It is just a simple question I have always wondered about
Does the supression effect cause loss of accuracy?
No it does not effect accuracy. When being surpressed, it's better to take cover than to "roll the dice" with your surviving chances by firing blindly.ryan d ale wrote:The thread title says it all.
It is just a simple question I have always wondered about
Does the supression effect cause loss of accuracy?
Get someone to shoot at you when you are in cover. That's the point of suppressive, to get their heads down. However this doesn't really work all the time in PR. Most of the "suppressive" fire is super-accurate laser-beam firegr770 wrote:It made to simulate suppressive firing. Which should make be less effective at "effective fire. Take cover and it goes away.

Uh huh... yeah. Course...ghost-recon wrote:If you just shoot more at the enemy than they do you'll have more chance to kill, accuracy is actually just bull****.
This hits it bang on the head. Hence, the DEV tags...[R-DEV wrote:Chuc,1466410]Being effectively suppressed more or less means to the person on the receiving end: "You've lost this engagement, better try another approach before the next bullet goes through your helmet".
The Germans racked up over 8 million freaking kills and they had a 5 shot bolt action. On the other hand they had big tanks and the machine gun, hmmm.ghost-recon wrote:If you just shoot more at the enemy than they do you'll have more chance to kill, accuracy is actually just bull****.