Rifles

Go Back



Infantry Rifle

A standard-issue firearm for soldiers, often used for long-range engagements. It typically features a long barrel and is designed for accuracy and durability in various combat conditions.

Carbine

A shorter, lighter version of a rifle, designed for ease of use in confined spaces or for mobile infantry. Carbines are typically less accurate than full-sized rifles but are highly maneuverable.

Assault Rifle

A selective-fire rifle that can switch between automatic and semi-automatic fire, designed for military use. It typically fires intermediate cartridges, providing a balance of range, firepower, and mobility.

Rifled Musket

A 19th-century firearm that combines the rifling technology of modern guns with the muzzle-loading system of earlier muskets. It was known for its increased range and accuracy compared to smoothbore muskets.

Musket

A smoothbore, long-barreled firearm used before the development of rifled guns. It required manual loading of powder and shot and was used extensively from the 16th to the 19th centuries.

Sniper Rifle

Sniper Rifles are precision firearms designed for long-range accuracy, enabling skilled shooters, or snipers, to engage distant targets with high precision. These rifles typically feature long barrels for improved accuracy, high-powered optics for enhanced sighting at long ranges, and often use specially designed ammunition that minimizes ballistic deviation. Commonly employed by military and law enforcement for reconnaissance, counter-sniping, and anti-personnel roles, sniper rifles are engineered for stability and reliability under various conditions, and are often bolt-action or semi-automatic, allowing for controlled and highly accurate shooting.