Just for the record I don’t know a lot about guns or hunting. This is just a thought experiment based on my experience with a hunting video game but now I’m curious if the concept could maybe be actually good.

So in “theHunter: Call of the Wild” there’s a revolver modeled after the Taurus Judge that’s chambered for .45 Colt as well as .410. It’s pretty interesting but not all that useful in practice since it lacks range and power. To my knowledge the actual Judge isn’t marketed as a hunting sidearm but rather as a self defense weapon.

So I got thinking how it could be improved upon and came up with what you see in the sketch. Kind of a bullpup design to give you more barrel length while retaining pocketability, weaver rail for sights, and a grip for better accuracy.

Would this just break and burn your hands or is there a way this could work? And would it even be an improvement? One drawback I’m seeing is that you couldn’t fire multiple shots in single action unless you fan it cowboy-style but I’m not sure how relevant that is for irl hunting. I feel like as long as the trigger isn’t impossibly hard to pull double action with birdshot could be viable for duck hunting and in most other scenarios you’d probably take one shot at a time anyway.

So yeah, thoughts?

  • √𝛂𝛋𝛆@piefed.world
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    6 days ago

    Depends on where you are and what you are worried about. Coming across a bear or mountain lion in a concealed close quarters area is what scares me. I have had that happen with a bear in a thicket. I was very lucky it ran when spooked because I only had a useless .22 on me. Later that day, a buddy let me shoot his .454. That is what I want for a side arm with a bear. I would have been lucky to draw and get one or two shots before it got to me. I want the biggest meanest slug of a bullet in that situation. For a rifle, I only really care about a solid bolt action. A small magazine is nice to know I have, but I am not taking bad shots. With a handgun, I want as many shots as I can hold reliably. I have no nostalgia for revolvers.

    Machining is fun, but something like a gun takes a lot of skills and time invested.