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Talk:Overwatch

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Revision as of 06:21, 4 June 2017 by Pyr0m4n14c (talk | contribs) (→‎Saving Page Data: new section)
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SMGs from Sombra short film

Not sure what these are, but they're never seen that well throughout the Sombra short film. Unsure if totally fictionalized or based on something or if they are something. They seem to have AK-style bakelight (?) magazines, though.

Sight, rails, sort of an AKish looking muzzle?
Folding stock maybe. The magazine is rather clear here.

There's also a short film starring Winston which features some gun-weilding commandos. But it's too dark to really see anything. Could be the same gun model, though. --Clonehunter (talk) 15:49, 3 June 2017 (EDT)

IIRC, the guns used in Winston's character intro video looked a bit like Tavors, but maybe that's just me. Also, we might be able to wire in the rocket launcher used by Pharah, the autoloading shotguns used by Reaper (of which he carries a literally infinite amount), and maybe Widowmaker's hybrid sniper rifle/assault rifle (which, in the latter mode, seems to use a balanced-action principle, with the top of the handguard pivoting forward with every shot as the barrel recoils. Any thoughts? Pyr0m4n14c (talk) 19:48, 3 June 2017 (EDT) P.S.: I'm calling it now, there are going to be people calling for this page to get nuked, saying that it doesn't have enough real weapons to justify its existence.
I feel like they have a point, outside the very obviously real guns in the one movie. It's incredibly arbitrary this game has a page but Halo, which is far and away more realistic, doesn't. That revolver, for instance, looks absolutely nothing like any single real-world gun I've ever seen in my life; it's like Blizzard just told their modelers to make a generic revolver, slap some LEDs on it, and then stick a spur in the grip and call it a day. The same goes for the one character's SMG; it's just about every generic SMG/machine pistol trope you could have (one handed, collapsed stock, fore-grip you don't use) rolled into one gun, although I'll grant it's still closer to the CPW. Same for the grenade launcher; it's very obviously not a real gun. And the blunderbuss: I feel like that's a really generic weapon category anyway. And the minigun: Bastion's has almost half again as many barrels as a real M134, so I feel like IDing it as one is quite a bit of a stretch (although pointing out the ways in which it's not an M134 does seem legitimate); the gangster in the video at least has one with the appropriate number of barrels. Apart from those two guns (the AKs and the minigun), though, I feel like everything else is clearly fictional and shouldn't be on the page. If you can't name a single real-world analog for the gun (like the revolver specifically), it's not worth having, in my opinion. --That's the Way It's Done (talk) 23:15, 3 June 2017 (EDT)
You called it right, this page serves no point. Sure the game is popular, but every gun has generic elements. McCree's Revolver barely works in the context of gun design with a wafer thin grip, spur and magical sabot bullets. The Soldier 76 stuff is fairly generic, 1911's are holster stuffers in dozens of games and that skin for his rifle just looks like a bunch of M4 bits stuck together. Anything with Junkrat or Roadhog makes little sense and isn't based on reality, and Sombra's SMG only vaguely looks like a CPW. A game can be popular but nothing in this page is worth saving because only a few weapons are based on reality. And a few guns in promo videos that look like morphed versions of AK's and M134's isn't worth saving for a full page, especially for a game this big. --PaperCake 00:23, 4 June 2017 (EST)
Well, in that case... Pyr0m4n14c (talk) 02:19, 4 June 2017 (EDT)

Saving Page Data


Overwatch
Overwatch BoxArt.jpg
PC Boxart
Release Date: 2016
Developer: Blizzard Entertainment
Publisher: Blizzard Entertainment
Series: Overwatch
Platforms: PC, PS4, Xbox 360
Genre: First-person shooter


Overwatch is a 2016 cross-platform video game by Blizzard that mixes team-based first-person shooter gameplay with MOBA-esque elements.

The following weapons appear in Counter-Strike: Global Offensive:


Overview

The majority of weapons that appear in Overwatch are "futuristic" sci-fi weapons with varying capabilities. Given that IMFDb's purpose is to catalog actual firearms or firearms that can be confused for the real thing, only the weapons that can fit those two criteria will be included on this page, while all other weapons will be absent. In addition to gameplay, this page will also cover firearms that appear in promotional trailers and short films related to the game.

Handguns

McCree's Revolver

McCree's primary weapon is a six-round DA/SA revolver that appears to be of a custom design. It appears to fire tracer-rounds and, like most video game revolvers, the weapon is incredibly accurate. In addition to firing it in double-action, McCree can also "fan the hammer" to quickly discharge however many rounds are left in the gun.

McCree's unusual looking revolver.
McCree flashes his revolver giving us a good look at the rifling in the barrel and what appear to be flat head bullets. There appears to be a built-in laser of some kind underneath the barrel.
In a rather appropiate Wild West setting in Hollywood, McCree holds his revolver at the ready. Oddly, the hammer only moves after a round has been fired.
Upon reloading, McCree dumps all spent and unspent casings and replaces them with rounds fed from a speedloader. Surprisingly, this speedloader also appears when watching McCree reload in the third-person.
After reloading the rounds, McCree flicks his wrist to shut the cylinder.

M1911

Soldier: 76's alternate 'Commando 76' and 'Night Ops' skins appears to come with an M1911 placed in a holster. The firearm can not be used by the player.

Colt M1911 - .45 ACP
'Commando 76' carries an M1911 in a holster. For this skin, the 1911 has brown wooden grips, but for the 'Night Ops' skin, the grips are black.

Rifles

Soldier: 76's Pulse Rifle (Commando 76 Skin)

Soldier: 76's fictional Pulse Rifle takes on the general appearance of an M4 carbine when players equip the 'Commando 76' or 'Night Ops' skins.

Colt M4 Carbine with 4 position collapsible stock - 5.56x45mm
Though its still obviously a fictional 'space gun,' the 'Commando 76' and 'Night Ops' skins for Soldier: 76 visually transforms his Pulse Rifle into a weapon with various M4 carbine styled parts and accessories.

Norinco Type 56

Norinco Type 56 rifles (Without the under-folding bayonet) are used by various criminals in the promotional short films, with the weapons being most notably used by Los Muertos gang members in the "Hero" short.

Norinco Type 56, early milled receiver model with under-folding ("pig sticker") bayonet - 7.62x39mm
A Los Muertos gang member lets loose with a Norinco Type 56 in Dorado in the "Hero" short film.
A bank robber opens fire with his Type 56 before receiving a face-full of Soldier: 76's rifle butt stock.

Submachine Guns

Sombra's Machine Pistol

Sombra carries a futuristic machine pistol resembling a cross between a Heckler & Koch MP7 and an ST Kinetics CPW as her weapon of choice. Despite its fast rate of fire, 60-round magazine, and generous damage output, the weapon's bullet spread make it nigh-useless at anything but close quarters combat. What appears to be a holographic sight attached to the rail is actually a round-counter.

Heckler & Koch MP7 - 4.6x30mm
ST Kinetics CPW (Compact Personal Weapon) with EOTech holographic sight and RIS foregrip - 9x19mm
Sombra's customized and futuristic submachine gun. Note that in-game, the weapon is called the 'SENTINEL-00.' Notable differences from a normal MP7 include the stock, the placement of the bolt, and the fairly odd-looking computer components grafted onto the side.
Sombra flashes the SMG, showing us that the barrel is placed higher than on a normal MP7.
The in-game model for the machine pistol. What appears to be a sight of some kind attached to the rail is actually a hexadecimal ammo counter, which currently reads 30. The skull next to the gun's designation is Sombra's personal emblem.
Sombra reloads the machine pistol. Note that the ammo counter flips down during the reload process, and only flips back up after Sombra chambers a fresh round.
Katya Volskaya is threatened with the SENTINEL-00 in an animated cinematic that predated Sombra's arrival to the actual game.

Machine Guns

M134 Minigun

Bastion's sentry mode turns the robot (or Omnic, as robots are called in the game) into a stationary battlefield fixture equipped with a fictionalized M134 Minigun. Although it's not the most accurate weapon at longer ranges, its nonetheless powerful and keeps most enemies clear of wherever Bastion is stationed. A gang member in the "Hero" short utilizes a handheld M134.

General Electric M134 - 7.62x51mm NATO
Bastion sits tight with a shrouded M134 minigun.
The barrels are uncovered in Bastion's 'Antique' skin.
Bastion's M134 cools down after being used to level a forest in a cinematic. Note the number of barrels.
Airsoft handheld M134 Minigun with 'Chainsaw grip' - 7.62x51mm NATO
In the "hero" short film, a Los Muertos gang member unleashes an M134 minigun that was hidden in a box of piñatas.

Shotguns

Roadhog's Scrapgun (Mako Skin)

Roadhog's fictional Scrap Gun (a shotgun styled weapon that shoots--you guessed it--scrap metal) turns into a double-barreled blunderbuss-styled weapon when equipping Roadhog's nautical themed skins.

Modern replica of English 1766 Blunderbuss Flintlock
Roadhog's rather bizarre looking double-barreled blunderbuss weapon. In some ways, it also resembles a Howdah Pistol.
Roadhog's ultimate ability transforms the blunderbuss-esque weapon into some kind of crank-operated weapon.
The weapon fires scrap metal. Upon being reloaded, Roadhog shovels in a handful of various pieces of metal before flicking his wrist to snap the break-open shotgun closed.

Launchers

Junkrat's Grenade Launcher

Junkrat carries a custom-built grenade launcher. Interestingly, it seems to fire the grenades via a small wheel attached to the side of it.

Junkrat's custom grenade launcher. Note the grenade magazine, which seems to have been built from an ammo can of some kind.

Six Gun Killer Movie Poster

A movie poster for the fictional film Six Gun Killer features a variety of "Wild West" weapons.

(Starting at the top-left and going clockwise around the poster) Two Single Action Army revolvers, an 1892 "Mare's Leg," another SAA, a double barreled shotgun, a Remington 1875 revolver, what appears to be a (highly out-of-place) Chiappa Rhino 50DS, and a LeMat Revolver.

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