About: Spray and Pray   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/zdHyRsb-1IKptNXhX2AnsA==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Deal 110% Damage to one enemy and all enemies adjacent to it.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Spray and Pray
  • Spray and pray
rdfs:comment
  • Deal 110% Damage to one enemy and all enemies adjacent to it.
  • Spray and Pray is a medal that can be earned in the multiplayer mode of Uncharted 2: Among Thieves. It is awarded in competitive game types for defeating five enemy players with blindfire.
  • Spray and pray is a derisive term for firing an automatic firearm towards an enemy in long bursts, without making an effort to line up each shot or burst of shots. This is especially prevalent amongst those without benefit of proper training. It differs from suppressive fire as the shooting is sloppily directed. This term does not apply to appropriately focused fully automatic fire or true suppressive fire, which is standard practice for a properly trained combatant. In the Rhodesian Bush War and elsewhere, spray and pray was used to describe the firing of a relatively inaccurate weapon.
sameAs
dcterms:subject
plunder
  • 50.0
dbkwik:military/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:uncharted/p...iPageUsesTemplate
Name
  • Spray and Pray
Type
  • Competitive
DESC
  • Defeat five opponents with blindfire
Medal
  • 500.0
abstract
  • Deal 110% Damage to one enemy and all enemies adjacent to it.
  • Spray and Pray is a medal that can be earned in the multiplayer mode of Uncharted 2: Among Thieves. It is awarded in competitive game types for defeating five enemy players with blindfire.
  • Spray and pray is a derisive term for firing an automatic firearm towards an enemy in long bursts, without making an effort to line up each shot or burst of shots. This is especially prevalent amongst those without benefit of proper training. It differs from suppressive fire as the shooting is sloppily directed. This term does not apply to appropriately focused fully automatic fire or true suppressive fire, which is standard practice for a properly trained combatant. In the Rhodesian Bush War and elsewhere, spray and pray was used to describe the firing of a relatively inaccurate weapon. Jack Lewis a former U.S. Marine veteran of World War II, the Korean War, and Vietnam War and editor of Gun World magazine met the then Commandant of the Marine Corps Paul X. Kelley. Lewis told the Commandant that the effect of the introduction of the M16 rifle was that "The United States used to be known as a Nation of Riflemen; now we've become a Nation of Sprayers". Drawbacks of uncontrolled automatic gunfire are the low likelihood of actually hitting an enemy target, the large amounts of ammunition needed, and the increased risk of it becoming friendly fire. It was due to the tendency of soldiers to spray and pray during the Vietnam War that the US replaced the automatic-fire setting that was on the original M16 with three-round burst fire for the M16A2 and M16A4/M4 carbine.
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