Montagnard Crossbow

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USVC

Montagnard Crossbow
Sniper
1 / 10
Damage Base Headshot × Chest × Stomach × Leg × Arm × Bayonet Rifle Grenades
35 ×4 = 140 ×3 = 105 ×3 = 105 ×1 = 35 ×1 = 35 NO NO
Designation Weapon Type Fire Modes Fire Rate Bullet Spread ° Range Modifier Muzzle Velocity Projectile weight Weight
[[]] Crossbow Single Shot 15 RPM 1?° & 1?° ADS 1 64 m/s 100 g ( gr) 1 kg (2.2 lbs)
Full name Caliber Place of Origin Date Manufacturer Barrel Length Total Length Weapon Script Name
FN Crossbow Bolt PoO D8 ARM in ( mm) in ( mm) weapon_crossbow



The Montagnard Crossbow is a traditional crossbow used by the Indigenous peoples of Vietnam’s Central Highlands (often grouped under the French-derived label “Montagnard”). Typically made from locally available materials such as wood and plant fibers, it was primarily a hunting tool but could also be used as a silent weapon at close range. During the Vietnam War it remained part of Montagnard material culture and sometimes appeared alongside modern firearms in village defense and irregular warfare contexts.

HISTORY

Crossbows have long been used by highland communities in Vietnam for hunting and subsistence, valued for their simplicity, repairability, and effectiveness in dense terrain. Museum-held examples from the 1960s reflect locally made construction and continued everyday use, with associated bolts and quivers suited to carrying in the field.

During the Vietnam War, some Montagnard groups allied with U.S. and South Vietnamese forces through programs such as the CIDG, and crossbows persisted as familiar tools and, in limited circumstances, as quiet weapons for clandestine activity. The crossbow’s association with counterinsurgency in the period is underscored by the well-known April 1963 Oval Office photograph in which President John F. Kennedy and Gen. Chester V. Clifton examine a Colt Model 601 rifle and a crossbow intended for counterinsurgency use.

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