


Because you know, a shotgun that ceased production over 50 years before the game is supposed to be set is still considered relevant in the mid 21st century. One of the devs even mentioned a SPAS 12 beign in the game I believe. I'm pretty sure that in the reveal trailer, there was a brief shot of a Beretta ARX-160 and a holstered pistol that resembled the Steyr M9-A1 was also spotted. I've yanked the "MGL," (didn't look anything like an MGL, it's some werido gun with the export G36 sight and a cylinder that uses giant Dardick Trounds instead of grenades) Evil Tim ( talk) 01:57, 18 September 2014 (EDT) There was a debate on the talk page for Alien: Resurrection, but in general, made up guns that physically exists (props) trump made up guns that only exist in video games or animation. Just a note, bar the 1911 how would alien resurrection qualify? All of the guns are fictional and not based on anything yet halos rifle is loosely based off f2000 and the sniper rifle a mix of barrett m82 and as50 - Forrest1985 ( talk) 12:11, 11 August 2014 (EDT)forrest1985 It's one thing to just change the name, either because you're lazy or you don't want to pay the licensing fees, but it's another to just invent guns.

How did the Crysis games qualify then? Of course, it's really too early to tell much about AW's guns until closer to release. Halo and Turok and Monday Night Combat were disqualified under the same criteria. If we're using words like "resembles" or "based upon" for every entry on a video game page, I'm not certain about its eligibility. The same Spyderco Military knife from Modern Warfare 3 is reused during some Grappling Hook attacks in the level "Sentinel".
