Difference between revisions of "Tomislav"
(→Trivia) |
|||
Line 53: | Line 53: | ||
==Trivia== | ==Trivia== | ||
* The name Tomislav is derived from the verb ''tomiti'', meaning "to suppress," which relates to the suppressed spin-up sound of the weapon.<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomislav_%28name%29</ref> | * The name Tomislav is derived from the verb ''tomiti'', meaning "to suppress," which relates to the suppressed spin-up sound of the weapon.<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomislav_%28name%29</ref> | ||
− | * Alternatively the name could be | + | ** Alternatively, the name could also be a pun on "Tommy Gun", a more well-known name for the Thompson submachine gun. |
== References == | == References == |
Revision as of 05:23, 21 June 2011
“Ok guys, bad news: we lost that last one.” This article documents unreleased content. It may contain speculation, broken links, or errors. |
“ | I am Heavy Weapons Guy, and this is my new weapon.
Click to listen
— The Heavy prepares for a stand-off
|
” |
The Tomislav is a primary weapon for the Heavy. It is a large Template:W with two handles, an ammo drum connected to its underside and a carrying strap hanging below. It will be released with the Über Update.
The Tomislav will have a faster, silent spin-up time, at the expense of a slower firing speed.
Damage and function times
See also: Damage
Damage and function times | ||
---|---|---|
Shot type | Hitscan | |
Damage | ||
Maximum ramp-up | 150% | 13.5 / per bullet |
Base damage | 100% | 9 / per bullet |
Maximum fall-off | 52.8% | 4.5 / per bullet |
Point blank | 50-54 / per 1 ammo 500-540 / per second | |
Medium range | 5-30 / per 1 ammo 50-300 / per second | |
Long range | 5-10 / per 1 ammo 50-100 / per second | |
Critical | 27 / per bullet | |
Mini-crit | 12 / per bullet | |
Function times | ||
Attack interval | 0.125 s | |
Wind-up time | 0.5 s | |
Values are approximate and determined by community testing. |
Related Achievements
Heavy
|
|
Trivia
- The name Tomislav is derived from the verb tomiti, meaning "to suppress," which relates to the suppressed spin-up sound of the weapon.[1]
- Alternatively, the name could also be a pun on "Tommy Gun", a more well-known name for the Thompson submachine gun.
References
|