Table of Contents
- Normal
- Damaged
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Bamboo (RF)
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Basic Info
Craft Time |
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Acquisition | Drop, Heavy, Normal |
Rarity |
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T-Doll Stats
This T-Doll is available in EN. Its rankings are based only on EN T-Dolls.
Ammo |
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Ration |
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Move Speed |
7
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Crit. Rate |
40%
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Crit. Damage |
50%
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Armor Pen. |
15
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Clip Size |
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Tileset
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Reduce Skill CD | 15% |
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Reduce Skill CD | 18% |
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Skill
Steady Shot
Initial CD (5s)
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Level 10 Effect
Start to charge after skill cooldown. Increase charges by 1 stack every second, 5 stacks maximum. Tap the skill to aim for 1 second, remove all charges, and deal 2.8x - 6x damage to the furthest target, depending on the number of stacks.
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Level 10 Cooldown
11 Seconds
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Lvl | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
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CD | 15 | 14.6 | 14.2 | 13.8 | 13.4 | 13 | 12.6 | 12.2 | 11.8 | 11 |
DMGx | 2.5x (1.5s) | 2.8x (1.5s) | 3.2x (1.5s) | 3.5x (0s) | 3.8x (1.5s) | 4.2x (1.5s) | 4.5x (1.5s) | 4.8x (1.5s) | 5.2x (1.5s) | 5.5x (1.5s) |
Unlocks at MOD I
Steady Shot
Initial CD (4s)
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Level 10 Effect
Start to charge after skill cooldown. Increase charges by 1 stack every second, 5 stacks maximum. Tap the skill to aim for 1 second, remove all charges, and deal 3x - 6.5x damage to the furthest target, depending on the number of stacks. |
Level 10 Cooldown
11 seconds
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Lvl | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
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CD | 15 | 14.6 | 14.2 | 13.8 | 13.4 | 13 | 12.6 | 12.2 | 11.8 | 11 |
Unlocks at MOD II
Pale Reaper
Initial CD (-1s)
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Level 10 Effect
Increase damage by 20% for 3 seconds after killing an |
Level 10 Cooldown
0 seconds
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Lvl | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
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CD | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Equipment
Special Equipment |
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7BT1 |
Hayha Memory Chip |
K6-24X56 |
Equipment
Special Equipment |
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7BT1 |
Hayha Memory Chip |
K6-24X56 |
GZ SPEQ-Set Bonus
When equipped with all 3 SPEQs, Mosin-Nagant's Skill 1 deals double damage to Elites and has its ICD reduced to 1 second. Additionally, her Skill 2 buffs can stack up to 3 times.
MOD Cost
MOD 1
MOD 2
MOD 3
History/Trivia
Mosin’s origin can be traced back to Russia (surprise-surprise) with the Russo-Ottoman war of 1877 and 1878, during which the Russian forces got their asses handed to them because the Turkish troops had lever-action Winchester Repeating rifles, and the poor russians had single-shot rifles.
With the incentive to upgrade their infantry's small arms, in 1889 a department of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Empire acquired several rifles for testing, notably the French Lebel 1886. In the same year, 3 more rifles were submitted for evaluation: two in 7.62mm and one in 9mm caliber. One of those 7.62 rifles was by Captain Sergei Ivanovich Mosin, and it was aptly named Mosin's rifle; the 9mm was by Léon Nagant.
Trials were concluded in 1891, with Mosin's rifle promising, but flawed. Disassembly was lengthy and required special tools, and their quality was low due to being just 300 hand-made and hand-fitted rifles. Final requirements were then decided upon, and the designers reworked their rifles. Mosin's rifle got picked and production was ordered under the name "3-line rifle M1891" (the 3 line refers to caliber, 1 line is 1-tenth of an inch, or 2.54mm).
Several flaws had been discovered in the meantime, one of which involved the aforementioned Léon Nagant.
The magazine spring was loose and not attached to the base plate, so it would be easy to lose. Mosin's original design also had problems with feeding, the 'interrupter' mechanism that should have prevented it was arguably the least reliable part of the entire rifle. By 1930, these had been fixed in the M91/30 variant.
The interrupter mechanism is where Léon gets involved. He had borrowed and internationally patented the mechanism (Mosin could not do so since he was an army officer, and the design was owned by the Russian government) and filed a patent suit. Due to small politics with Nagant being both generally helpful and cooperative in sharing experience and technology, and not being involved with competing governments to Russia, the commission that picked Mosin's rifle all the way back in 1891 awarded Nagant with the same amount that Mosin did - 200 thousand rubles.
The decision to not include inventor names in the rifle was deliberate, as Mosin's rifle included characteristics from other members of the military, some suggested by the small-arms commission, and of course some from Nagant. 'Russian' wasn't even included in the name, it was simply a 3-line M1891 rifle.
However, Nagant also used this situation for publicity, and the name Mosin-Nagant (although wrong) appeared in western literature, and it caught on. Probably because it sounds much better than the 3-line M1891.
This rifle has been in many, many wars and conflicts. Too many to list. To this day, it still stands as one of the cheapest arms to equip a given number of fighters, and around 37 million were produced in Russia alone.
The rifle itself has a few design flaws that you won't find in, say, a Mauser 98-style rifle. It has a tendency to jam shut after firing, due to the bolt handle being used as an asymmetrical backup/safety locking lug. But it's also a Mosin-Nagant, affectionately named Garbage Rod, so you don't need to feel bad when using a nearby rock or log to beat it open and resume firing. The russian-made ones are also notably poorly made, with just about anything rifle-y beating it in terms of accuracy.
Fun fact: Her chip is a homage to Hayha, the White Death. Simo Häyhä was a farmer and hunter. No, really. He was also an exceptional marksman from his youth. During compulsory military service, he was able to estimate distances incredibly accurately (up to 150m away, he was able to estimate the distance within 1m), and managed to hit a target 16 times in one minute... 150m away. With a rifle that only held 5 rounds at a time. That had to be manually cycled after each shot. That's an achievement for a non professional shooter even today, with full power autoloading rifles.
Well, he was also a notable user of the Mosin-Nagant, managing 259 confirmed kills in the Winter War with it until he was seriously wounded, with him estimating to have shot around 500 - he didn't count kills where multiple snipers shot the same target, as well as ones killed with an SMG in a group.
Although the SAKO M/28-30 (read: Finnish Mosin) wasn't his only weapon (he also used Ceia a Suomi KP/31), it was his most used weapon, preferring to not use optics as they would present a smaller target, be more reliable in the extreme weather, and wouldn't have a chance of reflecting sunlight off the lenses.
The name White Death comes from Finnish propaganda, tales of an invisible soldier that wouldn't miss, hidden among us the snow.
Even after getting wounded while filling commies with holes, he still lived to 96. What a chad.
Fun fact 2: Due to her similarities with desktop video cards, her chip is often called an Nvidia card. M1918 BAR, who also has a chip SPEQ, also has her SPEQ nicknamed Nvidia card.
Fun fact 3: While there is no reason to increase a Rifle’s Evasion, as they are slow and definitely not meant to tank enemies, it is believed that her chip has Evasion as yet another nod at White Death. He was notorious for evading full Soviet patrols, snipers, bombings, and even surviving a shot on his face.
Acquisition |
Drop,
Heavy,
Normal
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Illustrator |
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Voice Actor |
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Manufacturer |
Various - Tula,
Izhevsk,
Sestroryetsk,
Manufacture Nationale d'Armes de Châtellerault,
Remington Arms Company,
New England Westinghouse,
and many others
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T-Doll Full Name |
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Country of Origin |
Russian Empire
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Common Nicknames |
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