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  #1  
Old 11-18-2009, 05:28 PM
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Spartan198 Spartan198 is offline
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Originally Posted by Excalibur View Post
Have him bust out an AA-12 with slugs.
Actually the AA-12 is currently leading on the list of shotguns I'm considering for that part. Both characters have backgrounds in covert ops and have the connections within the DoD to get pretty much anything they want.

The AA-12 may more or less fall under the mall ninja category, but the thing is still scary as fuck...
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Old 11-18-2009, 06:00 PM
Ace Oliveira Ace Oliveira is offline
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Fuck the AA-12. Give them a M4 super 90.
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Old 11-18-2009, 08:51 PM
Mandolin Mandolin is offline
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Go with the AA-12. THere's something truly evil about hosing a police car with a full-auto shotgun. Of course, you could give one of the bad guys a lever-action .45-70 or .45-110. That should realy do a job on glass.
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Old 11-19-2009, 07:18 AM
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Originally Posted by Ace Oliveira View Post
Fuck the AA-12. Give them a M4 super 90.
An M4 Super 90 would probably be easier and faster to obtain.

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Originally Posted by Mandolin View Post
Of course, you could give one of the bad guys a lever-action .45-70 or .45-110. That should realy do a job on glass.
I'm not really sure that would be fast enough. Gotta blow a big enough hole in the windshield to toss in a CS gas grenade largely well before the cops are quick enough to react, in addition to a two-cruiser escort that needs dealing with.

And as I previously mentioned, it's a two-man team responsible for this. Definitely not an easy job...
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  #5  
Old 11-20-2009, 03:14 AM
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Well, If all else fails you can use a .50 Beowulf. I'm pretty sure that would do it... But I'm not sure..
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Old 11-21-2009, 05:20 PM
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The box o truth didn't use a .50 on the window, so don't know if it'll penetrate a thick layer of glass. Maybe.

The Beowulf was designed to go through engine blocks so I think it should go through specific glass.
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Old 11-22-2009, 02:47 AM
Clutch Clutch is offline
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Personally, I'd spring for the aforementioned M4 Super 90. Unless you're going to write it in as a plot point somewhere along the line, a slight credibility issue could come up with using a fully-automatic, very distinctive looking shotgun, especially if you're planning on leaving any of the victims of the ambush alive...

"I don't know what I could tell you, man...one of them was wielding this really blocky-looking gun...I just know one thing...I ain't never seen a 12-gauge fire that fast..."

Of course, that's just me thinking. I don't know what kind of realism you're shooting for here (no pun intended).

On a tangent...I've just started on my second and third novel, and this topic has inspired me to ask a couple of questions, one for each.

1) The second novel is a direct sequel to the first, taking place some three years after the first. One of the main characters, an LAPD detective, has been established in the first novel to carry a Walther P99AS in 9mm (unrealistic, yes, but despite the fact that I pretty much went the summer-blockbuster route with the novel, I did try to allude to his getting approval to carry the gun). He also used a SIG 552 as a carbine, but lost it in a climatic gunfight. As I start the second novel, I've toyed with the idea of replacing the SIG with either a short-barreled variant of the 556 or a Colt M933 (or similar variant). Should I choose either of these two guns, or should I just have him acquire a new 552 and roll with it?

2) The third novel is more of a crime drama, set in Baltimore. I'm trying to decide on a sidearm for the main character, an assassin with a tragic past and vengance on his mind. I've floated from a Desert Eagle, quickly over to a P99 (I know, I know...but I really like the gun), to a SIG Pro, to a Beretta, back to the P99. I'm kinda stumped. Any suggestions?
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Old 11-21-2009, 06:03 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Spartan198 View Post
Actually the AA-12 is currently leading on the list of shotguns I'm considering for that part. Both characters have backgrounds in covert ops and have the connections within the DoD to get pretty much anything they want.

The AA-12 may more or less fall under the mall ninja category, but the thing is still scary as fuck...
You consider weapons for "parts"? Seems kind of superfluous to me. Personally, when I write screenplays (I've written a few), I tend to think about the story, the characters, and the way I convey the mood of a particular scene. I'm pretty sure most screenwriters do, since those kinds of things matter a lot more than the guns.

Also, why the AA-12 and not the USAS-12?
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Old 11-22-2009, 02:20 AM
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You consider weapons for "parts"? Seems kind of superfluous to me. Personally, when I write screenplays (I've written a few), I tend to think about the story, the characters, and the way I convey the mood of a particular scene. I'm pretty sure most screenwriters do, since those kinds of things matter a lot more than the guns.
I plan a story out on a scene-by-scene basis and write them largely in the order they happen. Of course, I have a basic end result that drives it, but I improve a lot of happenings between beginning and end.

As far as arming characters, I use a combination of what I personally like and what I think suits his/her personality. I try to make the guns part of the character instead of just a tool of the character.

The two characters from this scene as an example:

Church, the shotgun-wielding ex-Special Forces soldier, is more direct and to the point of things. He's concerned more with just getting the job done than how he gets it done. If he wants to knock somebody out, he's gonna grab said person by the collar, throw him against the wall, and plant a fist in his face. So he uses a 1911 (currently a Desert Warrior, but I may change it) as his preferred carry.

His partner Alexis (the main protagonist that the plot centers around), by contrast, is more stylistic. A sort of Sam Fisher-like special agent previous to the story events (I left her past largely blank to emphasize how secret the agency she worked for is), she definitely has the skills to get the job done, but she puts extra effort into looking cool while doing so. If she wants to knock someone out, she'll do it with some fancy Solid Snake-esque "CQC" move. Taking into account her "tactical personality" as well as her flare for the dramatic, I've chosen as her standard everyday carry a USP-45 CT, while her "combat carry" (pistol-wise) is two full size USP-45 Tacticals. In effect, she's more "tacticool" and mall ninja-esque, but still more than capable of backing up her words.

Quote:
Also, why the AA-12 and not the USAS-12?
The USAS-12 is semi-auto only, isn't it? I want the AA-12 for its full-auto capability and the awesome amount of firepower it's capable of putting out at a moment's notice.
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  #10  
Old 11-28-2009, 04:19 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Spartan198 View Post
The USAS-12 is semi-auto only, isn't it? I want the AA-12 for its full-auto capability and the awesome amount of firepower it's capable of putting out at a moment's notice.
No, the USAS-12 is made in both select-fire and semi-auto versions. The semi version was for civilian sales only.

Plus, the AA-12 is friggin' ugly, while the USAS-12 looks kinda cool (I was just watching an episode of "The Sentinel" where some bank robbers use one).
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