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Talk:Assassin's Creed III: Difference between revisions
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Seems like a match to me. Also is anyone here familiar with IDing cannons?[[User:Mr.Ice|Mr.Ice]] ([[User talk:Mr.Ice|talk]]) 21:17, 11 January 2013 (EST) | Seems like a match to me. Also is anyone here familiar with IDing cannons?[[User:Mr.Ice|Mr.Ice]] ([[User talk:Mr.Ice|talk]]) 21:17, 11 January 2013 (EST) | ||
== Brown Bess == | |||
Just an initial heads-up to say that while the section heading for the Brown Bess correctly identifies it as a musket, it's referred to as a "rifle" in the captions, which it most assuredly is not. | |||
That being said, however, even if it's referred to as a Brown Bess and it would be historically correct for Redcoats and some settlers to have it (though they should have Trade Muskets really), the in-game model is definitely NOT a Brown Bess. Note how it has barrel hoops, something no Brown Bess model (except a replica made by Denix) ever had, and the highly curved stock with decorative brasswork on the buttplate is more reminescent of a sportsman's Pennsylvania/Kentucky Rifle than any military-issue firearm of the period (but no rifle of that type had bayonet lugs or barrel hoops). Frankly that monstrosity looks like a Kentucky Long Rifle had a night of passion with a Charleville 1766 Musket. - Phalanx |
Revision as of 14:14, 12 January 2013
Yeah I haven't played any of these. Evil Tim (talk) 07:31, 28 November 2012 (EST)
There was a scene where Connor referred to a man's Brown Bess as a "rifle". Excalibur01 (talk) 12:20, 28 November 2012 (EST)
Desmond's pistol training
In this game, Desmond spends ten memory sequences in the memories of two ancestors, both of which fire their guns left handed, although Connor uses his primary with his right. After the tenth sequence, (during whcih he becomes completely adept at using their fighting styles), Desmond Miles is called upon to rescue his father in Abstergo. Late in that mission, he takes Daniel Cross' Mark 23 and uses it to rape throught the ranks of Abstergo agents.
(Side note: I think the Mark 23 is the same model Ubisoft used in Splinter Cell: Conviction.)
So before you lamblast me with insults of my stupidity, I thought that since I'm among the experts, I might as well:
In the REAL WORLD, if someone were to train with just single shot pistols long enough to master them and have a very tight grouping, then be put in a high-stress situation with a modern handgun in their off-hand (although Desmond probably now is ambidextrous), would they be able to hit with a high enough accuracy to hit foreheads, hearts, and graze the jugular so the target bleeds out?
SIGman (talk) 09:53, 27 December 2012 (EST)
Personally you would think the modern day assassins would have trained Desmond in modern combat tactics and how to use guns and other things. The fight at Abstergo was so out of place Excalibur01 (talk) 00:33, 12 January 2013 (EST)
Desmond's only training has been within the Animus, via the memories of Altair, Ezio, and now Conner. I don't think he's been given any modern training. Spartan198 (talk) 07:08, 12 January 2013 (EST)
Also, no matter how much you train, it's unlikely in the real world you'll ever achieve "a very tight grouping" with a late-18th-century flintlock pistol, since they're some of the most horrifically inaccurate weapons known to man. At best, you could hope to consistently hit a man-size target at fifteen yards, but anything else would be wishful thinking. - Phalanx
Flintlock Pistol
I think the flintlock pistol is a very anachronistic Harper's Ferry Flintlock: Harper's Ferry Flintlock. --SmithandWesson36 (talk) 20:17, 11 January 2013 (EST)
Seems like a match to me. Also is anyone here familiar with IDing cannons?Mr.Ice (talk) 21:17, 11 January 2013 (EST)
Brown Bess
Just an initial heads-up to say that while the section heading for the Brown Bess correctly identifies it as a musket, it's referred to as a "rifle" in the captions, which it most assuredly is not.
That being said, however, even if it's referred to as a Brown Bess and it would be historically correct for Redcoats and some settlers to have it (though they should have Trade Muskets really), the in-game model is definitely NOT a Brown Bess. Note how it has barrel hoops, something no Brown Bess model (except a replica made by Denix) ever had, and the highly curved stock with decorative brasswork on the buttplate is more reminescent of a sportsman's Pennsylvania/Kentucky Rifle than any military-issue firearm of the period (but no rifle of that type had bayonet lugs or barrel hoops). Frankly that monstrosity looks like a Kentucky Long Rifle had a night of passion with a Charleville 1766 Musket. - Phalanx