Difference between revisions of "Talk:Stun Rod"

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- [[User:Bomb_Bloke|Bomb Bloke]]
 
- [[User:Bomb_Bloke|Bomb Bloke]]
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That someone was me, and Firing Accuracy (high or low) didn't seem to seem to affect any part of the bomb's flight path -- through the first waypoint, or otherwise.  It ''might'' have an effect on reaction fire with a Blaster Launcher.
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I've never tested to see if a Stun Rod could miss.  Sometimes it fails to knock out an alien, but I always assumed that was because it did low damage.  I guess we could try hacking its accuracy (and a soldier's melee accuracy) to see if it can miss.
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--[[User:Ethereal Cereal|Ethereal Cereal]] 20:16, 2 July 2006 (PDT)

Revision as of 03:16, 3 July 2006

I have a question: this page says the stun rod is a 2-handed weapon. Normally using a two-handed weapon with one hand results in an accuracy penalty (-20% if I remember). Since I tend to use low-quality soldiers to try and stun aliens early in the game, I am thinking it would be wise to always try and use stun rods two-handed, to avoid the accuracy penalty. Am I right in looking at it this way?

Also, I see a few weapons with their "handedness" listed (mostly if they're two-handed) but most weapons entries don't mention if they're one or two-handed (Small Launcher, for example). This would be a good thing to accurately list for every weapon.

I'm also thinking there could be a separate wiki page for explaining "handedness", the importance of it, thoughts on the tradeoffs, etc. For example, I think the accuracy of the Blaster Bomb is 120% but it is considered a two-handed weapon, so my understanding is, you can put a second item in the other hand with no practical penalty.

- Erik


I don't think I've ever seen the stun rod miss. This is probably because you have to use it at point blank range - The only way you could fail to hit the target is if your unit actually turned away when you told him to use it. I've only ever seen a weapon misfire that badly once, so I don't think it's much of a risk.

Someone did some tests with the Blaster Launcher a little while ago, and it seems to be as accurate whether you're holding another weapon or not. My personal theory is that the accuracy only effects the initial launching of the weapon, and once it starts following waypoints it's effects are lost.

- Bomb Bloke


That someone was me, and Firing Accuracy (high or low) didn't seem to seem to affect any part of the bomb's flight path -- through the first waypoint, or otherwise. It might have an effect on reaction fire with a Blaster Launcher.

I've never tested to see if a Stun Rod could miss. Sometimes it fails to knock out an alien, but I always assumed that was because it did low damage. I guess we could try hacking its accuracy (and a soldier's melee accuracy) to see if it can miss.

--Ethereal Cereal 20:16, 2 July 2006 (PDT)