Combat : Special Operations

Weapons

Cur­rent Weapon List:

Soviet Bloc Weapons

All text from their respec­tive Wikipedia pages (for bet­ter or worse)

AK 101

The AK-101 is an assault rifle of the Kalash­nikov series. The AK-101 is designed for the world export mar­ket, using 5.56x45mm NATO car­tridges, which is the stan­dard of all NATO armies. The AK-101 is mar­keted at those look­ing for a weapon that com­bines the logis­ti­cal com­pat­i­bil­ity and famil­iar­ity of the 5.56x45 NATO round with the leg­endary reli­a­bil­ity of a Kalashnikov.

AK47

The AK-47 is a 7.62 mm assault rifle devel­oped in the Soviet Union by Mikhail Kalash­nikov in two ver­sions: the fixed stock AK-47 and the AKS-47 (S) vari­ant equipped with an under­fold­ing metal shoul­der stock.

AK74AK74U

The AK-74 is basi­cally an AKM recham­bered and rebored to fire a 5.45mm car­tridge, and the AKS-74U is a short­ened ver­sion of that rifle. Exter­nally, the AK-74 has the same gen­eral appear­ance as the AKM, with two notice­able differences.

Baghira (mr-444)

The MR-444 “Baghira” pis­tol is a mod­ern pis­tol designed in Rus­sia at the Izhevsk Mechan­i­cal plant; it was built to replace the Makarov pis­tols. This hand­gun is avail­able in three main cham­ber­ings: 9x17 Short (.380 ACP), 9x18mm Makarov (PM and PMM) and 9x19mm Para­bel­lum. It also uses a detach­able, box-type, double-column magazine.

PP-19 Bizon

The PP-19 Bizon (bison) is a sub­ma­chine gun devel­oped by IZMASH OJSC. It is based on the AK-74 and AK100 series of assault rifles.

GP25GP30

The GP-30 Obu­vka (‘Shoe’), GP-25 Kostyor (‘Bon­fire’) and BG-15 Mukha (‘Fly’) are Russ­ian under bar­rel grenade launch­ers for the AK-series of assault rifle. They were first seen by the west in 1984 dur­ing the Soviet Inva­sion of Afghanistan. The ini­tial ver­sion was des­ig­nated BG-15, and was fit­ted under the bar­rel of AK-74 assault rifles. The main pro­duc­tion ver­sion, the GP-25 has a dif­fer­ent sight­ing sys­tem. The lat­est ver­sion the GP-30 is an evolved ver­sion of the GP-25, being lighter, eas­ier to make, and eas­ier to use.

Makarov

PKM

RPK

RPK-74

RPG-7

Sko­r­pion

The Škor­pion vz. 61 is a Czecho­slo­va­kian 7.65 mm sub­ma­chine gun (often clas­si­fied as a machine pis­tol), devel­oped in the 1950s by Miroslav Rybář (1924–1970) and pro­duced under the offi­cial des­ig­na­tion Samopal vzor 61 (“sub­ma­chine gun model 1961″) by the Česká Zbro­jovka arms fac­tory in Uher­ský Brod. Although it was devel­oped for use with secu­rity forces, the sub­ma­chine gun was also accepted into ser­vice with the Czechoslo­vak Army, as a per­sonal sidearm for lower-ranking army staff, vehi­cle dri­vers, armored vehi­cle per­son­nel and spe­cial forces.

SKS

The SKS is a Russ­ian 7.62x39mm cal­iber semi-automatic car­bine, designed in 1945 by Sergei Gavrilovich Simonov. The SKS car­bine was rather quickly phased out of first-line ser­vice, replaced by the AK-47, but remained in second-line ser­vice for decades after­wards. It was widely exported and pro­duced by the for­mer East­ern Bloc nations, as well as China, where it was des­ig­nated the “Type 56″, East Ger­many as the “Kara­biner S” and in North Korea as the “Type 63″. It is today pop­u­lar on the civil­ian sur­plus mar­ket in many coun­tries. Together with the RPD light machine gun the SKS was one of the first weapons cham­bered for the 7.62x39mm M43 round later used in the AK-47 and RPK.

SVD

The SVD (Russ­ian: Снайперская винтовка Драгунова, Snayper­skaya vin­tovka Dra­gunova), “Dra­gunov sniper rifle”, is a 7.62 mm semi-automatic sniper rifle, devel­oped in the for­mer Soviet Union. The SVD is a semi-automatic gas-operated rifle with a short-stroke gas-piston sys­tem. The weapon is fed from a curved box mag­a­zine with a 10-round capac­ity and the car­tridges are double-stacked in a checker pat­tern. When equipped with the PSO-1 sight enables tar­gets to be engaged at ranges upwards of 1300 m; effec­tive ranges in com­bat sit­u­a­tions have been stated at between 600 to 1300 m, depend­ing on the nature of the tar­get (point or area tar­get) qual­ity of ammu­ni­tion and skill of the shooter.[4][5]

Type95

The QBZ-95 is an assault rifle man­u­fac­tured by Arse­nal 266, part of Nor­inco and Arse­nal 296, under Jian­she Corp, China South for the People’s Lib­er­a­tion Army, the armed forces of the People’s Repub­lic of China, Chi­nese People’s Armed Police (para-military police) and Chi­nese law enforce­ment. This weapon uses a newly-developed ammu­ni­tion type of Chi­nese ori­gin, the 5.8x42mm DBP87. The QBZ-95 con­sists of a sys­tem of firearms using a com­mon design. This fam­ily includes a car­bine vari­ant, a stan­dard rifle, and a light sup­port weapon.[2]

Saiga-12

The Saiga-12 is a Kalash­nikov–pat­tern 12 gauge com­bat shot­gun avail­able in a wide range of con­fig­u­ra­tions. Like the Kalash­nikov rifle vari­ants, it is a rotat­ing bolt, gas-operated gun that feeds from a box mag­a­zine. The Saiga is also avail­able in 20GA and .410 cal­iber shot gauges as well as the .30–06, 7.62x39mm, .308 Win­ches­ter and .223 Rem­ing­ton cen­ter­fire rifle calibers.

Nato Weapons

Steyr Aug

Beretta 92s

FN-SCAR (L or H series)

G36C

Beretta m12s

M4 / M16 Series

Attach­ments:

M203 Grenade Launcher

M26 Shot­gun (NEW!)

M320 Grenade Launcher (NEW!)

Sights / Opticals

Eotech

Aim­point

- many more!

Misc Attach­ments

Flash­light

Laser pointer

Stock Mod­i­fi­ca­tions

Fold­ing

Slid­ing / Locking

Solid

M4a1 CQBR / MWS (Close Quar­ters Bat­tle Rifle / Mod­u­lar Weapon Sysmte)

The M4 Car­bine is a fam­ily of firearms trac­ing its lin­eage back to ear­lier car­bine ver­sions of the M16, all based on the orig­i­nal AR-15 made by ArmaLite. It is a shorter and lighter ver­sion of the M16A2 assault rifle, achiev­ing 80% parts com­mon­al­ity with the M16A2.[1] The M4 has selec­tive fire options includ­ing semi-automatic and three-round burst (like the M16A2), while the M4A1 has a “full auto” option in place of the three-round burst.

M249

Mac 10

mp5 / mp5a3 / mp5sd

SA 80 (L85a1)

FN SCAR

The SOF Com­bat Assault Rifle,[3] or SCAR, is a mod­u­lar rifle made by Fab­rique Nationale de Her­stal (FNH) for the U.S. Spe­cial Oper­a­tions Com­mand (SOCOM) to sat­isfy the require­ments of the SCAR com­pe­ti­tion. This fam­ily of rifles con­sist of two main types. The SCAR-L, for light, is cham­bered in the 5.56x45mm NATO car­tridge and the SCAR-H, for heavy, fires 7.62x51mm NATO ammu­ni­tion. Both are avail­able in fur­ther vari­ants such as Long Bar­rel or CQC (Close Quar­ters Com­bat). The FN SCAR sys­tem com­pleted low rate ini­tial pro­duc­tion test­ing in June 2007 and was sched­uled for lim­ited field­ing in the fall of 2007.[4]

The SCAR is avail­able in two cal­ibers, and in ver­sions for short and long range com­bat. It emerged as the win­ner of a US SOCOM com­pe­ti­tion to find a new rifle for spe­cial forces begun in 2003. Other com­peti­tors included entries by Colt and the Robin­son Arms XCR. Heck­ler & Koch had sub­mit­ted the XM8 as a gen­eral issue replace­ment for the M4 and M16 for the US Army, but the pro­gram was canceled.

The SCAR is man­u­fac­tured in two main ver­sions; Light (SCAR-L, Mk 16 Mod 0) and Heavy (SCAR-H, Mk 17 Mod 0). The L ver­sion fires 5.56x45mm NATO using improved M16 rifle mag­a­zines. The H fires the more pow­er­ful 7.62x51mm NATO from a newly designed 20-round mag­a­zine (this full-sized car­tridge makes the SCAR-H a bat­tle rifle). Dif­fer­ent length bar­rels will be avail­able for close quar­ters bat­tle and for longer-range engage­ments. The ini­tial solic­i­ta­tion indi­cated that the SCAR-H would also be cham­bered for the 7.62x39mm M43 car­tridge. How­ever, FN is not cur­rently offer­ing other calibers.

Assorted Weapons

Tec 9

The Intratec TEC-DC9 (also known sim­ply as the TEC-9) is a blow­back–oper­ated, semi-automatic 9x19mm Para­bel­lum cal­iber firearm, clas­si­fied by the U.S. Bureau of Alco­hol, Tobacco, and Firearms as a hand­gun. It is made of inex­pen­sive molded poly­mer and stamped steel parts. Mag­a­zines hold­ing 10-, 20-, 32-, 36– and upwards of 50-round capac­i­ties are avail­able. There are three dif­fer­ent mod­els, all of which are com­monly referred to as the TEC-9, although only one model was actu­ally sold under that name.

Uzi

The Uzi (Hebrew: עוזי‎, offi­cially cased as UZI) is a related fam­ily of sub­ma­chine gun car­bines. Smaller vari­ants are con­sid­ered machine pis­tols. The first Uzi sub­ma­chine gun was designed by Uziel Gal in the late 1940s. The pro­to­type was fin­ished in 1950, and ini­tial ser­vice issue began in 1954. Over its ser­vice life­time, the Uzi was man­u­fac­tured by Israel Mil­i­tary Indus­tries, FN Her­stal, and other manufacturers.

A few other weapons that we have con­tent / mod­els for and are slowly get­ting them in-game includes:

Grenades

M67 Frag Grenade

AN/M83 SMOKE GRENADE

M84 Stun Grenade

Shot­guns

Rem­ing­ton Pump

Benelli / FN Tac­ti­cal full auto shotguns

Franchi Spas 12 Pump

Mk3A1 ‘Jack­ham­mer’ shotgun

Saiga shot­gun vari­ants (AK-47 style russ­ian shotguns)

Grenade Launch­ers (Stand-alone)

M79 ‘Thumper’

M32 — Six shot ‘Revolver’ grenade launcher

There will also very likely be other squad and/or vehi­cle mounted weapons such as the Mk19 & H&K GPG auto­matic grenade launch­ers, TOW mis­siles, AT-4 anti-tank mis­siles, Law Rock­ets, Stinger & SA-7 Ground to Air Mis­siles and a whole assort­ment of other weaponry for your sol­diers to use fight­ing the enemy.