Recoil: Scopes vs. Iron sights #2
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CAS_117
- Posts: 1600
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Should Scoped Weapons have less Recoil than Iron Sights?
Currently Iron sights have more recoil than Scopes, even on the same weapon. Should this be the case?
WARNING: PLEASE STAY ON TOPIC.
WARNING: PLEASE STAY ON TOPIC.
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Ironcomatose
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nedlands1
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zangoo
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i say they should have the same, dont see why it would change if you had a scope, if anything it would make people think about taking iron sight weapons instead of the scoped one. cas you should somehow change the poll to, should scoped guns have the same recoil as there iron sight counter part and the other option should be. no scoped guns should have less recoil then there iron sight counter part.
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DeltaFart
- Posts: 2409
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Think I got confused by the way the poll was worded, but the post was easy to understand, they should be teh same, because it's not fair that scopes get a recoil advantage while the ironsights have ot deal with the full recoil of the weapons. Marines deal with this problem each time they use it, and they are dealing with it ina life or death situation, so you can deal with it in a game
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SleepyHe4d
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BloodBane611
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kilroy0097
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The amount of perceived recoil when zoomed in on a scoped weapon would by the law of physics be more than the amount of perceived recoil from iron sights. Much like the movement from x2 zoom in a Tank is much more than the perceived movement at x1 zoom in a Tank.
If you view a horizontal line as your pre-fire angle (X) and then demonstrate the angle of the weapon at the greatest height at recoil (A1) and then the variable distance of view as the (Y) side of the triangle then the (Z) distance will be greater between the two. Optical Zoom (Y1) will be longer than iron sight zoom (Y2) and hence you will have a (Z1) and (Z2) distance in the third side.
Draw it out for yourself. Put a straight line on a piece of paper and then draw another line out about 25 degrees up from that straight line. Make the line about 2 inches long now draw a dotted line from the end of that about 2 more inches long. From the horizontal line draw a vertical line up to the first 2 inch end section and the another vertical line down the straight line up to the end of the dotted line. The distance of the vertical line is Z1 for the solid line and Z2 for the dotted line. Hence your viewing distance is greater when zoomed in with optics than with iron sight. The end result should be two triangles one within the other but sharing two sides.
Simple physics really. Hence the recoil when zoomed in optically should be perceived to be greater than when zoomed in with iron sights with the naked eye. The actual recoil of the gun doesn't change but the perceived recoil does change.
So taking the question, "Should Scoped Weapons have more recoil that Iron sights?" and rewriting it to say more clearly, "Should Scoped Weapons, when viewing through the Optical Zoom, have more perceived or visual recoil than Iron sight weapons when also zoomed?". The answer to that would be Yes.
If you view a horizontal line as your pre-fire angle (X) and then demonstrate the angle of the weapon at the greatest height at recoil (A1) and then the variable distance of view as the (Y) side of the triangle then the (Z) distance will be greater between the two. Optical Zoom (Y1) will be longer than iron sight zoom (Y2) and hence you will have a (Z1) and (Z2) distance in the third side.
Draw it out for yourself. Put a straight line on a piece of paper and then draw another line out about 25 degrees up from that straight line. Make the line about 2 inches long now draw a dotted line from the end of that about 2 more inches long. From the horizontal line draw a vertical line up to the first 2 inch end section and the another vertical line down the straight line up to the end of the dotted line. The distance of the vertical line is Z1 for the solid line and Z2 for the dotted line. Hence your viewing distance is greater when zoomed in with optics than with iron sight. The end result should be two triangles one within the other but sharing two sides.
Simple physics really. Hence the recoil when zoomed in optically should be perceived to be greater than when zoomed in with iron sights with the naked eye. The actual recoil of the gun doesn't change but the perceived recoil does change.
So taking the question, "Should Scoped Weapons have more recoil that Iron sights?" and rewriting it to say more clearly, "Should Scoped Weapons, when viewing through the Optical Zoom, have more perceived or visual recoil than Iron sight weapons when also zoomed?". The answer to that would be Yes.
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Molyporph
- Posts: 33
- Joined: 2007-04-30 12:27
That's how it, naturally, is at the moment, just compare firing the G3 with ironsights and then firing the G3 with scope. Anyhows, the reason the scoped weapons have less recoil (in the code) when zoomed is simply that the recoil while zoomed would seem extreme if they were the same. At least I read something like that from a dev some time ago.kilroy0097 wrote: So taking the question, "Should Scoped Weapons have more recoil that Iron sights?" and rewriting it to say more clearly, "Should Scoped Weapons, when viewing through the Optical Zoom, have more perceived or visual recoil than Iron sight weapons when also zoomed?". The answer to that would be Yes.
Why not lower the ironsight recoil as well, so they could be the same without the scope recoil going insane? I guess gameplay reason. Such a change would probably have quite some effect on infantry combat.
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Ragni<RangersPL>
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RANGERS LEAD THE WAY!!!
Do not post stupid suggestions just because you had a bad round in PR 
