• rockkicker
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    3474 months ago

    in-built, automatic tactile feedback that you need to reload because you feel 2 shots instead of 3

    better than the british solution of “count in your head how many bullets you’ve used and reload when you hit 30”

  • @[email protected]
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    1244 months ago

    As much as I love shitting on the French for being terrible with numbers (seriously, how the fuck is the word for ‘99’ ‘four-twenties, a ten, and a nine’?!?) this one seems intentional so you can feel when you run out.

    • @[email protected]
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      274 months ago

      The funny thing is that in Switzerland they commonly say nonante neuf. So it’s not like there is no word for 90

    • @[email protected]
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      4 months ago

      Because way back when, before sensible systems, they used base-20, and despite now running base-10, the base-20 is stuck in the language.

      Edit it’s sort of in most languages actually, not just to that extent. I mean, English has “twenty-one”, but no “onety-one”. 1-20 have their own numbers in most languages I think, and after twenty you just repeat the first 10 and add whatever tens you like, whereas the French sometimes repeat the first 20 and add an amount of twenties

      • @[email protected]
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        33 months ago

        English has “twenty-one”, but no “onety-one”.

        But you have teens? Thirteen, fourteen etc? It’s just that a dozen was kind of special, so eleven and twelve are kind of irregular, but afterwards it’s just ordinary base 10, isn’t it?

        • @[email protected]
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          33 months ago

          But the endian switches for the teens — twenty three is “tens place ones place,” but thirteen is “ones place tens place.”

        • @[email protected]
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          13 months ago

          Well, English does. Not my native language.

          Yes, my point exactly. No “onety-one”, because “eleven”.

          Same with other languages.

          But “thirteen”, “fourteen” etc, you think are as regular as “twenty one”, “thirty three” “forty five”?

          It is base-10 all the way through, but I’m just pointing out that probably at one point in history, even other languages, for some reason, counted 1-20 differently than 20+ numbers and they sort of stuck.

    • Natanael
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      124 months ago

      The Danish are similarly bad with numbers as the French

      • noughtnaut
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        134 months ago

        We’re not bad with numbers, just at naming them. 😉 But that’s why we pretty much always use abbreviations.

        Abbreviations. Of numbers. Don’t think about it. 😅

    • @[email protected]
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      64 months ago

      My ass will know I ran out when the panic fire stops working and not one second before. And probably several after.

    • @[email protected]
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      3 months ago

      Wait til you find out how Abraham Lincoln counted the passage of time in the Gettysburg Address…

  • SufniDroid
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    794 months ago

    Later on they made a variant that accepts 30 round STANAG magazines, but the Army decided not to adopt it. Classic French behaviour.

  • AlexisFR
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    714 months ago

    Fun fact: IRL burst firing modes don’t fire 3 bullets with a single presse of the trigger, you have to keep it down for all 3 bullets.

  • @[email protected]
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    4 months ago

    What? It’s the FAMAS…and certainly not the only military rifle with 3 round burst. It also has single fire and full auto. Many magazines are in multiples of 5, so unless the user only carries 30 round magazines there will always be an odd one left if burst fire is the only mode used.

    Anon really didn’t think about this too hard.