Not a crazed gunman, dad.
I got the achievement, Lamsey was a witness, hehe.
What a biased opinion.
Anyway, OP, if HL2 beta had assassins who did some acrobatics, why the fuck do you think they will be bland in BM?
Not a crazed gunman, dad.
I got the achievement, Lamsey was a witness, hehe.
What a biased opinion.
Anyway, OP, if HL2 beta had assassins who did some acrobatics, why the fuck do you think they will be bland in BM?
+1 e-spect to OP for calling them “assassins.”
Personally, I think that it would be really, really cool if Assassins were blinded by the flashlight. Y’know, because of the nightvision.
hahahahahahah
Does they have night vision or thermal vision which fits better with red optics they wear.
And that is why they can spot you easily from a good distance. Unless they got :ninja :s kills and quick enought to dodge bullets, rushing in front of you is a brainless tactic.
You do realize that red is also an acceptable colour for night vision because of where it is located on the colour spectrum? You think it is a coincidence that traffic lights have red and green?
and yellow.
Usually night vision goggles are using the green color, that’s why. If its NVG I thought it should be like military issue used by HECU and lighting green.
Could be thermal imaging or high-tech red NVG, no big deal for me since it don’t change anything in game.
Traffic roundabouts are funnier than traffic lights and yes it’s a total coincidence that they use those colors :rolleyes:
Fassassin and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamgoggles?
Green is brighter than red. I assumed that red and green were used on traffic lights due to them being opposites.
To assassinate someone is to murder them by surprise attack. If only we had some type of mindless grunt, of the human variety of course, that likes to stand around in high-contrast clothes, and shoots at the player with minimum chance of it’s own survival. After countless hours of researching on google, it would seem that Marines would the perfect choice for this type of enemy. :retard:
Open a paint document, fill the screen with red, select Image -> Invert Colors, and then reevaluate your previous statement. :3
Red and green are opposites in subtractive colour (i.e. pigment/ink colour, which is the colour wheel most people think of), so it could be argued that it’s a reasonable assertion. In additive (screen/light) colour, however, red does indeed become cyan when inverted.
Oh noes! :[
Green is used in night vision goggles because it is in the middle of the visible light spectrum and the human eye can detect a difference between more shades of green than any other color. The military uses red lense covers on flashlights and on lights in cockpits because red is the only color of light that doesn’t change the eye dilation(make the eyes adjust to light) thus not interfering with the soldiers/pilots natural night vision. None of this has anything to do with the colors of traffic lights.
Thirded.
Bingo. The assassins are there to do a job - killing, preferably without dying in the process. They are not their to charge at you like some deranged beserker and engage your HEV-suited self in fisticuffs. Melee attacks and the like should be a last resort if you corner one and she can’t acrobatically leap to safety.
Before the United States became the military power red was the most common colour of nightvision. It is supposedly better at detecting objects not in motion, which green has trouble with, and it is less likely to cause eye damage after continual use. The last and most important reason is that red night vision hits the area of our eye with the most optical receptors, and can negate the ‘night blindspot’ that green can’t. Of course there is also a bevy of reasons to go with green instead beyond what you have mentioned. Because there are counters on both sides there is night vision devices using bother colours. Americans tend towards green for various reasons, but because they are the largest purchasers of the hardware, the most common you see around is now…green.
Ugh, that’s been covered already. I can’t remember when, but it has. Assassins can also be called Black ops, since they fit in with the definition.
By the definition every human enemy you face could be called a black op.
Don’t ya think it makes more sense to classify these particular enemies a bit more specifically by giving the name that describes their combat tactic?
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