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DESCRIPTION GOES HERE
The Maschinenpistole 40 (MP 40) is a German 9×19mm Parabellum submachine gun developed on the eve of World War II and produced in large numbers for wartime service. It is an open-bolt, blowback-operated weapon with a folding stock and extensive stamped-steel construction intended to simplify mass production. Although fully automatic only, its relatively modest cyclic rate and controllable recoil made it effective for close-range fighting in infantry, airborne, and vehicle-crew roles.
=HISTORY=
==HISTORY==
The Maschinenpistole 40 or MP 40 is an iconic weapon from the Second World War. It was designed by Heinrich Vollmer in 1938 for Nazi Germany, where Erma Werke produced an estimated 1.1 million MP 40s from 1940 to 1945. The MP 40 saw extensive use by Axis infantry, paratroopers, and armored units. It utilizes an open bolt blowback operated system. Its only mode of fire is automatic, but due to its low rate of fire and low recoil it was a very controllable submachine gun that was favored by many units.
Designed in 1938 and fielded from 1940 onward, the MP 40 evolved from the earlier MP 38 and became one of the most recognizable German submachine guns of World War II. Its design emphasized modern manufacturing methods, using stamped parts and spot welding alongside a compact layout with a metal folding stock and a detachable box magazine. In service it was valued for portability and handling, though it could be sensitive to magazine-related feed issues if the magazine was abused as a gripping point or contaminated with dirt.


During the [[Vietnam War]] the MP 40 was used by both North and [[South Vietnam]] forces. The [[North Vietnamese]] captured the MP 40 from the French Far East Expeditionary Corps. The South Vietnamese secured their MP 40s through the CIA from the Civilian Irregular Defense Group program. There are even images of Green Berets Special Forces using the MP 40.
After World War II, large numbers of MP 40s circulated globally through capture, redistribution, and later resale, appearing in a wide variety of postwar conflicts. During the [[Vietnam War]] era, MP 40s were present in Southeast Asia in small numbers, primarily as legacy weapons that had been captured, reissued, or acquired through irregular supply channels, and they could be encountered on both sides alongside a wide mix of older submachine guns.
<br>[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MP_40 SOURCE]
===Sources===
* [https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/30029268 Imperial War Museums — MP40 [1st Issue]]
* [https://royalarmouries.org/collection/object/object-277616 Royal Armouries — Centrefire automatic submachine gun - MP40]
* [https://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/search/object/nmah_415106 Smithsonian (NMAH) — German MP40 "Maschinenpistole .40" submachine gun]
* [https://archive.org/download/GermanInfantryWeapons/GermanInfantryWeapons.pdf U.S. War Department — ''German Infantry Weapons'' (MP 38 / MP 40 section)]
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Latest revision as of 06:17, 3 March 2026

Factions Weapon Icon Classes Ammo

VC

MP 40
Medic
Engineer
Radioman
32 / 96
Damage Base Headshot × Chest × Stomach × Leg × Arm × Reload Speed
Partial Empty
38 ×2.4 = 91.2 ×1.3 = 49.4 ×1.2 = 45.6 ×0.8 = 30.4 ×0.75 = 28.5 2 Seconds 3.033 Seconds
Designation Weapon Type Fire Modes Fire Rate Bullet Spread ° Range Modifier Muzzle Velocity Projectile weight Weight
Maschinenpistole 40 SMG Auto 500 RPM 7.4° & 2.15° ADS 0.95 400 m/s 7.5 g (115.74 gr) 3.97 kg (8.75 lbs)
Full name Caliber Place of Origin Date Manufacturer Barrel Length Total Length Weapon Script Name
FN 9x19mm Nazi Germany 1939 ARM in ( mm) in ( mm) weapon_mp40



The Maschinenpistole 40 (MP 40) is a German 9×19mm Parabellum submachine gun developed on the eve of World War II and produced in large numbers for wartime service. It is an open-bolt, blowback-operated weapon with a folding stock and extensive stamped-steel construction intended to simplify mass production. Although fully automatic only, its relatively modest cyclic rate and controllable recoil made it effective for close-range fighting in infantry, airborne, and vehicle-crew roles.

HISTORY

Designed in 1938 and fielded from 1940 onward, the MP 40 evolved from the earlier MP 38 and became one of the most recognizable German submachine guns of World War II. Its design emphasized modern manufacturing methods, using stamped parts and spot welding alongside a compact layout with a metal folding stock and a detachable box magazine. In service it was valued for portability and handling, though it could be sensitive to magazine-related feed issues if the magazine was abused as a gripping point or contaminated with dirt.

After World War II, large numbers of MP 40s circulated globally through capture, redistribution, and later resale, appearing in a wide variety of postwar conflicts. During the Vietnam War era, MP 40s were present in Southeast Asia in small numbers, primarily as legacy weapons that had been captured, reissued, or acquired through irregular supply channels, and they could be encountered on both sides alongside a wide mix of older submachine guns.

Sources


Real-Life Photos

Videos