Chaingun/Doom 3



The chaingun (also known as the UAC Weapons Division Mach 2 Chaingun) in Doom 3 is a good mid range weapon with a high rate of fire. It is considerably more powerful than its classic Doom counterpart. While the old chaingun was at best, a light rapid fire weapon that was clearly inferior to the plasma rifle and at best compared to the machine gun, Doom 3's chaingun is more on par with the plasma gun.

Very powerful; good belt size; medium accuracy with spread; heavy recoil; slight wind-up time. This should be used for Cacodemons, Imps, (pinky) Demons, Mancubi, and Hell Knights. Ammo counter is located on the weapon.

Unlike the classic chaingun, which fired the same standard rounds as the pistol, the Mach 2 Chaingun fires exclusive .30 caliber armor penetrating rounds.

Tactical Use
The chaingun is the gun-of-all-seasons, to say the very least. High accuracy and rate of fire make it a good weapon to use in anywhere from close to far range situations against almost any low to mid-range foe. Even a Hell Knight can be taken down with less than 5 seconds of concentrated fire from this supreme piece of military technology.

Although it has stupendous firepower at any length, both short and long range use is discouraged. Short range attacks mean possibly being taken down by a melee attacker (such as a tentacle Commando zombie) in a situation where you want to lay down a lot of pain in a split second (say, with a shotgun).

Due to its noticeable bullet spread, long range combat is also discouraged. Additionally, the chaingun has no splash effect damage, meaning that unless the target stands perfectly still or you just fire blindly in the targets movement range (which means wasting ammo), you are not going to do much damage.

The best situation is a relatively slow, large monster that affords enough time to be taken down and requires a steady stream of fire to be taken down. Pinkys and Cacodemons come to mind, as does Vagary. Also, a group of Trites or Lost Souls can easily be taken down with some blind firing.

When using the chaingun, take into consideration its two flaws. It does have a warm up period, albeit short, that can allow a quick opponent a chance to throw in a melee attack and soften you up for the kill. Secondly, only 600 rounds can be carried at any time for the chaingun, and its high rate of fire can mean running out of ammo very quickly.