You have no idea how much trouble I had to go through in order to find this comment again, but I figure it’s worth it for history’s sake with this awesome pic.
Still say it was originally posted on here and not Poni, but that’s just making a mountain out of a molehill.
Anyways, here it is.
Movie announcer voice This summer, from the producers of Red Dead Revolver, and Red Dead Redemption, comes the heartbreaking tale of transformation, loss, and revenge. Applejack, humanized pony, and her valiant steed/brother Big Mac, star in the greatest f+bleep+ing western you will never see, Red Dead Honesty!
@C Money
Still not the same round. Slightly different dimensions, almost certainly a different load and the slugs themselves are made of tungsten. Plus it’s made by a whole different company. (Misriah Arms)
@C Money
Guns are highly precise instruments. In order to use them properly, you need to be able to see exactly where you’re aiming. That requires both eyes. Also, there are a lot of factors that can interfere with each shot, such as your stance, the motion and angle of the gun at the time of firing, the way you squeeze the trigger, and depending on distance, atmospheric pressure, wind speed and direction, ambient lighting, and most importantly, attention to each shot.
Spree killers only manage what they do because they are operating in the only situation where firing indiscriminately is effective: against a large number of close-range, densely-packed, unarmed targets and typically before they’ve started moving.
@Somber Star
Practice makes perfect. So if I practice enough, even though it’ll take a Sh*t-Ton o’ it, I will be able to. Besides, it’d only be for big crowds with simi or full-auto small caliber pistols. If the amounts of targets were small, then a single pistol would be good enough… Unless it’s two guards that don’t expect anything or are not focused. Then both at the same time would be preferable in my mind.
@C Money
You’d be far more effective using a single gun and learning to snap between targets. Dual-wielding guns serves no purpose other than to look cool.
@Albus Fahrenheits
Not what I do it for. I’d practice it so I can take on either targets from two sides or multiple targets in on direction. Think of it this way: i’m stuck in the middle and bogeys are coming at me both sides. With two guns, One pointed in each direction, I am able to hold them both off. Keep in mind, I’d only dual-wield small calibers like 9mm… Unless a gang took my kid(s) from me, and they’re driving away. At that point, I’d risk using twin .44 Mags to stop the cars from getting away. Nothing says “Never take my kids” better than twin head removers. But that’s because I’d be raging.
@C Money
Dual wielding doesn’t really provide one with a good tactical advantage. You need two hands to steady a pistol and use it effectively. I’m a reservist, not some tribal militia.
You have no idea how much trouble I had to go through in order to find this comment again, but I figure it’s worth it for history’s sake with this awesome pic.
Still say it was originally posted on here and not Poni, but that’s just making a mountain out of a molehill.
Anyways, here it is.
Movie announcer voice This summer, from the producers of Red Dead Revolver, and Red Dead Redemption, comes the heartbreaking tale of transformation, loss, and revenge. Applejack, humanized pony, and her valiant steed/brother Big Mac, star in the greatest f+bleep+ing western you will never see, Red Dead Honesty!
I try sometimes, but most don’t get too far in the selection process.
AJ
Holy shit, that’s a name that really sets me back. I totally forgot that he was a fan of the show for a time, too…
Well, I still want to make a blowback action pistol that fires S&W 500 rounds.
Pistols and handguns are OK in my book. But blades are more my speed :) Like to be mobile and agile with my weapons.
Still not the same round. Slightly different dimensions, almost certainly a different load and the slugs themselves are made of tungsten. Plus it’s made by a whole different company. (Misriah Arms)
Whatever floats your boat, man. It’s your time and money. Just try not to hurt yourself or anybody else in the process.
I’m good at focusing. And I have my methods.
Guns are highly precise instruments. In order to use them properly, you need to be able to see exactly where you’re aiming. That requires both eyes. Also, there are a lot of factors that can interfere with each shot, such as your stance, the motion and angle of the gun at the time of firing, the way you squeeze the trigger, and depending on distance, atmospheric pressure, wind speed and direction, ambient lighting, and most importantly, attention to each shot.
Spree killers only manage what they do because they are operating in the only situation where firing indiscriminately is effective: against a large number of close-range, densely-packed, unarmed targets and typically before they’ve started moving.
Practice makes perfect. So if I practice enough, even though it’ll take a Sh*t-Ton o’ it, I will be able to. Besides, it’d only be for big crowds with simi or full-auto small caliber pistols. If the amounts of targets were small, then a single pistol would be good enough… Unless it’s two guards that don’t expect anything or are not focused. Then both at the same time would be preferable in my mind.
You’d be far more effective using a single gun and learning to snap between targets. Dual-wielding guns serves no purpose other than to look cool.
Not what I do it for. I’d practice it so I can take on either targets from two sides or multiple targets in on direction. Think of it this way: i’m stuck in the middle and bogeys are coming at me both sides. With two guns, One pointed in each direction, I am able to hold them both off. Keep in mind, I’d only dual-wield small calibers like 9mm… Unless a gang took my kid(s) from me, and they’re driving away. At that point, I’d risk using twin .44 Mags to stop the cars from getting away. Nothing says “Never take my kids” better than twin head removers. But that’s because I’d be raging.
Dual wielding doesn’t really provide one with a good tactical advantage. You need two hands to steady a pistol and use it effectively. I’m a reservist, not some tribal militia.