Jonathan Ferguson, a weapons expert and Keeper of Firearms & Artillery at the Royal Armouries, breaks down more of the weaponry of Helldivers 2, including the SG-225 Breaker, the Railgun Stratagem (in safe and unsafe mode), and even digs a real-world counterpart to the Autocannon from the Royal Armouries collection.
00:00 - Opening
00:40 - P-4 Senator Pistol
02:17 - Stalwart Stratagem
03:35 - Adjustable Rates of Fire
04:37 - Autocannon Stratagem
08:19 - Autocannon Sentry Stratagem
09:00 - SG-225 Breaker Shotgun
09:48 - SG-225IE Breaker Incendiary Shotgun
10:50 - LAS-5 Scythe Energy-Based Weapon
11:54 - Railcannon Stratagem
13:02 - Break-Action Shotgun
14:13 - JAR-5 Dominator Explosive Weapon
15:49 - P-2 Peacemaker
16:38 - Arc Thrower Stratagem
17:26 - Mortar Sentry Stratagem
18:31 - ICBM Missile
In the latest video in the Firearm Expert Reacts series, Jonathan Ferguson--a weapons expert and Keeper of Firearms & Artillery at the Royal Armouries--breaks down more of the guns of Helldivers 2 and compares them to their potential real-life counterparts.
Firearms Expert Reacts playlist - • Firearms Expert Reacts...
If you're interested in seeing more of Jonathan's work, you can check out more from the Royal Armouries right here. - / royalarmouries
If you would like to support the Royal Armouries, you can make a charitable donation to the museum here. - royalarmouries.org/support-us...
And if you would like to become a member of the Royal Armouries, you can get a membership here. - royalarmouries.org/support-us...
You can either purchase Jonathan's book here. - www.headstamppublishing.com/b...
Or at the Royal Armouries shop here. - shop.royalarmouries.org/colle...
You can subscribe to the Armax Journal that Jonathan Associate Edited here: www.armaxjournal.org/
“Is he a robot, or is that a robot arm?” “He’s a veteran.” Smiles in Democracy.
*robit
@@thecrabmaestro564oi, eyeuh got somethin' ya won ta say, moite?
Of course he's not a cyborg. He's too democratic to be a cyborg.
@@droidBasherYeah, lets not let the Democracy Officer hear any of that. Won't end well.
Helldiving made me the man I am today!
Finally, our Autocannon will be analyzed! :D Been looking forward to this! /A HD2 dev
It's definitely satisfying to fire. Only gripe I have is that assisted reloads can be temperamental, gotten stuck in assisted reload state or just animations in weird ways that required a respawn to fix. Still, very satisfying weapon to use, both in handheld and turret forms.
Love your team! Keep up the good work :D
🫡
It's very cool!
Congrats on your success! I've loved my time with the game, these episodes have been a blast to make.
A funny thing in regards to the front loading mortar; One of the ship upgrades is "Zero-G Breech loading: Replaces the current method of loading cannons - manual shell insertion down the front of the barrel - with rear loading, which is much faster."
When I read that upgrade I laughed for hours. Cause with how expendable soldiers are in the setting I imagined Space Powder Monkeys running along the hull of the ship every time I called in an orbital barrage..
It's for the orbital cannons though
@@Drakith90 And people joked that to reload they had someone in a spacesuit on the outside loading them like old cannons.
@@Drakith90apparently, the armor or suit that the helldivers are wearing have the same materials as with your super destroyer. I don’t know the validity of this claim for it is secondhand information. Fun fact though, one of the ship upgrades(I reckon it’s the first engineering bay upgrade) has you give stimulants like ampethamines to your crew to reduce certain stratagem cooldowns iirc.
@@Drakith90 Similar to the Hangar upgrade that allows them to reload "mid-spaceflight". How exactly support crew are affixing 500kg bombs to Eagles in spaceflight is a worrying thought.
"I'm doing my part"
I'm doing my part
I'm doing my part
I am doing my part!
I'm doing my part
"I'm doing my part"
For the amount of environmentally interactive details they put into the game, that the capes don't billow violently as the nuke shockwave passes seems like a glaring miss.
Def needs to get patched in.
That's exactly what I was about to comment. The effect is incredible, but feels so fake when it hits the cape and nothing. Needs patching for sure
That's because the capes of Super Earth's finest are unflappable. Mere nuclear winds can't shake our soldiers resolve.
@@IoFoxdale I forgot that. It all makes sense now
Don't worry. Capes only billow when they need to. Like when standing on the bridge of your super destroyer! FOR DEMOCRACY!
casually pulling out a Pedersen rifle like it's nothing and then dropping that they have TWO
We have three :D - all British trials Vickers-Pedersens.
JF loves to flex the collection. And for good reason!
@@IrregularDave JFtkofaaatramitUKwhacotoiffth is the correct short term
@@jonathanferguson1211 oh then I guess you wouldn't miss just one right? My birthday is coming up soon so maybe...
That giggle after Jonathan whips out that SR-9 thing is priceless.
sign of a man who truly loves what he's doing :D
It's that "I knew this will come in handy one day" type of giggle
I thank him for doing it. He has so many unique weapons at his museum.
I genuinely thought John was being wistful about not having a nuclear missile ready to show
He has one, I'm sure of it
His emotional support mini-nuke
You just know he has a Davey Crockett hidden away for emergencies
polaris is at imperial war museum so can understand his pain
He *is* wistful.
It has been an honour and privilege to bring you these episodes, fellow Helldivers! Many bugs and bots met their end to record the gmeplay, and many more will fall!
we want more helldivers... Please?
@@SmolGawblinmaybe when there are more weapons added we shall revisit!
A
Please show us your 40k mini collection
@@The7guys a lot of them are in storage at the moment, but I post the new ones I paint on my Twitter and Instagram 🫡
"One of out two, (because we greedy) maxim machinegun prototypes...". Jonathan might be locomitive of Gamespot but in hearts he still is british museum worker.
We have two out of the three that survive.
@@jonathanferguson1211 That is quite devious. But what happened to the third?
@@heinzaballoo3278probably in another museum
The third is in the US Marine Corps Museum collection.@@heinzaballoo3278
To be fair: a lightning strike _could_ make bugs explode. The radical increase in heat coupled with a chitin exoskeleton (assuming it's chitin or a similar material) _could_ conceivably cause the same sort of intense pressure increase that makes trees explode during a lightning strike.
Also, they are used as an easy fuel source. I'm not familiar with the details, but they do seem to just have pretty volatile insides, which would definitely have spectacular interactions with lightning.
Also the magnetic forces generated by currents flowing over an exoskeleton will tend to compress the exoskeleton. The same effect is used as the basis of z-pinch nuclear fusion experiments.
@derekp2674 , fusion? I'm curious as I've not heard a lot about it. Last I heard we finally had the first successful positive-yield reaction and then the excitement seemed to die off a bit.
Two possible outcomes. Either it instantly boils a large quantity of the water contained within the bug leading to an explosion or the shell acts like a faraday cage and directs the energy around the outside to ground
Simple headcanon for lore purposes. The goop inside these liberty hating bugs is a poor conductor of the fuel of democracy. It boils into high pressure steam almost instantly when a current passes through it.
An autoloading mortar that uses an arm to "drop" shells down the tube isn't as outlandish as you'd think. The swedish "Mjølner" and South Korean Wia 120mm both use a system like this.
Really? I wonder what the practical reason for that is.
well mjolner's like SEMI autoloading lol, there are still swedes pushing the rounds up rails, than they mechanically kinda tip into the magazine
That’s exactly what I was going to comment good on you for betting me to it 👍
@@abysswatcher9172I’m pretty sure it uses normal mortar rounds which might mean they have to be loaded from the top and not from a belt like with what Johnathon suggested on how you would do an automatic mortar.
Those mortar shells each weights about 15kg, nearly 35 pounds, you don't want a tired soldier to accidentally drop one and arm it.@@abysswatcher9172
If you want to see a nuclear weapon in a museum, the Swedish War museum in Stockholm has one. Right next to stone-age axeheads. A very powerful exhibit.
There is no Swedish war museum. Did you mean the Army museum?
@@sebastiandavidsson6997 yes.
Is it operational? Asking for a friend.
@@alexmin4752 ...maybe?
"It's a rule in our group that you have to salute as the missile detonates." You sir, are a true patriot and I commend your dedication to democracy.
🫡
Been a rule in our group, since day one, too. Along with standing and saluting the flag on that mission.
I dish out hugs instead. Nothing like embracing while a nuke goes off
Shame there is no mod (yet) to play the chorus or pre-chorus of "When Heavens divide" (or "Nuclear") when nuke detonates Democracy may be eternal, but heaven is not helldivers' kind of place anyway
I find it really funny that Ferguson is basically just a video game gun reviewer at this point. He's done SO MANY
I still do my day job :D
Almost singlehandedly keeping the Gamespot channel alive!
It's such a thing it got lampshaded in his video on Forgotten Weapons. Just check the thumbnail.
It's also _excellent_ PR / advertisement for the Royal Armouries Museum (in Leeds!). Which is, I believe, also a part of the job description of most curatorial staff at museums.
@@jonathanferguson1211lmao glad to see you. You're easily the best part of this channel
one thing that I have noticed is that if you use an action mid reload that prevents you from using the charging handle the gun won't actually be considered reloaded until you give it a second to do that animation.
Only if you run completely out of ammo from the mag. If you do a tactical reload with 1 in the chamber, it skips that animation. The same can be seen on the pump shotties. With none in the mag tube, you do an emergency reload + rack then reload the rest conventionally. If theres still 1 in the chamber you just reload conventionally
Happened to me so many times because I kept diving around evading dangers Trying to shoot and realizing the bolt isn't pulled back yet was kinda cool and clumsy like it jammed for a second
@@p0wer1337 Not only is that faster, but it's a cool detail - you skip pulling the charging handle is because you didn't clear the barrel and still have a round chambered. It's such a little detail that so many games ignore, but makes Helldivers even more immersive.
It's noticeable in small arms, but very obvious in platforms with longer multi-step reloads like the Recoilless Rifle, whose reload can be interrupted at three points between opening the breech, ejecting a casing, loading a casing, and closing the breech.
@@Dreznin its a dstail that every COD and BF game has had for decades.
I love how casually Jonathan mentions where we can check a museum's nuke
Lightning tends to superheat and fluids inside a target, causing them to rapidly expand and effectively explode. A tree near my home was hit by lightning and the superheated sap sent splinters as big as my arm flying across our garden. I imagine bugs would react similarly.
The same principle is also used in electrothermal (ET) and electrothermal chemical (ETC) guns but we don't often see them in sci-fi games.
The terminids in Helldiver lore are also farmed for their blood, under the codename of Element 710. Having such a volatile inside probably does not help matters.
Concerning the Sentinels, I came to the conclusion that it was not an AI per turret built in... but in fact, the command post from our Destroyers, as we sent the sentinels, who take control of the turrets deployed and blast all ennemies on the ship's radar sight. Which would explain as well why they don't make much difference between allies and foes, as they could only be dots on a screen.
Pretty sure that’s a simple problem solvable by using iff
@@a1ter120 but at the same time Helldivers are expendable and are used as such why put money and time to build an IFF system when you can just recruit more Helldivers.
@@jameslars7391 What does it cost to make four dots green?
@@Dostoron Everything
They couldn't even afford to put simple remote or even timed arming electronics into the hellbombs. I'm almost positive that touch screen and related hardware costs more to install per unit than conventional remote/automatic firing hardware
The GPMG (L7A2) you can rotate the gas block to 'balance' the gun as it were, changing its rate of fire. Beautiful bit of kit
GPMG is short for general purpose machine gun, so I have no idea what gun you are talking about.
@@NugireEdited to say L7A2 or FN MAG
I’ve heard us ‘yanks’ say the same with the M249 (FN Minimi) and the M240 (FN Mag).
Yes, you can vary rate of fire with any adjustable gas block, but that's not the purpose of it. I was thinking of selectable fire rates independent of gas setting (or in the absence of an adjustable block).
@@jonathanferguson1211Only thing I can even think of that's anywhere near that would be the G11, but still not exactly in the ballpark. German space wizards, man.
About the mortar, it might sound and look silly but this is actually how some more modern autloading mortars function. The swedish Granatkastarpansarbandvagn (which is probably the coolest name for a mortar carrier) has a system where a robotic arm contraption carries the grenade from a replenished magazine under armor outside to drop it into the muzzle of the mortar. It's really neat, the crazy kind of tank only sweden could fever dream up after inhaling too many Surströmming vapours.
South Korea has something similar as well, the KSM120 Skyfall, and there's a video of one of these systems being demonstrated detached from the vehicle it goes to that looks nearly identical to the Helldiver mortar. South Korea probably got to that idea from too many kimchi fumes.
About selectable fire rate. The new MG5 also has like 3, I think, selectable speeds.
Does it have fuller auto?
and all 3 of them are lower than the MG3s, which it replaces in the german army for no good reason
@@marcellosilva9286What about "fullest auto"?
@@Feldflasche it conserves ammo, it can fit modern scopes, it's shorter (better handling), it's more ergonomic for fire on the move or standing. Don't get me wrong, i love the MG3 aswell, but saying that the MG5 has no upsides is just blatantly wrong
@@Feldflasche weight, ammo conservation thats the reasons formally.
This has been the most fun and well thought out bunch of fictional guns i've seen in a game in a really long time. Always a pleasure to see Jonathan's take on these!
4:26 You can adjust the gas block to effectively change the rate of fire, even though it's usually meant to deal with dirtier conditions
The Negev has 3, normal and high for belts like you said and a low setting for using magazines. They learned from the M249 that mags need a lower gas pressure/slower cycling
Yes, not quite what I was thinking of :)
Yea cool rules of engagement high RPM is the "surrounded" switch
Generally, adjustable gas toggles are meant to deal with muzzle attachments, such as suppressors, compensators, and other attachments that could change the barrel pressure. Running a suppressor would increase the barrel pressure, causing blowback. Which can seize the action as unburned powder is forced into the action. So you shrink the aperture to reduce the amount of gas that can pass through the gas tube.
That's a recent development. Adjustable gas blocks are traditionally to allow proper setup of a machine gun and then continued reliable function in adverse conditions and/or when fouled. The same is true for service rifles, most of which were either never designed for a suppressor or never used with one. @@Mindpron
As a Swedish company, Arrowhead seems to have taken quite a few design cues from Swedish weaponry of today. The EAT and the recoilless rifle are the most obvious examples, but there are several others aswell. The mortar sentry is basically just an automated, scaled-down version of the recently introduced mortar system in the Swedish Army.
Yes, the lead designer and more on the team was Swedish military and has used CGs themselves. There is a video where the creators play the game with a youtuber and talk about it. Just as Jonathan notices and mentions in this in the last video, the recoiless rifle is based on Carl Gustaf and the autocanon friend reload is based on the Bofors canons.
11:21 It does actually, cold planets reduce rate of fire (so your MG shoots slower RPM) but also reduces heat buildup.
7:05 loved that giggle. I knew it was going to be special right away 😂
The Dominator's gyrojet rounds are a dual stage. Uses the massive cartridge to give it a jump out the barrel, and then you see the jet fire up a short distance out the barrel.
In short: literally a bolter.
I hope this series never ends
The new set of weapons that’s coming out for Helldivers II includes a Pump Action-Shotgun style Lightning weapon, so I’m looking forward to the episode of you guys reviewing that. I’m wondering if they’ll eventually give players the mini Atomic Grenades (or a variant of them) from Starship Troopers, since this series does pay a lot of homage to that series.I can’t imagine that they wont also eventually give us their take on a Pulse Rifle too, since its so iconic.
The real advantage a revolver would still have in the future would be ease of handling large cartridges without more moving parts like a slide or bolt for a magazine fed handgun. It also has the all important looks cool factor.
A few vets who worked with the M249 mentioned that you could adjust the gas regulator to change the rate of fire, but the function is often to over-gas the system for reliability when it starts to slow down from heavy use.
Saluting when the missile launches sounds great, but my group already has the rule that we give eachother a hug before boarding the Pelican no matter what.
Regarding variable fire-rate machine guns, the Israeli IWI Negev light machine gun technically has an adjustable fire rate. A lot of other guns do to but it's not exactly the intended use of an adjustable gas system, including this one. Position 1 on the Negev is for feeding from box magazines at 700 to 850 rpm. Position 2 will create the same fire rate when using a belt. Belts add drag to the system; I think using this setting on a magazine would make it shoot bit faster but would probably be unreliable. Position 3 is for belts under adverse conditions, gun all gunked up with powder residue and sand and debris. But on a clean gun, with the gas system opened all the way up to third position, you can reach up to 1000 rpm.
Almost every machine gun today has an adjustable gas system making them fire faster or slower. It’s weird that a supposed weapons historian of his magnitude doesn’t know that.
@@jacobs6771 He probably does know that but just hadn't considered it to be an intended feature of adjustable gas systems. When he talks about historical examples he references a deliberate design choice to give those weapons variable fire rates, and that's almost never the case in modern arms design. I only reference the Negev because I've heard stories of people using the gas system to change the fire rate, but that's not really how you're supposed to treat the gun.
The Pz Mg 87 on the Swiss Leopard 2 can switch between 500 and 1000 rpm.
I don't know if its just me, but a massive toggle lock going right next to my head would make me EXTREMELY disconcerted.
It probably helps to be wearing a futuristic space helmet.
This man is an absolute treasure, his knowledge and being able to balance how it works with video games is absolutely amazing. Never stop educating people about firearms!
The Mortar Sentry, might take inspiration from atleast partially, how the Mjölner, CV90 Mounted Mortar System, reloads
I never knew what the B.A.R is classified as but it has 2 different full auto modes. Full auto and fuller auto
Its an automatic rifle. Browning designed it with the intent that you use it like a rifle thats automatic. Basicly the predecesor to the battle rifle. The US pushed it into a SAW (squad automatic weapon) role that it wasnt remotly ideal for.
That's the weapon that immediately sprang to mind when he mentioned variable full-auto rates of fire.
Since i havent seen it mentioned in the comments or the video, something interesting of note is the fact that some of the devs were actually conscripts for the swedish army, and they also are reaching out to people who have experience with firearms.
Im pretty sure that the cybernetic prosthetic armor is a reference to warhammer 40k's Tyrannic War Veterans. Who are essentially space marines with many Tyranid battles under their belt. They have very similair looking prosthetic limbs. But the main reason why I think this is because the cape and background card of the first set is called Tyrant Hunter.
Thank you for doing a part 2. The Breaker is my favorite gun in the game, and I was sad to see you didn't cover it last time.
Something I Learned from Zach Hazard, you can adjust the timing on M2 Browning MG and its .30 cal counterpart, making it fire “faster” but also increases the chance of an out of battery detonation
The Swiss army rifle Stgw90/SIG550 can change the firerate between 600RPM and 900RPM. But it is more used in case the gun is not feeding properly because of dirt or extrem cold
16:51 Made with lightning - REAL LIGHTNING!
Doing the Praise The Sun pose at a nuclear explosion is next-generation memery.
I'd be interested in seeing Jonathan talk about some of the weapons of the Quake series. For Quake 1 I really just want to see him speculate on how the nailgun would work (I can't imagine he'd have much to say about the other guns except "yup that's a shotgun"), but from Quake 2 onwards the weapons start to take more design cues from real guns, and I think it'd be interesting to hear his thoughts on some of them.
Solid breakdown of Helldivers 2's weapons, makes you appreciate the detail!!
More! WE NEED MORE!!! Please do part 3)))
Actually, I just had a thought about the fire version of the breaker. What if it's actually projecting some form of thermite pellets that remain vacuum-sealed until it gets fired out the barrel, igniting when finally exposed to oxygen?
4:34 yeah, Swedish ksp-58/FN-MAG have alot of possitions on the gas regulator. That is primarily for letting more gas through if the gun is fouled up, but it also de facto lets you alter rate of fire quite alot.
The USAF Museum in Dayton Ohio has a ICBM Gallery incase any of you are interested in visiting. I went there and it was both amazing and terrifying to stand at ground level next to previously active ICBMS
on the 249 i think the older models still have it you can adjust the gas regulator and it increases rpm from like...750 to 1000? or something close to that if I am remebering right? Though they got rid of it with some newer ones i believe because it could also make it be under gassed and not work..or you could overgass it and break it.
The Negev LMG it has a gas regulator too and if i can remember y has a lower rpm for mag fed ammo and to high rpm for belt fed ammo
17:45 the Piranha V would disagree it actual has that kind of lording system on its mortar module so not unrealistic at all.
Loved it! Some of the cooler weapons shown in Part 2 here
Amazing. I was using the Autocanon yesterday and wondered what ol Jonny boy would think of it. Cheer's, brother!
If y'all do Ghost Recon: Future Soldier in a future vid you can slow down or increase the RPM of most of the weapons. I guess the idea was/is higher RPMs can provide better cover fire, apply more rounds down range, and give your opponent pause for thought. That said I never do that unless I'm messing around and firehosing a corridor. I prefer to slow down most of my rifles to improve accuracy and handling.
This video goes well with a cup of LIBER-TEA!
This guy is a such a pro! Perfect tracking and explanation of all the features and design elements.
On the subject of the over-the-shoulder autocannon, Barret actually made an over-the-shoulder .50 BMG rifle meant for engaging helicopters and other light airborne targets, the M82A2, the idea is to move much of the weight behind you so that you can hold and aim it properly while standing, which is very much necessary if you plan to shoot things above you. It was never actually adopted though.
Lets not forget the really cool feature where bouncing rounds can and will hit your teammates. I am being sarcastic, but it is a cool feature that i appreciate, even when it gets me killed.
The lightning gun (arc thrower) is probably making bugs explode because the bugs are engineered to produce space fuel used to run FTL engines.
14:43 The JAR-5 is basically a bolter. As that's what a bolter is, a jet propelled large caliber rifle. Usually with explosive rounds, but not always.
Not something you covered but I appreciate that for all the one handed guns they have added one-banded reload animations, frequently with your character putting the gun on his chest, then inserting the magazine, like with the SMG or with the revolver he opens and empties with one hand, then puts it on his chest again with the cylinder open and inserts the rounds before flicking it closed again. We’ve come a long way from just waving the gun around offscreen and suddenly it has bullets again
Just once I'd like to see a game which accurately portrays the sound of a nuclear detonation, and the delay between being able to see the explosion and being able to hear it (at survivable ranges, that is)
Yeah unfortunately you kinda gotta design the sound engine with proper sound travel in mind. On paper/pseudocode it's fairly simple though, if the sound emitter is x game units away from player, delay sound playback by x amount of time based on distance, and then also whatever sound modulation/effects you wanna add based on distance as well.
@@crestfallenneet2167 For a special event like a nuke going off they could just "cheat" by having the sound delayed by a set amount of time, since the nuke is aimed beyond the playable game area anyway. That way there's no need to actually have the game calculate the sound delay.
The revolver 1:00 is based off the Mateba2006M which has a similar cylinder rotation when reloading. Saw it also in the Ghost In The Shell series.
more please! cant wait for part 3!
Thanks Dave, Jonathan and team. Some nice sci-fi guns there. Obviously I enjoyed seeing the railgun. I see its projectiles leave a visible trail behind them. That is a nice touch because such trails were actually seen (caused by air ionisation?) in the pioneering 1970s work with the ANU Canberra railgun, when hypervelocity projectiles were fired in air. I enjoyed the lightning gun too, but I think those are more a case of sci-fi magic.
[Comment is under investigation for treason]
Been waiting
"I've been waiting for this!"
Another “variable” rate of fire gun that comes to mind is the BAR with its slow and fast automatic settings
The Jar-5 Dominator reminds me a lot of the Inkunzi PAW. Patlabor aesthetics future knick angles, round mag, delayed fuse rounds, all that good stuff.
+1 week pushing for a E.Y.E. Divine Cybermancy, Darkwatch or Resistance episode.
The guns in Resistance will be a field trip
Jonathan should look at the guns of SAO Fatal Bullet and COD Advanced Warfare
FINALLY! I've been waiting for this one!
There are modern automatic muzzle-loading mortars, and they do use a mechanical arm to load. They're a little different than this, though, with the rounds being fed into a vertical stack by a crew from below.
There's actually a few autoloading mortar systems out there, they are usually vehicle mounted and basically exist for firing very very quick volleys and then scooting off to safety.
the swedish grkpbv 90 for example
If i ever travel to the UK, ill be going to that museum. Had no idea that the inception of the machine gun had the "rapid fire" and "more rapid fire" modes. Very cool.
There are top loader mortars in modern arms with similar system like the mortar sentry. The CV-90 with Mortar got similar loading system with difference that the ammunition is prepared by crew inside of the vehicle and its twin barrel.
Literally everything about that shoulder mounted, crew served, toggle autocannon excites me.
One cool detail is that the devs recently nerfed the Breaker shotgun, reducing it's ammo per mag- this was paired with changing the double-stack magazine into a single stack ingame as well so it's actually represented by the art.
Wow i was just like perhaps Jonathan is in a new epic video hopefully about Helldivers again and here we are 😻
Loved the take on these guns. Good to see an expert's reaction/opinion with real world examples. Not all game guns are realistic, but they don't need to be, they just need to be plausible and fun for the player, but still good to see the adaptation from a real world design that was made with certain intent or to solve a particular issue like heat or feed system. Loved the SR-9, never seen one of those before. Really cool design and reload system. Looks too heavy for a 1 man use.
4:30 M249 SAW. variable firerate is usually found in guns made to work in subzero temps, where fluids inside the rifle contract, thus needing more energy to be moved around properly.
The giggle when bringing out the bullpup 50 caliber rifle (or whatever category it is), hahahahahaha! Never change, Mr. Ferguson!
There’s an upcoming warbond that’s set to add yet more weapon types (which arrives on the 14th), so I already anticipate there being a 3rd episode for Helldivers 2…
At this point Firearms Expert Reacts with Jonathan Ferguson is such a core GameSpot series that they might as well poach him from the Royal Armouries. The rest of GameSpot could fail and these videos would still be gold every single time.
for the auto cannon it always reminded me at least in function as that shoulder mounted Barret .50 America was messing with in I believe the 80s or 90s that was intended to act as a anti helicopter weapon. sadly I don't remember what its name was.
You're basically right about the Dominator lol, its essentially a proto-Bolter and thats why its my favourite weapon
Another excellent video. Thank you.
I knew he would get a kick out of the Autocannon. My favorite weapon. Togglelock firearms are so cool.
the devs playing with OperatorDrewski also a great insight on how much gun knowledge he has why the game is thoughtfully and carefully well crafted ie: being able to change MG's rate of fire for its rule of engagement
when i see a Nuke i "Praise the sun" like @19:42
IIUC, variable-charge breech loading autoloaders not only exist, but are often outfitted with targeting software that allows them to send multiple rounds downrange starting with a very high trajectory and ending with a flatter one such that all rounds land on target at the same time for maximum impact and psychological damage.
The right-hand ejection on the LMG looks pretty realistic since you can see the cases coming out behind the belt box, suggesting something like a KelTec RDB with a very long bolt travel inside
You should have this guy review guns from Ground Branch. The devs love feedback, and are trying their best to make the guns as real as possible.
I clicked as soon as I saw that thumbnail. Rare to see anything Russ Robinson!
17:44 There is auto loaded mortar system like this IRL. It's a vehicle mounted weapon and such mechanism make it possible to encase it in a turret without adding a breach at the rear end. Also it means you can have a higher caliber tube without breach loading.
Suggestion for next video: I think we need another series of cursed guns from somewhere. Jonathan is overdue for a cursed gun or two.
> What about adjustable fire rates on the machine guns? Current infantryman here. LMGs and GPMGs like the M249 and M240 (dependant on the variant you get) have an adjustable gas setting that is used when your weapon has a lot of carbon in the gas tube thats slowing the cycling. This setting, when adjusted, can also increase the fire rate of the weapon.