Name: Rye Ahn
Rank: Commander
Magic/Class: Ash Conjurer, mainly uses a double revolver
An officer of the Grand Navy, and the mentor of Jinhao and Andre.
Name: Rye Ahn
Rank: Commander
Magic/Class: Ash Conjurer, mainly uses a double revolver
An officer of the Grand Navy, and the mentor of Jinhao and Andre.
this artstyle is delicious ong
is that a tomboy or a femboy
Bro got .357 Magnums before 1955 ![]()
Great art, and as a fellow Ash Conjurer I definitely APPROVE running Conjurer with Ash magic
Is this not set in the current AO time
Is this a modern version
tomboy
i put that text for when i need references on her guns in the future ![]()
bro you do know when modern revolvers were made right
Fair enough, I made a literal revolver hybrid that’s just a bayonet, a makeshift handle(unergonomic) and a Colt Anaconda(.44 Magnum) somehow rechambered for .50 caliber rounds in a 4 inch barrel(not short enough to count as a snubnose revolver but close enough to one)
But back in the 1850s they would’ve had stuff like this:
(this is a Colt Walker FYI)
Generally these were a pain to reload: they didn’t really have metallic cartridges (e.g. contemporary rounds such as 5.56x45mm NATO, .22 Long Rifle, .50 BMG, .30-06 Springfield, .45 ACP). So either you had a powder horn (a waterproofed animal horn, that stored black powder) and lead shot (just a round ball, later turned into shaped bullets that resembled modern blunt-tipped bullets), or paper cartridges that were pre-measured for powder charge (since excess powder could cause catastrophic failures such as the gun exploding in a hand).
While in the late 1850s the Remington Model 1858 existed, with a new system that allowed the cylinder to be detached without major disassembly (Colt models had their barrels removed just to detach the cylinder iirc), but most people just bought a bunch instead of buying only the cylinders (due to the higher chance of the cylinders going off on their own, and the fact that military-issued ones didn’t come with spares).
(I did not expect to write this but I guess I did it)
But if this is some modern-era AU then I guess everything I explained is just pointless ![]()
the author refuses to respond or just say what time period it is so i’m guessing they have literally no knowledge of history and they’re trying to put modern firearms in the 1850s
I mean I don’t really mind but like it does irk me a tiny bit.
What’s next, an AR-15?
“the AR in AR-15 stands for assault rifle”
I genuinely can’t stand it when somebody says that… like c’mon at least know the company that originally designed it; it ain’t Colt, they just got the designs sold to them by Armalite, which is literally what the “AR“ in AR-15 stands for. “AR“ is Armalite, 15 just means it was their 15th design (which was just a downscaled AR-10).
ok no lie i lowkey just took the gun from her modern au’s design and forgot to take into account that ao takes places in the 80s ![]()
ill fix this thx bro
twin im not chronically online i rarely check forums to begin with
to answer ur question: no this is not modern au i just forgot to switch out her gun from her original design (which was in modern era), thx for letting me know
do yall have any gun recommendations from the 80s? preferably revolver types
Well, you could always go with Colt models. Examples could be the Colt Walker (it’s massive FYI, like 15.5 inches long), Model 1851 (.36 caliber), Pocket Percussion models (basically the closest thing to concealed carry guns), and the Colt Dragoon.
If you want something else, there’s really just Remington(with the Remington-Beals Pocket Revolver and Model 1858) and Smith & Wesson(with the Model 1) but those two made revolvers in 1857 and onwards. Still around the same time period so it works.
Side note: S&W Model 1 uses rimfire cartridges, not lead balls and powder. They kinda had a monopoly on metallic cartridge revolvers for two decades because they had licensed the patent to do so.