Index description:
A trio of connoisseuses who often critiques their enemies on the battlefield from head to toe and give them scores. They also do that to their companions off the battlefield, and the one who scores the highest is consistently the one sitting in the command center.
After every 2 shots, fire an augmented missile (first shot is always an augmented missile), dealing additional ($amp)x damage that ignores shields, force fields, and evasion, and ($shield_amp)x shield damage, while also causing the target to short-circuit (unable to move or attack) for 2 seconds
The minimum stat values of all installed Chips to reach the stat cap are listed in the following table. Please see HOC Chip Matrix for further details.
The RPG-29 ("Vampir") is a single-shot, reloadable, shoulder-fired unguided rocket launcher developed and fielded by the soviet union in the late 1980s. Initially, It possesses a 105mm tandem-HEAT warhead for use against hard targets (Armoured vehicles and bunkers) capable of penetrating ~75cm of RHA at any range, and capable of retaining most of the primary warhead's penetration against a single layer of ERA (Explosive Reactive Armor). The weapon has a typical effective range of about 500 metres (800m with advanced optics and a tripod), and most commonly had a 1P38 (2.7x) sight, but also could use a multitude of other sights such as NV sights, laser-rangefinders, and low-tech iron sights. The weapon is also capable of firing the the TBG-29V Thermobaric rocket, a thermobaric weapon capable of incredible destructive firepower against soft targets, and in later service Iran developed the OG-29 Time-Fused High-Explosive Fragmentation round for use against soft targets. Iran also refers to it's RPG-29's as the "Ghadir".
The weapon is typically operated by loading the rocket to be fired through the rear of the tube, then taking aim and firing the rocket, which unlike other soviet designs (such as the RPG-7) features no firing booster to protect the operator from the rocket by delaying it's ignition: instead of such a 2-stage design, the rocket is single-stage, propelled by it's rocket motor down the length of the barrel, which is already burnt out by the time the rocket leaves the barrel's end.
Perhaps ironically, the RPG-29 did not see combat service in the soviet union, nor post-soviet states, however it has been used to effect in various conficts in the middle east, notably proving it's capability against modern Main Battle Tanks, scoring damaging hits against the Challenger 2 and M1A2. It was however proven susceptible to APS countermeasures in combat in later years.
Similar to HOC AT4AT4AT4, the RPG-29 is actually a single-crew weapon system, though unlike the disposable AT4 and like some other shoulder-fired weapons, assigning a loader to it is actually useful due to the weight of the rounds.