is covered in polarised steel, given that the firing assembly and trigger are all electrically powered. Used by special-operations soldiers.
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Comments: 2

BBLLHH [2009-11-30 14:23:53 +0000 UTC]

Awesome stuff.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

PhantasmaStriker [2009-11-30 10:35:38 +0000 UTC]

Awesome designs. I can see a lot of thought were put into them.

👍: 0 ⏩: 0