Light Machine Guns

Revision as of 04:08, 4 March 2026 by Skizmophonic (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Factions Weapon Icon Classes Ammo Damage
Normal Headshot

VC

Bren
Gunner
30 / 120 46 105

VC

DP-28
Gunner
47 / 141 43 103

VC

FM 24/29
Gunner
25 / 125 49 112

ANZAC

L2A1
Gunner
30+1 / 120 44 107

US

M14E2
Gunner
33+1/132 39 93

US

M1918A2 BAR LMG
Gunner
40 / 120 45 110

US

M1919A6
Gunner
150 / 300 47 112

US

M60
Gunner
100 / 200 45 103

US

M60 Belt
Gunner
150 / 300 45 103

VC

MG 34
Gunner
50 / 150 39 89

VC

MG 34 Double Drum
Special Loadout
Zombies
75/225 39 89

VC

PK
Gunner
100+1 / 200 41 94

VC

PK Belt
Gunner
175+1 / 175 41 94

VC

RP-46
Gunner
125 / 250 43 103

VC

RPD
Gunner
100 / 200 42 96

US

RPD SOG
Gunner
100 / 200 42 96

VC

RPK
Gunner
75+1 / 150 41 103

US

Stoner 63A Commando
Gunner
150 / 300 33 82

US

Stoner 63A Bren
Gunner
30 / 120 33 82

US

Stoner 63A LMG
Gunner
100 / 200 33 82

VC

TUL-1
Gunner
40+1 / 120 41 103



Light machine guns are man-portable automatic weapons intended to provide a squad or fire team with sustained suppressive fire while still being operated primarily by a single soldier. They are commonly fired from a bipod and may be fed by magazines or belts depending on the design, typically using rifle-caliber ammunition. In the Vietnam War era, light machine guns helped small units put effective automatic fire onto targets in vegetation and fighting positions without relying solely on heavier crew-served weapons.

DEFINITION & CHARACTERISTICS

A “light machine gun” is a functional category rather than a single rigid specification: it generally refers to a relatively lightweight machine gun that a single infantryman can carry and employ as an infantry support weapon. In practice, some general-purpose machine guns can also fill the light-machine-gun role when used from a bipod, while others are purpose-built as squad automatic weapons with emphasis on portability and controlled bursts.

Common traits
  • Role: Squad- or fire team-level automatic weapon for suppression and covering fire while maneuvering.
  • Typical cartridges: Rifle cartridges, often aligned with the squad’s standard ammunition where logistics allow (varies by nation and period).
  • Typical fire modes: Fully automatic is typical; controlled bursts are the common method of employment.
  • Typical feeding: Often belt-fed or fed from high-capacity magazines/drums; many are optimized for quick reloads and sustained fire.
  • Common engagement ranges: Typically employed across short-to-mid ranges common to infantry contacts; effective range depends on cartridge, sights, and doctrine.
  • Notable tradeoffs: Greater volume of fire and suppression versus increased weight and ammunition burden; heat management and reliability become more important under sustained firing.

HISTORY

Light machine guns rose to prominence as armies sought an automatic weapon that could “walk with the infantry,” giving small units organic suppressive fire without the weight and setup time of heavier tripod-mounted guns. By the mid-20th century, many infantry organizations treated the light machine gun (or squad automatic weapon) as a core element of small-unit tactics, using it to pin enemies while riflemen maneuvered. The distinction between “light” and “medium” roles was often practical: the same weapon family could be used as a light machine gun from a bipod or as a heavier sustained-fire weapon when mounted.

In the Vietnam War era, U.S. forces widely used the 7.62mm M60, frequently employed from its bipod in a mobile support role, while communist forces commonly used the Soviet RPD and its Chinese Type 56 copy as standard light machine guns. Australian and New Zealand forces also fielded the M60 in Vietnam, and captured RPD/Type 56 guns appear in Australian War Memorial collection records and photographs, reflecting the types of light machine guns encountered in theater.

Sources


Real-Life Photos

Videos