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Talk:Valorant

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
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Some of these IDs are a bit generous. I'm not sure this title is eligible. --Funkychinaman (talk) 00:01, 26 December 2020 (EST)

Eh, some of them are certainly off a bit (e.g. the Zastava-Operator connection, despite the Operator having a Barrett-style lower and what appears to be a slanted Arctic Warfare bolt, the Judge looking more like a mocked-up tube-fed shotgun than an actual AA-12, or the Vandal having more in common with the Alpha AK than the AEK prototype), some of them are missing parts (e.g. the Classic looking a fair bit like a Ruger P-series pistol in addition to the Px4, the Ghost having the underbarrel components of the Hudson H9, or the Spectre having bits of a UMP45), and some are missing IDs entirely (e.g. the Odin being essentially a giant KAC ChainSAW with an MG42-style charging handle, the Phantom being a really smooth HK433 with a SCAR-H mag shoved in it, and whatever the Marshal is trying to be), but I'd still say it's eligible - a lot of the guns have a pretty evident real-world inspiration. Pyr0m4n14c (talk) 10:43, 26 December 2020 (EST)
Real-world inspiration opens up a lot of doors, doors we don't necessarily want opened. --Funkychinaman (talk) 16:13, 26 December 2020 (EST)
There are enough realistic looking guns like the pistols, the LWRC and MPX SMGs and the Alpha AK ect but the page needs work. All the images seemed to be "borrowed" from Valorant's wiki.--AgentGumby (talk) 16:36, 26 December 2020 (EST)
I wanted to "open the door," so to say, for someone with the means to better screenshot, identify and write the article for the game, so I took it upon myself to lay some groundwork, figuring it was better or nothing. I did read the guidelines about if a media should have an article for it or not, i agree Valorant is kinda straddling the line, but I will let those in the power for it to delete the page if they see fit.--Jaffaceksi (talk) 03:41, 31 December 2020 (EST)
In that case the article should be transferred to the talk page here as a WIP until it has at least all the entries completed. It is not good practice to rely on someone else to finish a page after you start it. When I created the Star Wars Battlefront article I started it as a talk page first.--AgentGumby (talk) 12:02, 31 December 2020 (EST)

Save Data


Valorant
Valorant Cover Art.jpg
Release Date: 2020
Developer: Riot Games
Publisher: Riot Games
Platforms: Microsoft Windows (PC)
Genre: First-person shooter


Valorant (stylized as VALORANT) is a competetive multiplayer first-person shooter by Riot Games, known best for League of Legends. In gameplay highly comparable to Counter-Strike, two teams of 5 face off against eachother across multiple rounds, with the attacking team attempting to deliver and detonate the Spike in designated locations, which the defenders must prevent. In the start of each round, players (known as Agents) can purchase more powerful weapons with credits awarded for their performance in the previous round. However, each Agent is also equipped with unique abilities provided by either advanced technology or supernatural powers, including walls of fire, recon drones, orbital laser bombardment, wind-powered dashes and ghostly teleportation.

The following weapons appear in the video game Valorant:

Handguns

Classic

The basic pistol every player receives, dubbed the "Classic," resembles a Beretta Px4 Storm with it's beveled slide and skeletonized hammer, though featuring an unique grip with a heavily slanted butt. Has an alternate fire which fires a lightning-fast 3-round burst.

Beretta Px4 Storm - 9x19mm
"Classic"

"Ghost"

The "Ghost" has an obvious Desert Eagle barrel and slide, though heavily elongated and vertically squished, married onto a nondescript striker-fired pistol. Comes equipped with a suppressor and a cosmetic laser sight.

IMI Desert Eagle Mark XIX - .50 AE
Browning Buckmark - .22 LR.
"Ghost"

Sheriff

The "Sheriff" is an expensive, beefy revolver that can one-shot Agents on a headshot. Not distinctly based on any design, though it has a barrel shroud similar to a Taurus Raging Hunter and a hexagonal cylinder like Chiappa revolvers.

Taurus Raging Hunter - .44 Magnum
"Sheriff"

Shotguns

Shorty

The cheapest purchasable weapon in the game, the "Shorty" is a compact double-barrel shotgun that can be carried instead of a pistol.

"Shorty." Note the presence of aperture and blade sights despite the barrel length; supposedly this is a "factory" model rather than a sawed-off full-size shotgun.

Bucky

This otherwise standard pump shotgun features an interesting airburst mode as it's alternate fire; the shell flies for 8 meters before releasing a forward spray of buckshot, as if the weapon was fired 8 meters ahead.

Benelli Supernova Slug - 12 gauge
"Bucky."

Judge

MPS AA-12 CQB - 12 gauge
"Judge."

Submachine Guns

Frenzy

The "Frenzy" is a cheap machine pistol that can be carried in the pistol slot; it resembles a KRISS Vector compacted down to a TEC-9 sized package.

KRISS USA Gen II Vector SDP - .45 ACP / 9x19mm Parabellum
"Frenzy."

Stinger

Cheaper of the two primary submachine guns, the "Stinger" has an extremely fast firerate, and a 4-round burst mode when aiming down the sights.

LWRC SMG-45, 2015 prototype - .45 ACP
"Stinger."

Spectre

The "Spectre" comes suppressed and is the choice for when one wants a fully automatic primary, but doesn't have the funds for a full-power rifle.

SIG-Sauer MPX SBR, Gen 2 - 9x19mm
"Spectre."

Assault Rifles

Bulldog

Cheapest of the automatic assault rifles, the "Bulldog" is weaker than the other two, but has a 3-round burst when aiming down the sights.

IWI Tavor 7 - 7.62x51mm NATO
"Bulldog."

Guardian

The semi-automatic "Guardian" trades rate of fire for a higher zoom and instantly lethal headshots at any range.

Springfield Armory SOCOM 16 CQB - 7.62x51mm NATO
"Guardian."

Phantom

The premium assault rifle "Phantom" comes suppressed and has good damage, rate of fire and accuracy across the board.

"Phantom."

Vandal

A counterpart to the Phantom, the "Vandal" has the same price tag, but trades some rate of fire and accuracy for damage capable of one-shot kill headshots as well as higher penetration. Unlike in Counter-Strike where the M4A1 and the AK-47 have their own fans, but are only available for purchase for their respective teams, in Valorant both teams can choose between the Phantom and Vandal at their leisure.

AK-Alfa with 12.4" barrel, 45 degree gas block, KeyMod forend and MH1 reflex sight - 7.62x39mm
"Vandal."

Sniper Rifles

Marshal

"Marshal."

Operator

The "Operator" is a large sniper rifle that's expensive and clumsy to handle, but one-shots Agents from the waist up, and even a leg-shot requires shields to survive.

Zastava M93 "Black Arrow" - .50 BMG
"Operator."

Machine Guns

Ares

Heckler & Koch HK11E - 7.62x51mm NATO
"Ares."

Odin

"Odin."

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