StinkomanFan
The Thing with Questionable Taste
- 221
- Posts
- 12
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- Seen Dec 3, 2015
What about Pokemon found in other regions as well? Like Snorunt and Glalie or the Gardevior line? Will they still be known by the attacking humans?
He said that human technology is equivalent to real life right now, so I went with it, I'll change it if needed.Year is 1980; has a G36C.
I don't even.
He said that human technology is equivalent to real life right now, so I went with it, I'll change it if needed.
Also, as leader, am I in charge of just the army, or the entire HR as well?
To summarise this drivel, the AKM is cheaper to produce, and it's better than the AK-47. If there's need to acquire weapons quickly, then the AKM will be more readily available and cheaper to use in an unforeseen conflict than the milled version of it.The AK-47 was designed in 1946 and formally adopted by the Soviet military in 1949. There were four models used between 1947 and 1959: The AK-47 was the test and trials designation for the rifle: the earlier prototypes, made in 1946, were referred to as the AK-1 and AK-2. After the adoption of the rifle, it was designated simply as the "AK". However, due to three variants of the AK being made, it is more proper to refer to these variants as the "AK Type-#" rather than just "AK" as the three variants differed quite significantly from one another. Due to that, the term "AK" has more or less become a catch-all for just about all AK variants, and does not necessarily refer to one specific model. The Type-I, adopted in late 1948, featured an early, stamped receiver, but it was quickly (and I mean quickly) replaced by the Type-II AK in 1949. This featured a milled receiver, a stock boot, and some other small, yet somewhat significant changes. The Type-III is the most common "AK-47," and it is basically just a milled predecessor of the rifle you should be using. What rifle is that?
Enter the AKM.
The AKM is the modernized version of the Type-III assault rifle. It utilizes a stamped receiver, reinforced receiver cover, slanted muzzle brake, vented gas block, and a rear sight leaf showing distances of 100m to 1,000m among other things. In reality, it is only acceptably accurate out to 300m on a good day. The AKM is the most widespread AK variant in the world. Almost every foreign-made AK (Yugoslavian, Hungarian, Polish, etc) variant in the world is based off of the AKM. Why? It's more reliable and just as accurate as the original AKs, not to mention much cheaper to produce. It is the Kalashnikov rifle. They come in a variety of, well, variants, which include models with forward, wooden grips, underfolding MP40-style stocks, side-folding wire stocks, and, of course, fixed, wooden stocks. They fire the 7.62x39mm cartridge. Folding-stocked AKMs are designated as AKMS.
Complete HR, so to say, but only full control of the army. Otherwise it's pretty much divided with second in commands.
@-DeepImpact- That's understandable. I don't know much about guns myself either, but I've probably been pavlovically conditioned to think that an AK-47, in use by a modern, first-world nation as a standard issue rifle, is unacceptable from this other site I frequent where wars are roleplayed, well, on a daily basis. But to shamelessly steal a paragraph (or two; this guy wrote like 12 of them in his full version) of text from another roleplaying website that deals with incorrect AK-47 usage:
To summarise this drivel, the AKM is cheaper to produce, and it's better than the AK-47. If there's need to acquire weapons quickly, then the AKM will be more readily available and cheaper to use in an unforeseen conflict than the milled version of it.
So, yeah.