Minimum Damage decreased from 32 to 31 (Warzone Only)
With a great damage profile, locational multipliers, and manageable recoil, the CR-56 AMAX was able to reliably reach extreme TTKs at long-range. This change reduces its fastest minimum damage TTK by about 17% in addition to its slowest minimum damage TTK by an additional shot. Its fastest maximum damage TTK however, remains intact which is a risk we feel is equal to the reward considering how unforgiving its rate of fire is and how many other weapons it has to contest with in the mid-range engagement space. The CR-56 AMAX is just a tad more dominant than we would like it to be and with this change, our aim is to widen the selection of viable long-range assault rifles.
Outriders Best Pyromancer Builds Guide segmentnext.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from segmentnext.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Updated:
Scope of the exercise is to conduct sub-unit level operations in counter terrorism
Share Article
AAA
Uzbek soldier practicing helicopter slithering from a static platform as an Indian soldier looks on and is seen with a SIG-716 assault rifle.
| Photo Credit: Dinakar Peri
Scope of the exercise is to conduct sub-unit level operations in counter terrorism
At the ongoing India-Uzbek exercise Dustlik-II at Ranikhet, Uzbek troops learnt the handling of SIG-716 assault rifles, recently inducted into service by the Army and also got orientation in slithering from helicopters for heli-borne operations in a counter terrorist (CT) environment.
“As far as weapons are concerned we have Sig Sauer rifles. we are sharing our weapons with the Uzbek troops. At present Uzbek troops are learning firing from Sig Sauer rifles,” Col. Amit Malik, Commanding Officer of the 13 Kumaon Regiment, nominated for the exercise from the Indian side, told visiting journalists at Chaubatia near
Special forces and others using these assault rifles used to import them from the Israel Weapons Industry, a former Israeli government firm that was privatised in 2005.