Homemade Shotgun

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Factions Weapon Icon Classes Ammo

VC

Homemade Shotgun
Special Loadout
Zombies
1 / 24
Damage Base Headshot × Chest × Stomach × Leg × Arm × Bayonet Rifle Grenades Reload Speed
Partial Empty
26 x2.5 = 65 x1.5 = 39 x1.25 = 32.5 x0.9 = 23.4 x0.85 = 22.1 NO NO Seconds Seconds
Designation Weapon Type Fire Modes Bullet Spread ° Range Modifier Muzzle Velocity Projectile weight Weight
Homemade Shotgun Shotgun Semi 8 / 3 ADS 0.75 403 m/s 0.7 g (10.8 gr) 3.2 kg (7.05 lbs)
Full name Caliber Place of Origin Date Manufacturer Barrel Length Total Length Weapon Script Name
Homemade shotgun 12 gauge Vietnam Unknown Local workshop / handmade Unknown Unknown weapon_vcshotgun



The Homemade Shotgun is a Zombies shtarting weapon. It represents a craft-built single-shot 12 gauge shotgun made from available parts rather than a standardized factory model.

Hand crafted weapons, also called improvised or craft-built weapons, are firearms and munitions produced outside formal armories and industrial production lines, typically made as one-offs or in small batches by local workshops. They range from extremely crude pipe-gun style weapons to skilled copies of captured firearms, built using limited tooling and available materials. In Vietnam-era irregular warfare, these weapons could fill urgent gaps when factory-produced arms were scarce or when a locally made weapon was easier to hide, replace, or supply.

HISTORY

Improvised and craft-built firearms have appeared wherever irregular forces lack consistent access to factory arms. A U.S. Foreign Science and Technology Center study on “typical foreign unconventional warfare weapons” describes a spectrum ranging from weapons made largely from pipe and scrap, to adapted or partly factory-made arms fitted with homemade stocks and components—often intended to serve only until a better weapon can be obtained. Because these weapons may be built with minimal tooling, designs often prioritize simplicity (single-shot, crude blowback, or simplified lockwork) over longevity.

A useful real-world comparison is the Richardson Industries M5 "Philippine Guerrilla Gun", a post-World War II American commercial shotgun inspired by crude slam-fire pipe shotguns used by Philippine guerrillas against Japanese occupation forces. The video added below identifies its subject as a deluxe M5 Guerilla Gun in 12 gauge and describes its operation: the barrel is driven rearward into a fixed firing pin, with the deluxe model adding a safety while simpler versions were little more than pipe-gun designs. The M5 should be treated as a comparison point rather than the exact identity of the in-game Homemade Shotgun, but it shows the same design logic behind many improvised guerrilla firearms: cheap materials, few moving parts, and a weapon intended to be simple enough to build or use when standard arms are scarce.

In the Vietnam War era, locally made weapons existed alongside a much broader mix of imported and captured arms. Vietnam-theater collection notes document crude single-shot pistols associated with tunnel defense, and Australian War Memorial reporting highlights captured munitions that included homemade and improvised grenades—evidence of small-scale local production even when standard weapons were also present. Craft-built examples ranged from very rough “emergency” pistols to more ambitious copies of captured firearms (such as crude 1911-pattern pistols made with limited tooling).

Sources


Real-Life Photos

Videos