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Farthest Sniper Kill on Record
#1

Check out this crazy story, this breaks all records.

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/internation...s=facebook

But it doesn't count because he had perfect weather conditions.
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#2

Hawkens85 Wrote:But it doesn't count because he had perfect weather conditions.

wat
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#3

CHEAT111 weather's exploit111111

Bad english, bad jokes. (backpack 1, backpack 2)
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#4

VAC BAN! I hope Valve is trolling these forums right now reading this! Some sort of super aimbot and wall/mountain hax!


EDIT: lol at hell-met comment.

Thanks.
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#5

bodyshot fag

[Image: hell-met.jpg]
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#6

Hawkens85 Wrote:Check out this crazy story, this breaks all records.

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/internation...s=facebook

But it doesn't count because he had perfect weather conditions.

There is no such thing as perfect weather conditions because he is in the desert and not in a vaccum.

/sarcasm
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#7

holly crap.
turn off yall HAXXXX please.
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#8

"Perfect weather conditions" means that he did not have to compensate his shot for humidity, wind speed, barometric pressure, etc., which is what a sniper normally has to do when lining up a shot. It was for the most part a point and shoot after gauging the distance and calculating the bullet fall.

And if you're in a vacuum, I guess it's not the weather, is it? Big Grin
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#9

Hawkens85 Wrote:"Perfect weather conditions" means that he did not have to compensate his shot for humidity, wind speed, barometric pressure, etc., which is what a sniper normally has to do when lining up a shot. It was for the most part a point and shoot after gauging the distance and calculating the bullet fall.

And if you're in a vacuum, I guess it's not the weather, is it? :D

Any shot over about 500 meters needs to compensate for this because there is no such thing as 'perfect weather conditions' There is always barometric pressure, humidity, and wind speed.

/sarcasm
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#10

OmegaZero_Alpha Wrote:
Hawkens85 Wrote:"Perfect weather conditions" means that he did not have to compensate his shot for humidity, wind speed, barometric pressure, etc., which is what a sniper normally has to do when lining up a shot. It was for the most part a point and shoot after gauging the distance and calculating the bullet fall.

And if you're in a vacuum, I guess it's not the weather, is it? Big Grin

Any shot over about 500 meters needs to compensate for this because there is no such thing as 'perfect weather conditions' There is always barometric pressure, humidity, and wind speed.

What if it was like in Firefly when Jayne shot Vera out of the spacesuit?

[Image: signature.jpg]
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