rdfs:comment
| - Battle Dress (バトルドレス Batoru Doresu) are one of the four tribes from the Blue World.
- Battledress was the specific title of a military uniform adopted by the British Army in the late 1930s and worn until the 1960s. Several other nations also introduced variants of Battle Dress during the Second World War, including Australia, Canada, India, New Zealand, South Africa, and the United States of America (the E.T.O. uniform) and after the Second World War, including Argentina, Belgium, Norway, the Netherlands, and Greece.
- Peace Sentinel issued some of its soldiers with reinforced combat suits for armored vehicle escorts. In 1974, the Militaires Sans Frontières procured a Battle Dress during the Peace Walker Incident, following their commander, Big Boss's first battle with the Peace Walker unmanned weapon.
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abstract
| - Peace Sentinel issued some of its soldiers with reinforced combat suits for armored vehicle escorts. In 1974, the Militaires Sans Frontières procured a Battle Dress during the Peace Walker Incident, following their commander, Big Boss's first battle with the Peace Walker unmanned weapon. Conceptually the opposite of the Sneaking Suit, the Battle Dress was designed specifically for combat, and allowed for increased ammunition and weapons storage, and offered excellent protection. However, these benefits came at the cost of the user's speed due to the increased weight. A variation provided a sturdy bullet-proof helmet complete with a riot-gear style yellow visor, increasing protection, that was procured by the MSF during missions outside of Costa Rica from capturing an enemy facility. Big Boss himself utilized an armored version of his bandana in place of the bulletproof helmet. When infiltrating the United States Missile Base near Lake Nicaragua, Big Boss was later forced to adopt the use of the Battle Dress at Kazuhira Miller's suggestion to get past the swarm of soldiers at the base that were between him and the base's command tower, which had been far more than even Amanda and her Sandinistas believed to be the case. In 1984, special forces troops in Africa utilized a variation of the Battle Dress and the Diamond Dogs R&D Team was able to create a variation of the Battle Dress for use. The Diamond Dogs' Battle Dress during this time was a variant of the standard Sneaking Suit that was both inserted and fitted with various ceramic plates to act as heavy combat gear, greatly increasing protection for the wearer. The hard-line PF Kill Count frequently wore body armor in most cases, some of which were of a similar model to those worn by African PF special forces troops such as Zero Risk Security. Kill Count and ZRS's battle dress had a faint similarity to MSF's Battle Dress. Another variant ended up developed for various buddies, specifically D-Horse and DD. The former featured a clear face mask on the face, bulletproof ceramic shroud across the body, and armor for the hooves and lower legs, which also was further upgraded to include a black bodysuit and a reinforced face mask and eventually a tan ceramic shroud for the neck.
- Battle Dress (バトルドレス Batoru Doresu) are one of the four tribes from the Blue World.
- Battledress was the specific title of a military uniform adopted by the British Army in the late 1930s and worn until the 1960s. Several other nations also introduced variants of Battle Dress during the Second World War, including Australia, Canada, India, New Zealand, South Africa, and the United States of America (the E.T.O. uniform) and after the Second World War, including Argentina, Belgium, Norway, the Netherlands, and Greece. Battledress (BD), or later No. 5 Uniform, was the combat uniform worn by British Commonwealth and Imperial forces and many Free European Forces through the Second World War. It was worn mostly but not exclusively in temperate climates. In some armies it continued in use into the 1970s. During the Second World War and thereafter this uniform was also used for formal parades (including mounting the Queen's Guard at Buckingham Palace) until the re-introduction of separate parade uniforms in the late 1950s.
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