Toggle menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

Rifleman

From CM-SS13 - Wiki
MARINE
Standard.png
Standard Marine
Difficulty: Easy
Supervisors: Squad Leader
Rank: Not defined
Duties: Follow orders. Don't get yourself killed. Don't shoot your squadmates.
Guides: Bullet Paths and Friendly Fire
Unlock Requirements: Not available.
Detailed Description:
|__________|
Not defined
|__________|


"How do I get out of this chickenshit outfit?"- Hudson, Aliens

You're in the United States Colonial Marine Corps. Follow your sergeant's orders and don't ask too many questions. Whether you've been to Hell and back or you're fresh out of Boot, you're expected to maintain a level of professionalism. Do your job, follow orders, and maybe you'll go home in one piece.

This guide assumes you have finished the Marine Quickstart Guide and will hopefully help you transit out from being a baldie.


Your Squad

As a Standard Marine you will be assigned to one of four squads. Each squad has a colour to make them easily identifiable: Alpha is RED, Bravo is YELLOW, Charlie is PURPLE, Delta is BLUE.. Examining your ID or checking about the role when you spawn will tell you what squad you're in.


See those chrome-domes, snowcones, and badass wannabes over there? Those ass-hats are your fellow squaddies. Stay near them and you might not go home in a box. Stay on comms and let your squad know if you see anything out of the ordinary. If you find yourself standing around with some other jackasses who aren't wearing the same color as you, you fucked up. Go find your squad. That hardass with the funny stripes on his helmet? That's your Squad Leader. The squad leader's orders are the will of God and should be treated as such. The morons with the big guns? That's your Squad Specialist and your Squad Smartgunner. Leave them alone. Don't fuck with the corpsmen and the com-techs and they won't fuck with you. Okay, Grunt, time for a recap. Do what you're told and don't shoot your squad.


The Weapons

In Marine Quickstart Guide, M41A is recommended as the weapon of choice due to its versatility and ease of use. However, you may find it lack burst damage of M37 shotgun, the mobility of M39 submachine gun, the clearing power of M240 Incinerator.


M37A2 Shotgun

Shotgun.png
Slug
Buckshot

This weapon is powerful in close quarters combat and is capable of killing even the strongest of hostile targets. Due to its sheer power, the M37A2 is capable of stunning even the mighty Xenomorph when fired from close range. Unlike M41A which magazine-fed, shotgun is pump action and shells are fed in one by one. To reloading a shotgun, first you need to take out the shells from the shell box. Hold the shotgun shell box with one hand, then swap to your other hand and click it to take out a handful of shells. Take out a few handfuls of shells then take the shotgun in one hand, load it the shells one by one (M37 can hold eight shells plus one pumped in the chamber). Pump the shotgun with Unique Action Button Use-Unique-Action.png, you need to pump it after each firing. Using Macros to bind a hotkey for it is a must to use shotgun effectively.

  • Slug shells: Single Slug Projectile. Effective in ranged combat. Armor Piercing. Less damage. High knockback chance from range.
  • Buckshot shells: Fires multiple small projectiles. Powerful in close range. Massive damage, with a rapid damage fall-off at range. Fires in a 15-degree radius.
  • See the latest replies of the thread Buckshot vs Slug: The final debate.


M39 Submachine Gun

M39.png

Allows you to have high mobility but lacks raw power and armor penetration. Good for chasing down fleeing enemies. You can duel wield them but they won't hit most of the time. The M39 uses 10x20mm SMG rounds, and holds 48 bullets with an optional 4-round burst fire mode.


M240 Incinerator Unit

Flamethrower.png

The incinerator is good at setting enemies on fire and clearing unwanted vegetations with a moderate range of 5 tiles. Fuel tanks can be refilled (only when it's emptied) by clicking on a welder fuel tank, welder pack or welding tank with the emptied tank in your hand. Squad Lead may hand out the two incinerators that are in their vendor (with 8 fuel tanks in total). The refilled welder fuel is weaker than original thick sticky napthal fuel. More flamers can be ordered from cargo.


M44 Combat Revolver

44magnum.png
M44SL.png

Deals significantly more damage per round than the M4A3 at the cost of ammo capacity and recoil. It uses .44 rounds, usually held in speedloaders, and holds a maximum of 7 bullets. To reload, click it with an empty hand to open the revolving cylinder, load the speedloader, click the revolver again with an empty hand to close the revolving cylinder


Attachments and Requisitions

Now you may have heard of that mythical land where special equipment, grenades and weapon mods flow like it's motherfucking Christmas. That place is called Requisitions and it ain't no Mount Olympus and that sweaty guy over there ain't Zeus. He's the RO. Rule motherfucking one: Don't fuck with the Requisitions Officer. If he says you don't get attachments, guess what, Boot? You don't get attachments. If he says so, the MPs will throw you in the fucking brig. So don't go screaming and trying to bash your way into cargo because you couldn't get a third red dot for the M39. Now, the RO answers to "On-High" and "On-High" has deemed it acceptable for you to request two to four attachments and probably 2 pieces of special equipment (such as webbing and grenades) from Requisitions, depending on how the RO sees it. To get these attachments you're treating like holy fucking relics, you must go to the requisitions line, located aft of the briefing room. Now, remember, the RO has a low tolerance for bullshit so if you show up in your underwear he'll refuse to serve you. Then your "buddies" will throw your ass out of the line. Then the MPs will kick your ass out of boredom.


Alright, you've managed to wake up, eat breakfast, get dressed, let your squad leader know you exist, and wait in a single file line for a little over three minutes. Aren't you fucking special? Think again! Your ass is still bottom of the food chain so don't hold your breath over getting anything good but seeing as you're holding some sort of weapon, I guess there's still hope for you yet. Everyone's got their favorite loadouts but it all boils down to what you prefer. Trial and error is the best way to know what you like and don't like.


In the field

You have superior firepower and can fire across the screen, the limiting factors are lighting, vision, and terrain.

Lighting

3 tiles throw range
6 tiles throw range (one tile into the dark)

To overcome low visibility of the battlefield, you need rail flashlight and flares. Rail flashlight not only extend your light, it also extends your throw range (you can only throw/shoot to tiles that is lit), allowing you to throw flares further thus even more light. Rail flashlight increases your throw range from 3 tiles to 6 tiles by allowing you to throw into the dark by one tile.

First aid

Helping others

Before pulling a downed marine back in the front, use point at (shift + middle click) to show your intention of going in or to urge the nearer marines to pull them. As you are pulling the downed marine back, shift + click to check the marine, bandage the bleeding wounds when it's safe. If the marine is conscious (not seems to be asleep), shake them with Help intent to get them up, get them to a medic if he doesn't get up. If the marine has no pulse, get them to a medic then remove their armor (drag their sprites onto yours to open their equipment window, click ExoSuit: M3 armor) so that medic can immediately revive them (can't revive with armor on).

  • Get splints Splint.png, you can split the stack by holding it in the active hand then click it with another hand, restock the new stack (one splint) to a NanoMed NanoMed.png then you keep the rest.
  • Get a roller bed in your bag so you can quickly transport wounded out in an emergency (being overrun/no Medic/no CASevac).
  • Marines whose revive timer ran out, without a head, chestbursted and turned gray (aka husked, too much burn damage) are unrevivable.


Your Skillset

Standard Skill set.png

To find out about how the skill system works head over to the skills system page.


Tips

  • Only take what you need. You're going to need somewhere between zero and one armor piercing magazine in the field for heavily armored enemies and probably more if you see tin men in the field. For everything else, soft point ammunition to hollowpoint to incendiary is superior.
  • Follow the chain of command. If someone tells you jump, you'd better ask how high on the way up.
  • Use appropriate titles. Your Squad Leader is Staff Sergeant, or Squad Leader. He's not an officer so don't call him "Sir" and he's not in the Army so don't call him "Sarge."
  • Be useful. Offer to carry extra engineering, medical, or some specialist/smartgunner supplies. Those guys are already carrying more weight than you'll ever be able to.
  • Keep your superiors informed. Stay on the radio and keep the squad and command up to date on what's going on. Do you see movement outside the perimeter? Let your fireteam know. Did Private McFuckface blow his hand off playing catch with a grenade? Let your squad leader know. Did your staff sergeant just get his head taken off by incoming artillery? Let command know.
  • Stay in the light. There ain't many things out there scarier than marines and they all like the dark. Keep your shoulder lamp on and pop a flare whenever you're stopped for more than a moment.
  • Use single fire for long to medium ranges and burstfire for CQC and close range engagements. By doing this you conserve ammo but can still dish out the pain to incoming hostiles.