Army of Two: Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Army of Two: Difference between revisions
The [[Glock|Glock]] was introduced as the G18C. It should be noted that the weapon's image is that of a sub-compact Glock of unknown caliber. The in game capacity of 24 or 48 rounds does not help in properly IDing the specific weapon.
The [[Glock pistol series|Glock]] was introduced as the G18C. It should be noted that the weapon's image is that of a sub-compact Glock of unknown caliber. The in game capacity of 24 or 48 rounds does not help in properly IDing the specific weapon.
[[Image:G27.jpg|thumb|none|400px|Glock 27 .40 S&W,used as an example.]]
[[Image:G27.jpg|thumb|none|400px|Glock 27 .40 S&W,used as an example.]]
Army of Two is a 2008 third-person shooter for the Xbox 360 and PS3. The player characters are two US Army Rangers, Rios and Salem, who join a Private Military Company at the request of their former commander. During their missions they find themselves in the middle of a conspiracy, and soon have to fight their way out of it.
The following weapons appear in the video game Army of Two:
The GE M134 Minigun was introduced as the M134. Ali Yousef, a terrorist in Iraq responsible for killing one of the officers from your old Ranger unit wields this weapon. For $175,000 it can be yours (or you can just beat the game on any difficulty setting), the custom gold and silver plating will set you back an extra $10,000. Like most video game Gatling guns it fires at a slow rate but has considerably higher damage than other automatic weapons, and in this game, Aggro. It fires at 600 rounds per minute and has a magazine capacity of 200 rounds that are loaded by invisible magazines inserted into the spade grip. Standard loadout gives you 600 spare rounds to play with but you can carry up to 800 plus what is loaded in the weapon. Like most games the gun must "spin up" first before it begins feeding and firing ammunition. Unlike most games the barrel cluster doesn't even rotate completely defeating the point of the "spin up." Due to the third person view and how the character holds the weapon it is difficult to see that the barrels don't rotate but from certain angles you can see that they in fact do not. Despite how the game prides itself with insane weapon customization, this gun has no upgrades, not even a GE or DA type flash suppressor.
Grenade Launchers
Milkor MGL Mk 1L
The Milkor MGL Mk 1L was introduced as the "MGL MK-X". It is notable that while you carry the actual payload of the MGL Mk 1L, you only have three spare rounds compared to the minimum two full reloads found on real life Grenadier's vests.
Secondary Weapons
Pistols
Beretta 92FS
The Beretta 92FS was introduced as the M92 Elite II.
The Glock was introduced as the G18C. It should be noted that the weapon's image is that of a sub-compact Glock of unknown caliber. The in game capacity of 24 or 48 rounds does not help in properly IDing the specific weapon.
The FIM-92A Stinger was introduced as the FIM92 Stinger.While in real life this missile system is Death to helicopters. In game the weapon uses multiple rounds to destroy an unarmored transport helicopter. The only time it should be used by a player is during the Dam fight in China. It is used in the Dalton's demise cutscene.
FGM-148 Javelin
The FGM-148 Javelin was seen in the cutscene where Philip Clyde tries to kill Rios and Salem by blowing up the plane that the trio were flying in.
Grenades
M61 Grenade
The grenades used ingame. Anachronistic as the Military is currently issued M67 grenades since Vietnam.