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| AK47 |
350 tape |
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Select-fire rifle
Cal. 7.62x39mm
Magazine: 5, 10, 20, 30, 40 round detachable box, 75 round
detachable drum
Barrel: 16.3 inches
Weight: 9.5 (wood furniture), 6.9 (synthetic furniture) pounds unloaded
(Pictured with wood furniture and 30-round magazine.)
It's an AK47. Everybody knows it. When you absolutely have
to kill every xylophone in the room; the one whose
rusted-shut bolt can be kicked open and it'll shoot; you
know.
Many people make them, including Izhmash, Maadi, and Norinco.
They're all about the same, so there's no telling what kind
you'll get when you buy this. Not nearly as versatile accessory-wise as the AR15
platform, but when the slag hits the fan, the AK47
will do you well. Available with threaded barrel
(optionally pre-equipped with a muzzle brake), wooden
furniture or lighter synthetic black furniture, and folding
stocks (side-folding or under-folding.)
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| Bushmaster ACR |
1200 tape |
Select-fire carbine
Cal. 5.56x45mm or .223 Remington
Magazine: 5-10-20-30-40-70 round detachable STANAG box/100 round
detachable drum
Barrel: 12.5 / 16 / 18 inches
Weight: 6.7 pounds unloaded
(average)Originally named the Masada, developed by Magpul,
and sold to Bushmaster for mass production, the ACR is a gas
piston operated modular carbine. In theory, a platform to
replace the AR15. Because it is gas piston operated, it
will run cleaner and cooler than a direct gas operated
weapon like the AR15 platform. The gas system can be
adjusted in three different positions, S for suppressors, R
for normal operating conditions, and H for adverse
conditions, including a fouled weapon, high altitude,
extreme cold, and others. As a modular weapon, the ACR is
equipped with a full-length M1913 Picatinny rail on top,
with flip up iron sights, and various slots and holes in the
handguard to attach extra rails in almost any location. The
handguard itself is held on with a single pin, allowing it
to be removed easily and replaced with other types of
handguards, and to access the quick-change barrel, which can
be changed for a different caliber or barrel length without
tools. The ACR uses STANAG magazines, the same as the AR15
and countless other weapons, and comes standard with
Magpul's ultra-reliable polymer PMAG. The ACR is available
with three different stocks, currently including a
telescoping folding stock, a fixed stock, and a fixed
"sniper" stock, with adjustable butt pad and cheek rest.
The ACR also uses drop in M16 trigger packs, making
available to you any fire mode ever used in the AR15
platform, including every combination of safe,
semi-automatic, fully-automatic, and three-round burst you
can think of.
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| Bushmaster XM15 E2S 16 inch |
800 tape |
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Select-fire carbine
Cal. 5.56x45mm or .223 Remington
Magazine: 5-10-20-30-40-70 round detachable STANAG box/100 round
detachable drum
Barrel: 16 inches
Weight: 6.7 pounds unloaded
(Pictured with removable carrying handle and 30-round
magazine.)
The XM15 is a version of Armalite's AR15, variants of
which have been in service with the United States, North
America, Earth, Sol, Milky Way
military for several decades.
The XM15 is equipped with a six-position telescoping
stock and a removable carrying handle mounted on a "flat
top" upper receiver with a Picatinny rail for mounting
optics. The barrel has a "step down" for mounting an M203
grenade launcher and is threaded and equipped with a
removable "birdcage" flash suppressor.
The XM15 can be equipped with various fire mode
selectors; safe, semi-automatic, and fully-automatic; safe,
semi-automatic, and three-round burst; safe, semi-automatic,
fully-automatic, and three-round burst; or safe and
semi-automatic.
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| Bushmaster XM15 E2S 20 inch |
800 tape |
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Select-fire rifle
Cal. 5.56x45mm or .223 Remington
Magazine: 5-10-20-30-40-70 round detachable STANAG box/100 round
detachable drum
Barrel: 20 inches
Weight: 8.4 pounds unloaded
(Pictured with removable carrying handle and 30-round
magazine.)
The XM15 is a version of Armalite's AR15, variants of
which have been in service with the United States, North
America, Earth, Sol, Milky Way
military for several decades.
The XM15 is equipped with a fixed stock and a removable
carrying handle mounted on a "flat top" upper receiver with
a Picatinny rail for mounting optics. The barrel is threaded
and equipped with a removable "birdcage" flash suppressor.
The XM15 can be equipped with various fire mode
selectors; safe, semi-automatic, and fully-automatic; safe,
semi-automatic, and three-round burst; safe, semi-automatic,
fully-automatic, and three-round burst; or safe and
semi-automatic.
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| Fabrique Nationale F2000 |
1500 tape |
Select-fire bullpup
Cal. 5.56x45mm
Magazine: 30-40-70 round detachable STANAG box
Barrel: 15.75 inches
Weight: 7.95 pounds unloadedThe F2000 is a compact carbine in a
bullpup configuration designed for left and right-handed
shooters.
The F2000 comes equipped with a removable 1.6x optical
sight mounted on a Picatinny rail, allowing mounting of
different optics and iron sights. The handguard can be
removed and replaced with a grenade launcher, FN303
less-lethal launcher, or a flashlight-equipped handguard.
Magazines are interchangeable with 30-round and higher
AR15 box magazines. 100-round C-Mags cannot be used.
The F2000 can be fired in semi-automatic or
fully-automatic modes.
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| Lanus Arms M42 |
1000 tape |
Select-fire
bullpup
Cal. 8.27x25mm
Magazine: 60 round detachable drum
Barrel: 18 inches
Weight: 5.6 pounds unloadedThe Lanus Arms M42 is the most
reliable firearm in the universe. Nanites built into the
parts literally eat dirt and fouling, meaning the only
possible malfunction would be in destruction of parts,
absence of parts, and bad ammunition. The M42 is equipped
with two MIL STD M1913 Picatinny rails; one underbarrel rail
for mounting the included half-handguard, available full
handguards, vertical foregrips, and any accessory under the
stars that mount on such a rail, and another rail which runs
the length of the entire upper receiver for mounting, again,
anything under the stars that can mount on such a rail.
The M42's fire control pack, held in by two push pins, is
designed to be easily changed. Fire control packs are
available in pretty much any combination of safe, semi
automatic, fully automatic, two-round burst, three-round
burst, on up through ten-round burst. In addition, many
variations in fire mode markings are available, including
numbers, pictographs, numbers and pictographs, and
letters.
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| MSAR STG-556 |
1500 tape |

Select-fire
bullpup
Cal. 5.56x45mm
Magazine: 10-20-30-42 round detachable box
Barrel: 14 / 16 / 20 inches
Weight: 7.2 pounds unloaded
(Pictured in tan, with integral 1.5x scope and 30-round
magazine.)
The Microtech Small Arms Research (MSAR) STG-556 is a
select-fire, gas-operated bullpup rifle, and an upgraded
clone of the well-known and instantly recognizable Steyr
AUG.
The STG-556 includes such upgrades as removable sight bases
(the classic AUG 1.5x scope can now be removed and
interchanged with a MIL STD M1913 Picatinny rail for
mounting of other sighting options), an automatic last-round
bolt hold-open device, similar to the AR15 platform, and a
forward assist button to force the bolt closed in the case
that, for whatever reason, the bolt did not completely
close.
Other features include an enlarged trigger guard,
accommodating the entire hand for use with gloves; a folding
ergonomic vertical foregrip; large charging handle above the
grip and trigger area, which can be easily locked rearward
by rotating into a notched recess; quick-change barrel
system, with 14, 16, and 20 inch barrels available; and easy
access to the fire mode selector: the trigger. Simply pull
the trigger partially for single shots, or pull it
completely rearward for fully automatic fire.
The STG-556 comes configured for right-handed shooters,
where, due to the bullpup design, a left-handed shooter's
face would lie directly over the ejection port and thus be
hit with brass and hot gas from the action after each shot.
However, it includes a second bolt and a reversible ejection
port cover to facilitate use by left-handed shooters.
The STG-556 is available in black, tan, or olive
drab.
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| Mossberg 590A1 |
460 tape |
Pump-action shotgun
12 gauge
Magazine: 9 round (2 3/4 inch ammo), 8 round (3 inch ammo)
fixed tubular
Barrel: 20 inches
Weight: 6.8 pounds unloadedThe Mossberg 590A1 is a pretty
awesome pump-action shotgun. It holds plenty of ammo and
includes a tube in the stock for an additional four rounds
for quick reloading. This variant isn't exactly short,
however, with its 20 inch barrel. The 590A1 can use 3 inch
rounds and under.
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| Springfield Armory M1A |
2000 tape |
 Select-fire battle rifle
Cal. 7.62x51mm (.308 Winchester)
Magazine: 5-10-20 round detachable box
Barrel: 22 inches
Weight: 9.3 pounds unloaded
(Pictured with black fiberglass furniture and 20-round
magazine.) Based on the classic M14 rifle of old. Heavy. Reliable. Powerful.
The M1A is a gas-operated, magazine-fed,
select-fire battle rifle, using the M14 action derived
from the M1 Garand, described by famed General George S.
Patton, Jr. of the United States of America, North America,
Earth, Sol, Milky Way, as "the greatest single battle
implement ever devised by man." This has to say
something about it. Features include last-round bolt
hold-open, a muzzle brake for reduced felt recoil, and
stripper clip rails, held over from the Garand, to
facilitate loading the magazine without removing it from the
gun. (The benefits of this, however, are questionable.) Although the weapon is described
as "select-fire", it is unadvisable to use it on fully
automatic mode; the recoil and muzzle rise of the .308 round
is far too great to be of much use in this manner. It is
also easily available without full automatic capability.
The M1A is available with black or mossy oak camouflage
pattern fiberglass, or wooden furniture.
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| Springfield Armory
SOCOM 16 |
1500 tape |
 Select-fire battle rifle
Cal. 7.62x51mm (.308 Winchester)
Magazine: 5-10-20 round detachable box
Barrel: 16.25 inches
Weight: 9.3 pounds unloaded
(Pictured with 20-round magazine.) Based on the classic M14 rifle of old. Heavy. Reliable. Powerful.
The SOCOM 16 is a variant of the M1A, a gas-operated, magazine-fed,
select-fire battle rifle, using the M14 action derived
from the M1 Garand, described by famed General George S.
Patton, Jr. of the United States of America, North America,
Earth, Sol, Milky Way, as "the greatest single battle
implement ever devised by man." This has to say
something about it. Features include last-round bolt
hold-open, a muzzle brake for reduced felt recoil, and
stripper clip rails, held over from the Garand, to
facilitate loading the magazine without removing it from the
gun. (The benefits of this, however, are questionable.)
Unlike the M1A, the SOCOM 16 features a shorter, 16 inch
barrel and smaller muzzle brake for easier maneuverability,
as well as a scout-style forward-mounted MIL STD M1913
Picatinny rail for mounting optics. (If using magnified
optics, one would require a special scout scope for use this
far from the eye; non-magnified optics, such as red dot
sights, are preferred.) Although the weapon is described
as "select-fire", it is unadvisable to use it on fully
automatic mode; the recoil and muzzle rise of the .308 round
is far too great to be of much use in this manner. It is
also easily available without full automatic capability.
The SOCOM 16 is only available with black fiberglass
furniture.
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| Springfield Armory
SOCOM II |
1600 tape |
 Select-fire battle rifle
Cal. 7.62x51mm (.308 Winchester)
Magazine: 5-10-20 round detachable box
Barrel: 16.25 inches
Weight: 10.5 pounds unloaded
(Pictured with black furniture and 20-round magazine.) The SOCOM II is a variant of the SOCOM 16; still, of
course, a gas-operated, magazine-fed,
select-fire battle rifle. Features include last-round bolt
hold-open, a muzzle brake for reduced felt recoil, and
stripper clip rails, held over from the Garand, to
facilitate loading the magazine without removing it from the
gun. (The benefits of this, however, are questionable.)
SOCOM II retains the shorter, 16 inch
barrel and smaller muzzle brake of the SOCOM 16 for easier maneuverability,
as well as a scout-style forward-mounted MIL STD M1913 Picatinny
rail for mounting optics. (If using magnified optics, one
would require a special scout scope for use this far from
the eye; non-magnified optics, such as red dot sights, are
preferred.) Additionally, the SOCOM II features rails at 3,
6, and 9 o' clock on the handguard, facilitating the use of
any Picatinny rail-mounted accessory, from flashlights to
bipods. However, this comes at the cost of increased weight
and price over the SOCOM 16. The SOCOM II is also
available with a full-length top rail for use with standard
scopes. Although the weapon is described
as "select-fire", it is unadvisable to use it on fully
automatic mode; the recoil and muzzle rise of the .308 round
is far too great to be of much use in this manner. It is
also easily available without full automatic capability.
The SOCOM II is available with black or urban camouflage
pattern fiberglass furniture.
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