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GoldenEye 007
The following weapons were used in the video game GoldenEye 007:
Walther PPK
The PP7 is based on the Walther PPK, the handgun used by Bond in the original novels and a majority of the films, including GoldenEye. In the first half of the game it is suppressed, with the last such weapon appearing in the mission "Bunker 2." It's Bond's main weapon, and is used in all the single-player missions. Boris fumbles one in Control. Silver and gold versions can be unlocked, which deal damage equal to the Cougar Magnum and the Golden Gun, respectively.
Tokagypt Type 58
The DD44 Dostovei appears to be based on the Tokagypt Type 58 version of the Tokarev TT-33. The model in the game has the horizontal lines and curved shape of the Tokagypt's grip panels. Carried by Gen. Ouromov and other officers. Scientists and Defense Minister Dimitri Mishkin will defend themselves with Dostoveis when attacked, and Spetznaz soldiers sometimes dual wield them.
Sa. Vz.61 Skorpion
The Klobb appears to be based on the Sa. Vz.61 Skorpion with the top-folding stock folded. It was originally called the Spyder, and later changed to Klobb after Rareware employee Ken Lobb; this was apparently due to fears the game's "paintball mode" would lead to infringement claims from the manufacturers of a paintball gun called the "Spyder." It is still listed in the game files alphabetically as if it were named Spyder. The Klobb is generally considered to be the most lackluster firearm in the game, having poor hitting power, a weak firing sound effect, dismal accuracy, and a small magazine size. It is carried by Spetznaz and FSB agents, often in pairs.
Norinco Type 56-1
The "KF7 Soviet" appears to be based on the Norinco Type 56-1, modified to resemble an AKS-74 as seen in GoldenEye. It has the hooded front sight of the Type 56, the long AK-74 style muzzle brake, and the folding stock is missing; other firearms based on folding stock models also have missing stocks. Like the AR33 rifle, it is capable of firing fullauto by holding the trigger, three-round bursts by tapping it, or single shots by tapping while using the zoom mode.
Micro Uzi
The ZMG appears to be an Uzi Pistol converted to automatic fire or a Micro Uzi with the folding stock removed; either way, it is also scaled up to the size of a regular Uzi. Carried by Alec Trevelyan's most loyal guards.
Heckler & Koch MP5K
The D5K Deutsche appears to be based on the Heckler & Koch MP5K. Standard weapon for Janus mercenaries. Bond uses one with a suppressor on the Frigate.
SITES Spectre M4
The Phantom appears to be based on the SITES Spectre M4, though it is missing the top-folding stock. Used by a few Janus terrorists in Frigate. The weapon seems to have been something of an afterthought in development; early builds do not have it at all, and it does not appear in multiplayer modes or even have its own firing sound, instead using the one for the KF7 Soviet.
M16A2 Rifle
The AR33 appears to be based on the M16A2 rifle, and was called "M16 A/2" in development. Unlike the real rifle, it can fire in both fullauto mode (by holding the fire button down) and burst (by tapping it); it is also able to fire single shots while the zoom mode is used. Carried by Janus mercenaries in Jungle and Caverns, and Drax security in Aztec. Trevelyan himself uses one in Cradle. In Aztec, Jaws dual-wields them, likely owing to his immense height and strength shown in the James Bond films. However, in Caverns a hidden pair allow Bond to do this himself.
FN P90
The RC-P90 is a highly inaccurate reproduction of the FN P90, with wooden grips, no optical sight, and an 80 round magazine due to an error in programming (50 in hexidecimal is 80 in decimal). Rare seem to have been unaware of what the magazine was, resulting in it becoming a huge white block taking up most of the midsection of the weapon. Carried by Xenia Onatopp in combination with the grenade launcher in the "Jungle" level, and used by Janus soldiers in "Caverns."
Generic pump-action shotgun
The Shotgun is a pump action shotgun with a pistol grip, no stock, and an extended tube magazine. With the extra shells mounted on top of the receiver, it resembles the Remington 870 folding stock seen in Terminator 2: Judgement Day. It is not used in either the single player campaign or multiplayer deathmatches, and can only be accessed with the "all guns" cheat. It is chiefly distinguished by being the second-loudest weapon in the game, after the tank cannon.
Generic semi-automatic shotgun
The Automatic Shotgun is a short-barrelled semiautomatic shotgun with a pistol grip, no stock, and a ventilated heat shield. Trevelyan's hit squad uses them in the "Statue" level, and they're also seen at the very end of the Caverns level. Notably, the visible shells attached to the weapon will be equal to the amount of shells in reserve if that number is five or lower.
Generic sniper rifle
The "Sniper Rifle" is a silenced semi-automatic sniper rifle with wooden furniture; it bears a passing resemblance to a couple of real-life sniper rifles, but none clearly enough to make a good judgment as to precisely what it was based on. Notably, the midsection is completely undetailed, the weapon having no clear action or magazine location. However, the rifle's scope layout and markings appear similar to the night vision scope on Bond's Walther WA 2000 in The Living Daylights.
When one of these weapons is in the players' inventory, the standard hand to hand karate chop attack is replaced by using the butt stock of the rifle as a makeshift melee club. Used by snowsuited marksmen in Surface. Bond finds one lying around in Dam.
Leaked footage of the cancelled XBox version showed the high-definition version of the weapon would have been depicted as a bolt-action rifle.
Ruger Redhawk
The Cougar Magnum appears to be based on the Ruger Redhawk. Despite a slow rate of fire, it is suprisingly powerful; capable of shooting through doors and other objects while retaining lethal force. It is also used by Natalya to plow through the jungle.
"Golden Gun"
The fictional Golden Gun, used by Christopher Lee in The Man With The Golden Gun, can be found in the Egyptian bonus level. It can also be unlocked and used in multiplayer mode. As with its' movie incarnation, a single shot from this weapon will immediately kill anyone it hits.
"Military Laser"
The Military Laser appears to be based on the Moonraker Laser, a prop from the movie Moonraker based on a plastic toy IMI Uzi. Used by Drax security in Aztec.
Unknown multi-shot grenade launcher
The grenade launcher appears similar to the customized rotary grenade launcher in Predator. Bond finds one behind a crate in Surface. Xenia dual wields one with a P90 in Jungle. Russian soldiers try to blow up Bond's stolen tank with grenade launchers in Streets.
Unknown rocket launcher
The rocket launcher is aesthetically similar to the Type 69, both having a single pistol grip and an exposed warhead. The differences being the grey color scheme, lack of a carrying handle, and unintelligible markings. Russian soldiers use rocket launchers to attack Bond's stolen tank in Streets. Bond finds a cache of rocket launchers in Depot and uses them to destroy Janus's merchandise.
Mk 2 hand grenade
The grenade appears to be based on the Mk 2 hand grenade.
Mines
In the game four different mines are seen, 3 based on the fictional Remote Mine design seen in GoldenEye (the "Remote Mine", "Timed Mine", and a "Proximity Mine"), and large disc-shaped anti-tank mines are seen in the St. Petersburg level. All mine types can be defeated by shooting at them, provided the player is able to spot them before they're detonated.
Taser
A comically designed stun gun, known in-game as a "Tazer Boy", can be unlocked with the "All Guns" cheat. It is incorrectly referred to as a Taser; Tasers have the ability to shoot pronged electrodes, a less-lethal electronic device that can not shoot is simply known as a stun gun. The "Tazer Boy" can shoot a projectile that is identical to a very weak bullet, further making this gun complete fiction.
Generic rotary gun
In the single-player levels comprising the Janus bases in St. Petersburg and Cuba, as well as the two bonus levels, the player must beware of automated gun turrets mounted on the ceiling equipped with six-barrel miniguns. These lack detail to the extent that declaring a precise model would be giving entirely too much credit; the entire barrel group is just a solid hexagonal block. The Cuban base is also equipped with camouflaged turrets on the ground fitted with twin Miniguns.
See Also
- GoldenEye 007 (2010)