Single-barrel pistols, fired with one hand; -5 STR if fired 2-handed
name caliber OCV STR Rmod Pc Vel Damage Stun rds.-feed-mass wpn, kg cost sights ROF
Remington Target Pistol 45 Long Colt +1 8 -1/4 3 1 1d6+1 +1 1 breech -- 1.5 £8 rifle 1
-- introduced 1891, a variant of the rolling block system
smoothbore duelling pistol 11mm cap & ball +1 5 -1/2 3 1 1d6 +1 1 muzzle -- 1.0 £8 none 1
-- typical of a number of Continental weapons; rifled (or secretly rifled) versions are -1/3
Light revolvers, fired with one hand; -5 STR if fired 2-handed
name caliber OCV STR Rmod Pc Vel Damage Stun rds.-feed-mass wpn, kg cost sights ROF
Apache Knuckleduster 7mm Short RF +0 0 -1/1" 0 1 0.5d6 0 4 cyl -- 0.5 £1 none 1
-- a combination of short folding knife, brass knuckles, and revolver, popular among urban hoodlums; very slow reloading
Hopkins & Allen 32 Colt Short +1 0 -1/2 2 1 0.5d6 +1 5 cyl -- 0.6 £1 fixed d
-- a top break revolver typical of various low-power but common handguns (Harrington & Richardson, S&W, etc.)
Muff Pistol 32 Extra Short RF +0 0 -1/1 0 1 0.5d6 0 5 cyl -- 0.5 £1 fixed 1
-- single action, spur trigger revolvers used by women and gamblers; very slow reloading
Turbiaux Protector 32 Extra Short RF +0 0 -1/1 0 1 0.5d6 0 7 int -- 0.4 £2 none d
-- the palm-squeezer pistol, being about the size of a shoe-polish can; reloading is very slow.
Other very concealable pistols have similar stats
Heavy revolvers, fired with one hand; -5 STR if fired 2-handed
name caliber OCV STR Rmod Pc Vel Damage Stun rds.-feed-mass wpn, kg cost sights ROF
Colt Bisley 45 Long Colt +1 12 -1/4 3 1 1d6+1 +1 6 cyl -- 1.1 £7 fixed 1
-- a top of the line target pistol; reloads slowly through a side gate
Colt Frontier 45 Long Colt +1 12 -1/3 3 1 1d6+1 +1 6 cyl -- 1.2 £4 fixed 1
-- the iconic cowboy revolver; also available in 44-40, 44 Colt, and many lesser calibers; reloads slowly through a side gate
Colt New Army/Navy 38 Long Colt +1 7 -1/3 3 1 1d6 0 6 cyl -- 0.9 £4 fixed d
-- becomes standard U.S. Army sidearm in 1892; reloads by swinging out the cylinder
Le Mat 45 Long Colt/16 ga +0 10 -1/3" 3 1 1d6+1 +1 9 cyl -- 1.5 £30 fixed 1
-- unwieldy break-front, cartridge loading version of an exotic Civil War revolver; center barrel fires a 16 ga shotgun shell; very rare
Modele 1892 8mm Lebel Revolver +1 5 -1/2 5 1 0.5d6 0 6 cyl -- 1.0 £4 fixed d
-- becomes standard French military revolver in 1892; reloads by swinging out the cylinder
Nagant M1895 7.65mm Nagant +1 4 -1/2 6 1 0.5d6 +1 7 cyl -- 0.8 £4 fixed 1
-- 1895 issue Russian military revolver; reloads slowly through a side gate
Reichs Revolver M83 10.6mm German +1 12 -1/2 3 1 1d6 +1 6 cyL -- 1.1? £3 fixed 1
-- the current German military revolver (the prior M79 was similar); reloads slowly through a side gate; has a safety catch
Remington 1890 Army 44 Colt +1 7 -1/3 3 1 1d6 +1 6 cyl -- 1.2 £3 fixed 1
-- a common American revolver, used by the U.S. Army; reloads slowly through a side gate
S&W No. 3 44 S&W American +1 7 -1/2 3 1 1d6 +1 6 cyl -- 1.2? £3 fixed 1
-- typical of the larger guns kept in American homes; break-front reloading
S&W Schofield 45 S&W Schofield +1 10 -1/3 3 1 1d6 +1 6 cyl -- 1.2? £3 fixed 1
-- typical of weapons carried by bank and express guards; break-front reloading
S&W Russian 44 Russian +1 12 -1/3 3 1 1d6+1 +1 6 cyl -- 1.2? £5 fixed 1
-- very popular with professional shootists in the American West; Russian Army weapon to 1891; break-front reloading
S&W New Model No. 3 DA 44 S&W American +1 7 -1/2 3 1 1d6 +1 6 cyl -- 1.2? £4 fixed d
-- typical of the S&W revolvers introduced in the 1880s; break-front reloading
S&W Military & Police .38 Long Colt +1 6 -1/3 3 1 1d6 0 6 cyl -- 1.0 £5 fixed d
-- introduced 1897, the very latest in revolvers; reloads by swinging out the cylinder; in 1902 available in 38 Special
Webley Bull Dog 44 Bull Dog +1 4 -1/1 3 1 0.5d6 +1 5 cyl -- 0.8 £3 fixed d
-- the most common large gun kept in British homes; reloads slowly through a side gate
Webley Mark 3 455 British Service +1 10 -1/3 3 1 1d6 +1 6 cyl -- 1.1 £5 fixed d
-- the current British military revolver (though officers buy their own guns, of their own choice); break-front reloading
Webley RIC 44 Webley +1 10 -1/2 3 1 1d6 +1 6 cyl -- 0.9? £4 fixed d
-- when British policemen carry pistols, this would likely be the issued weapon; reloads slowly through a side gate
Semi-automatic pistols, fired with one hand; -5 STR if fired 2-handed
name caliber OCV STR Rmod Pc Vel Damage Stun rds.-feed-mass wpn, kg cost sights ROF
Bergmann Military Model 7.65mm Bergmann +1 5 -1/3 3 1 1d6 0 5 int -- 0.9? £6 fixed d
-- various models of this German pistol have been brought out since 1894; this is the 1897 model, a somewhat bulky design
Borchardt 30 Borchardt +0 8 -1/3 4 1 1d6+1 0 8 mag 0.1 1.4 £6 fixed d
-- invented by a Connecticut native, and produced in small numbers in Germany since 1893 by DWM, this is the ancestor of the Luger
Colt Automatic 38 Colt Auto +1 9 -1/3 4 1 1d6+1 0 7 mag 0.1 0.9 £6 fixed d
-- introduced in the spring of 1900, this is the first semi-automatic pistol produced in America, to John Brownings design
FN Browning 1900 32 Automatic Colt +1 5 -1/3 3 1 0.5d6 0 7 mag 0.1 0.9 £5 fixed d
-- John Brownings first semi-automatic pistol, produced in Belgium since 1898, quickly very popular
Mannlicher Model 1894 7.63mm Mannlicher +1 5 -1/2 3 1 1d6 0 5 int 0.1 1.0 £6 fixed d
-- loaded from a 5 round stipper clip, not very reliable
Mars Automatic 360 Mars +1 14 -1/4 5 2 1.5d6 +1 9 mag 0.2 1.3 £20 fixed d
-- powerful British pistol introduced 1895; probably the best sidearm for the extremely strong and wealthy man
Mars Automatic 450 Mars +1 14 -1/3 4 1 1.5d6 +1 8 mag 0.2 1.4 £20 fixed d
-- a larger-caliber version of the basic Mars pistol, also introduced 1895; only 80 Mars pistols in all calibers were made
Mars Automatic 8.5mm Mars +1 12 -1/3 4 2 1.5d6 0 10 mag 0.2 1.1 £20 fixed d
-- the lowest-powered of the new Mars pistols; also introduced 1895
Mauser C/96 7.63mm Mauser +1 7 -1/4 4 1 1d6+1 0 6-10 int -- 1.3 £6 rifle d
-- introduced in 1896, and quickly popular
Parabellum-Pistole 30 Luger +1 7 -1/3 4 1 1d6+1 0 9 mag 0.2 0.9 £8 fixed d
-- a 1900 redesign of the Borchardt for the Swiss army by the German firm DWM, much more handy and practical
Roth-Steyr 7.65mm Roth +1 5 -1/3 4 1 1d6 0 10 int -- 1.0 £6 fixed d
-- introduced 1895, a new Austrian pistol being examined by various European militaries
Schwarzlose M1898 7.63mm Mauser +1 6 -1/3 4 1 1d6+1 0 7 mag 0.1 1.1? £6 fixed d
-- an improved version of a German weapon introduced in 1895
Webley-Fosbery 455 British Service +1 8 -1/3 3 1 1d6 +1 6 cyl -- 1.4 £6 fixed d
-- avalable in 1901, this break-front revolver is automatically cocked after each shot by the recoiling upper frame
Light multibarrel pistol, fired with one hand; -5 STR if fired 2-handed
name caliber OCV STR Rmod Pc Vel Damage Stun rds.-feed-mass wpn, kg cost sights ROF
Remington Derringer .41 Short RF +0 2 -1/1 1 1 1d6 +1 2 break -- 0.4 £2 fixed 1
-- the classic double derringer, with over-under barrels; hammer must be cocked for each shot
Sharps Model 2 32 Extra Short RF +1 0 -1/1 0 1 0.5d6 0 4 slide -- 0.4 £2 none 1
-- another common American pocket pistol; the block of four barrels slides forward for reloading
Heavy multibarrel pistol, fired with both hands.
name caliber OCV STR Rmod Pc Vel Damage Stun rds.-feed-mass wpn, kg cost sights ROF
Greener Howdah .577 Snider +1 18 -1/2 2 1 1.5d6 +2 2 break -- 2.5 £8 none 2
-- works like a double-barreled shotgun (over/under); with belt hook and external hammers
Lancaster Howdah .577 Boxer +1 5 -1/2 0 1 1d6 +2 4 break -- 2.0 £5 fixed d
-- four barrels, with an indexing firing pin; double action only
Lancaster Howdah .577 Snider +1 18 -1/2 2 1 1.5d6 +2 4 break -- 2.3 £6 fixed d
-- four barrels, with an indexing firing pin; double action only
Manton Howdah 12 gauge 00 buck +1 18 -1/2 0 1 4x1d6-1 0 2 break -- 2.5 £8 fixed 2
-- essentially a sawed-off external hammer shotgun; drops one damage group every 2 hexes (1 loc. to 2;2 adj loc 3 4; etc.)
Purdey Howdah 450 Martini-Henry +1 15 -1/2 5 1 1.5d6 +2 2 break -- 2.3 £8 fixed 2
-- works like a double-barreled shotgun, with external hammers; 18 long
Wilkinson Howdah .577 Snider +1 18 -1/2 2 1 1.5d6 +2 2 break -- 2.3 £8 fixed 2
-- works like a double-barreled shotgun, with external hammers
Single-shot rifles, fired with both hands and the stock shouldered.
name caliber OCV STR Rmod Pc Vel Damage Stun rds.-feed-mass wpn, kg cost sights ROF
Martini-Henry Mark IV 450 Martini-Henry +1 10 -1/6 5 1 2d6 +2 1 breech -- 4.1 £4 rifle 1
-- the former standard British military rifle, being replaced by the Lee-Metford
Martini-Henry Carbine 450 Martini-Henry +1 11 -1/4 5 1 1.5d6 +2 1 breech -- 3.0 £3 rifle 1
-- Artillery Mk1, and the similar Cavalry MkI; still used by the British forces; 1d6+1K, STR Min 10 with special carbine ammo
Remington Rolling Block 43 Mauser +1 11 -1/5 5 1 2d6 +2 1 breech -- 2.5 £5 rifle 1
-- a very widely available American rifle, often sold to native armies; various other calibers and civilian models also
Sharps Long Range Express 50-140 Sharps +1 11 -1/9 6 1 2d6+1 +3 1 breech -- 4.8 £16 rifle 1
-- the classic long-range American heavy game rifle
Snider Mark III .577 Snider +1 9 -1/5 2 1 2d6 +2 1 breech -- 4.2 £2 rifle 1
-- old British military rifle, standard 1866-1871; earlier marks are conversions of muzzle-loading Enfield rifles
Trapdoor Springfield 45-70 Govt +1 7 -1/4 6 1 2d6 +2 1 breech -- 4.5 £3 rifle 1
-- still in use by the U.S. military, especially in militia units
Lever-action and pump rifles, fired with both hands and the stock shouldered.
name caliber OCV STR Rmod Pc Vel Damage Stun rds.-feed-mass wpn, kg cost sights ROF
Colt New Lightning 44-40 +1 4 -1/4 3 1 1.5d6 +1 9 tube -- 3.0 £3 rifle 1
-- a typical pump-action rifle; also available in 40-60 Marlin and other calibers
Marlin 1895 Model 45-90 Winchester +1 8 +1/4 4 1 2d6 +2 4 tube -- 3.0 £4 rifle 1
-- also available in 40-65 Winchester (3 Piercing)
Savage Model 1899 303 Savage +1 5 -1/5 6 2 2d6 +2 5 rotary -- 3.0 £6 rifle 1
-- a very advanced rifle
Spencer Carbine 56-60 Spencer RF +1 5 -1/3 1 1 2d6 +2 7 tube -- 3.7 £3 rifle 1
-- the first successful repeating rifle, dating from the American Civil War; hammer must be cocked manually for each shot
Winchester Model 1895 45-75 Winchester +1 8 -1/5 4 1 2d6 +2 5 int -- 3.5 £7 rifle 1
-- new hunting rifle, available in various calibers
Winchester Model 1894 30-30 Winchester +1 5 -1/4 6 2 2d6 +1 6 tube -- 3.0 £5 rifle 1
-- first successful commercial rifle to use smokeless powder; also available in takedown version
Winchester Model 1887 70-150 Winchester +1 15 -1/3 1 1 2d6+1 +2 5 tube -- 4.0 £12 rifle 1
-- rifled bore variation on the 12 gauge Model 1887, can also shoot 12 gauge shells (with some problems)
Winchester Model 1886 50-110 Winchester +1 6 -1/5 2 1 2d6 +2 5 tube -- 4.3 £10 rifle 1
-- also available in other calibers such as 45-70 Govt, and as a takedown rifle; a carbine version weighs 3.8 kg, with Rmod of 1/4
Winchester Model 1876 45-75 Winchester +1 6 -1/4 4 1 2d6 +2 8 tube -- 4.5 £7 rifle 1
-- Winchesters first powerful lever-action rifle; standard arm of the Mounties
Winchester Model 1873 44-40 Winchester +1 5 -1/4 3 1 1.5d6 +1 15 tube -- 4.0 £6 rifle 1
-- the famous cowboy rifle; a carbine version weighs 3.3 kg, has a 1/3 Rmod
Bolt-action sporting magazine rifles, fired with both hands and with the stock shouldered.
name caliber OCV STR Rmod Pc Vel Damage Stun rds.-feed-mass wpn, kg cost sights ROF
Mannlicher 8mm Mannlicher +1 7 -1/6 7 2 2d6 +1 4 int -- 3.8 £20 rifle 1
-- a recent Austrian weapon, also available in various other calibers; loaded with a 4 round en bloc clip
Mauser Heavy Sport Rifle 9.3x57mm Mauser +1 10 -1/6 6 2 2d6+1 +2 3 int -- 4.0 £15 rifle 1
-- typical heavy game rifle for Germans on safari; various other calibers available
Remington-Lee Model 1885 45-70 Govt +1 8 -1/5 6 1 2d6 +2 5 mag 0.2 4.25 £5 rifle 1
-- equipped with a detachable box magazine, the first firearm for which spare magazines were provided; used by US Navy to 1895
Game rifles, fired with both hands and the stock shouldered. These are blackpowder or smokeless double rifles. Famous makers include
Wm. & John Rigby, Westley-Richards, Holland & Holland, James Purdey & Sons, R. Hughs, Thomas Bland, W. J. Jeffrey, W. W. Greener, Evans,
George Gibbs, H. Krieghoff (the only non-Briton on this list).
name caliber OCV STR Rmod Pc Vel Damage Stun rds.-feed-mass wpn, kg cost sights ROF
super heavy double 4 bore +1 23 -1/4 0 1 2.5d6 +3 2 break -- 11.0 £100 rifle 2
-- or any other cartridge doing tremendous damage; the 4 bore is a black powder round, never loaded in smokeless
heavy double 500 Nitro Express +1 15 -1/4 5 2 2.5d6 +2 2 break -- 8.0 £95 rifle 2
-- or most other cartridges doing 2.5d6K with a +2 Stun mod
express double 400 Nitro Express +1 12 -1/5 6 2 2d6+1 +2 2 break -- 6.0 £75 rifle 2
-- or any other cartridge doing 2d6+1K with a +2 Stun mod
double rifle .360 Nitro Express +1 5 -1/6 4 2 2d6+1 +1 2 break -- 4.0 £30 rifle 2
-- not really a big game rifle; about the lightest double that might be carried in Africa
super heavy cape gun 4 ga. + 4 ga. +1 23 -1/4 0 1 2.5d6 +3 2 break -- 10.0 £100 rifle 2
-- serious killers only; one barrel rifled, one smoothbore (see ammunition table for shotgun damage)
heavy cape gun 10 ga. + .500 NE +1 17 -1/4 5 2 2.5d6 +2 2 break -- 6.0 £50 rifle 2
-- appear similar to double rifles, but one barrel is smooth-bore (see ammunition table for shotgun damage)
cape gun 12 ga. + .400 NE +1 13 -1/4 6 2 2d6+1 +2 2 break -- 5.0 £25 rifle 2
-- a lighter cape gun (see ammunition table for shotgun damage)
Shotguns, fired with both hands and the stock shouldered. Sawed off or extra-short models are 1/3.
name caliber OCV STR Rmod Pc Vel Damage Stun rds.-feed-mass wpn, kg cost sights ROF
generic double 10 ga. +1 15 -1/4 0 1 5x1d6 0 2 break -- 4.5 £10 fixed 2
-- representing a multitude of makers and variations (for English makers, see game rifle list)
generic double 12 ga. +1 11 -1/4 0 1 4x1d6 0 2 break -- 4.0 £4 fixed 2
-- representing a multitude of makers and variations (for English makers, see game rifle list)
Hopkins & Allen 12 ga. blackpowder +1 12 -1/4 0 1 4x0.5d6 0 1 breech -- 3.0 £10 fixed 1
-- 1888 model, with falling block action; takedown models are available
Spencer Model 1885 12 ga. blackpowder +1 10 -1/4 0 1 4x0.5d6 0 5 tube -- 4.0 £20 fixed 1
-- pump action, somewhat balky and fragile
Winchester Model 1887 12 ga. blackpowder +1 10 -1/4 0 1 4x0.5d6 0 5 tube -- 4.0 £15 fixed 1
-- lever action
Winchester Model 1893 12 ga. blackpowder +1 11 -1/4 0 1 4x1d6 0 5 tube -- 3.2 £15 fixed 1
-- early pump action shotgun
Winchester Model 1897 12 ga. +1 13 -1/4 0 1 4x1d6 0 5 tube -- 3.2 £10 fixed d
-- the fastest and best of the early pump shotguns; no disconnector on the trigger; takedown models are available
Combination guns, fired with both hands and the stock shouldered. These weapons are most popular in Europe (especially in Germany
and Austria-Hungary), and have three or more barrels -- not all the same caliber. Commonest are those with two shotgun and one sporting
rifle barrels. As shotguns, they have a 1/4 Range mod.
name caliber OCV STR Rmod Pc Vel Damage Stun rds.-feed-mass wpn, kg cost sights ROF
Drilling 12 ga. + 9.3mm +1 9 -1/5 6 2 2d6+1 +2 3 break -- 7.7 £25 rifle 2
-- equipped with two 12 gauge barrels and one 9.3x57mm Mauser; two triggers (one for shotgun, one for rifle)
(see ammunition table for shotgun damage)
Vierling 12 ga. + 9.3mm +1 9 -1/5 6 2 2d6+1 +2 4 break -- 9.5 £40 rifle 2
-- with two 12 gauge barrels and two 9.3x57mm Mauser barrels; two triggers (one for shotgun, one for rifle)
(see ammunition table for shotgun damage)
Bolt action military rifles, fired with both hands and the stock shouldered. Cartridges for these rifles are loaded individually,
3 per phase.
name caliber OCV STR Rmod Pc Vel Damage Stun rds.-feed-mass wpn, kg cost sights ROF
Krag-Jorgensen M1892 30-40 Krag +1 5 -1/6 7 2 2d6+1 +1 5 int -- 4.0 £8 rifle 1
-- the US Armys new rifle, distributed very slowly; has some flaws which cause jams if not cleaned carefully and regularly
Lebel Mle 1886/93 8mm Lebel Rifle +1 6 -1/6 7 2 2d6+1 +1 8 tube -- 4.2 £8 rifle 1
-- the standard French military rifle (modified in 1893), using the first smokeless military cartridge
Lee-Metford Mark I 303 British +1 5 -1/6 6 2 2d6 +1 8 mag 0.4 4.3 £8 rifle 1
-- adopted 1888 as the standard British military rifle; rear sights read out to 1900 yards, dial sights to 3500 yards;
extra magazines are not issued
Lee-Metford Mark II 303 British +1 5 -1/6 6 2 2d6 +1 10 mag 0.5 4.2 £8 rifle 1
-- adopted January, 1892; extra magazines are not issued
Lee-Metford Mk I Carbine 303 British +1 10 -1/5 6 2 2d6 +1 5 mag 0.3 3.4 £7 rifle 1
-- adopted 1897; extra magazines are not issued
Lee-Enfield Mark I 303 British +1 5 -1/6 6 2 2d6 +1 10 mag 0.4 4.2 £8 rifle 1
-- adopted 1895; extra magazines are not issued
Lee-Enfield Mark I Carbine 303 British +1 10 -1/5 6 2 2d6 +1 6 mag 0.4 3.4 £7 rifle 1
-- adopted 1899; extra magazines are not issued
Winchester Model 1883 45-70 Govt +1 8 -1/5 6 1 2d6 +2 5 tube -- 4.0 £8 rifle 1
-- sometimes known as the Hotchkiss magazine rifle, an early use of the Lee bolt-action system
Bolt action military rifles, fired with both hands and the stock shouldered. These are clip loaded, filling the internal magazine
in 1 phase.
name caliber OCV STR Rmod Pc Vel Damage Stun rds.-feed-mass wpn, kg cost sights ROF
Berthier Carbine Mle 1892 8mm Lebel Rifle +1 8 -1/6 7 2 2d6+1 +1 3 int -- 3.0 £8 rifle 1
-- a standard French military carbine; uses a 3 round en bloc clip
Lee M1895 6mm Lee Navy +1 5 -1/6 11 2 2d6 0 5 int -- 3.8 £8 rifle 1
-- the standard US Navy and Marine Corps rifle from 1895.
Mannlicher M1888 8mm Mannlicher +1 7 -1/6 7 2 2d6 +1 5 int -- 4.5 £8 rifle 1
-- current standardAustrian army rifle; uses a 5 round en bloc clip
Mannlicher M1895 8mm Mannlicher +1 8 -1/6 7 2 2d6 +1 5 int -- 3.7 £8 rifle 1
-- Austrian army rifle
Mannlicher-Carcano M1891 6.5mm Carcano +1 5 -1/6 9 2 2d6 +1 6 int -- 3.7 £8 rifle 1
-- standard Italian army rifle
Mauser Export 7mm Mauser +1 3 -1/6 7 2 2d6 +1 5 int -- 4.5 £8 rifle 1
-- typical of exported military Mauser rifles used by many smaller armies; many other similar calibers are available
Mauser Gewehr 1888 7.92mm Mauser J +1 5 -1/6 7 2 2d6+1 +1 5 int -- 4.5 £8 rifle 1
-- the current German military rifle, also adopted by other countries; rusts easily if not maintained; uses en bloc clip
Mauser Kar1888 7.92mm Mauser J +1 7 -1/5 7 2 2d6+1 +1 5 int -- 3.1 £7 rifle 1
-- carbine version of the 1888 German military rifle, for cavalry, artillery, etc. ; uses en bloc clip
Mauser Gewehr 98 7.92mm Mauser +1 5 -1/7 7 2 2d6+1 +1 5 int -- 4.1 £8 rifle 1
-- the classic bolt-action military rifle of the 20th Century
Moisin-Nagant M1891 7.62mm Russian +1 5 -1/7 7 2 2d6+1 +1 5 int -- 4.2 £8 rifle 1
-- the latest Russian rifle, replacing the Berdan II
Semi-automatic rifles and light machine guns, fired with both hands and the stock shouldered.
name caliber OCV STR Rmod Pc Vel Damage Stun rds.-feed-mass wpn, kg cost sights ROF
Cei-Rigotti Rifle 6.5mm Carcano +0 5 -1/6 9 2 2d6 +1 20 mag 0.4 4.5? £25 rifle d
-- a very early automatic rifle, not adopted by any army due to various flaws; also available with 10 and 50 rd. magazine
Madsen LMG 7.92mm Mauser +0 11 -1/6 7 2 2d6+1 +1 30 mag 1.0 9.1 £30 rifle d/10
-- adopted by the Danish marines in 1897, and in other calibers by other countries soon after (most notably Russia);
magazine is top mounted