News - I Found The Perfect Muzzle For Your Warzone 2 Meta Loadouts
There are over 20 different muzzles, and they range from steadiness stabilization to vertical and horizontal recoil control. They all seem to do the same thing, especially according to the bars, but that's not true; each of them gives the gun a unique recoil pattern by waving the RICO to the left or to the right.
Let's take a look at the five different horizontal and vertical Ricoh control muscles. First, we establish a base recoil by spraying M4 four times into the wall, and we will display it in the top left corner the whole time so you have a comparison going on there. Now we have a bunch of different vertical and horizontal Ricoh controls, and if you actually look at the bars, they do exactly the same; there's maybe a millimeter of a difference, if even that.
Fulcrum does a great job of horizontally squeezing The Recoil together and, slightly, making it smaller on the vertical; it also has a tendency to go to the right on two patterns and slide it to the left on the other pair that now go to the F tank. Castle Com, which technically does exactly the same but vastly differs there, is more horizontally spread, especially at the end, so the first bullet's very centered and then it jitters out way more horizontally to the left and the right does more vertically to put it down; therefore, it spreads it out harder, but it has a tendency to go straighter, and a wee bit to the right the RF Crown 50 goes.
Straight up with a slight tendency to the right, it does a lot of vertical control less, to be honest, and therefore jitters out more horizontally. Now we're looking at the Eastern Havoc; that is the one that makes it the straightest and also the best horizontally. Now, this was tested on the M4, so can we take this over to other guns and see if our learning helps us here?
We'll take the base tag 56, and if we're putting that into the wall, it is "having some horizontal," so if you think about playing this as a long-range beamer, you definitely want to have this horizontally under control, and, as it has been seen that the extent of Havoc is, one of the better muzzles to help us keep any horizontal jitter under control.
Well, I guess we'll go here all the way for the Aston Havoc instead of the sock and threat, and again, they mostly do the same and tune this as well on gun kick control. All of these muzzles were tuned for gun kick control and recur stabilization 70/30. And then we're going to fire that into the wall, and accordingly to what we learned, it should make it straighter and just keep it horizontally more or less the same, considering that it obviously shortens the recoil because it does some vertical, and this does actually work out very well.
You just minimize the recoil by a certain percentage, and horizontally, it's actually keeping nicely on the spot, which is very good. That being said, the gun probably doesn't need that much vertical control because it does not have a huge spread. but if you're shooting it on range, obviously the vertical gets more pronounced, and here we actually see how the extent It works plenty nice, but what about if we compared it one-to-one to the Sakin, which I usually recommend?
We're going to put that in the top left here; that is the socket in comparison, and you'll notice one important thing: the gun is way more jittery when you're shooting compared. What we had with the Exton, for some reason—and I haven't found out why the Havoc feels way more relaxed—is a very nice shot.
It looks similar to what the sake is in this, but you notice the big jitter here at the end, and we don't really have that; there's no such big jitter like that. What the sunken has to offer to the extent possible seems to universally, in my eyes, perform better. Do have a barrel here, the 15.9 Lachmann; wrap the barrel also towards steadiness, 40; and we're going to do some more aimed on-side speed because it doesn't hurt to whoop this out really quick.
We have a long range streamer magazine, 60 route Mac, and now we have two attachment slots left, and that would be under the muzzle, and the muzzle Let's take the muzzle first, and then actually fine tune the under barrel to make this perfect. We reduce this into the wall now, and it's a very nice relaxed recoil, and it's also much clustered at the top; there is some horizontal going on, and it goes a wee bit to the right, but all in all, it's just a very good recoil, just like you really do notice how the Recon kind of stops up here clustering.
nicely, how could we reduce this even further, and for that, we would again look at the Exton Havoc in comparison because it seemed to be the best of all of them, despite showing that they all do the same? It's very nice, and especially the horizontal makes a huge difference. You notice that where it was all the jittery mess up here, this is like better clustered together and feels just extremely good.
very decent, so it's the same but slightly better. Now, compare that obviously to the sock and tread because, again, that is the one I told most of my gun builders to straight up use, and we're putting that in, and it again feels like a more visual request for me personally when I shoot this, and the jitter here is also very strong.
That being said, due to the way the lachman shoots, it also seems not to be the worst of all options. But we're looking at this horizontal cluster in comparison to this horizontal cluster, and this is obviously more of a mess than what we've had here. Let's do a third test with the f-tech castle, which is feeling the most of the vertical compared to all the other guns, and if we're now getting that in with 70 and 30, we have the f-tech castle, which is feeling the most of the vertical compared to all the f-tech castle, which is feeling the most of the vertical compared to all the other two before.
It's kind of nice to see that each muscle does it completely differently. This one really stands up to the right, so you're definitely better off keeping it straight on track with a sock and tread or with the Axton running the barrels. I would go for the F Take Ripper or the Phase Three; each of them would fit fantastically with this recoil pattern.
We're going to tune this versus aiming stability and recoil, stabilization. Have a very nice, straight recoil that's even more horizontally clustered and just really stays gathered on top without jittering all over the place. I think that's the most important part, especially keeping your visual recoil extremely low.
Now you would say, "What a pony," because that does not look that much better than what we had before, but if you look at how clustered the bullets are and especially how this has a pronounced effect on the distance, then just keep it at minimally middle now.