"The Japanese weren't necessarily known for their airborne operations..." Idk, seems like they were pretty well known for them- just not the kind where anyone would land and need a rifle
They had one fantastic airborne drop on, I wanna say, Singapore. The war they started evolved very quickly to them not having the advantage, being on the defensive for most of the war after that, resulting in there not being much use for their paratroopers. The Allies didn't do it much either in the Pacific.
They used Airborne unit to captured various points in Dutch East Indies. The famous one was the operation to captured Palembang Airfield and Kalimantan Oil field.
@@AJadedLizardThe IJA used paratroopers several times in attempts to neutralize US airfields on Leyte during the landbattles which followed the IJN's defeat in the battle of Leyte gulf. They used Ki-49 and Ki-57 to land troops at night, success was different per day and airfield, but in the end the operations failed and only a fraction of the paratroopers managed to fight their way through American territory back north around Ormoc to other IJA troops
@@rumanmian9573 you can’t go wrong with Constitutional Arms ngl. I got jumped by those commie implant stealers the other night but I had my unity in hand and managed to fight them off. Can’t go wrong with MA either tho ngl
Airborne operations ≠ aerial warfare as a whole. Japanese paratroops didn't do that much during WW2. Edit: doing paratroop operations, that is. They mostly got used as elite light infantry.
You're telling me we're only one letter away from a major cyberpunk synchronism? No wonder John hopkins is the leader in cyber prosthetics in this timeline, fuck.
Cyberpunk’s writer picked the megacorp’s name from this rifle and its inventor! The company’s founder (as well as Saburo, his son and the current head) both also served in the imperial military in cyberpunk’s timeline
It kinda reminds me of how some katanas are held to the blade by a single pin or a couple pins to make blade cleaning and restorations easier, but instead with guns lol
I read online a sporterized Type 2 starred as Scorpio’s sniper rifle in the original Dirty Harry. Sporterization aside, it’s an interesting highlight of the various weapons in the film
I love that whoever the armorer was for that film just decided to give him every single bad guy from WWII gun. He also had an MP.40 and a P.38. Wish he'd had a Nambu Type 14 instead, just to be on brand.
I mean not really, better to have a rifle that can be easily broken down and put back for use by an individual soldier or sailor than in a cache that could get lost or captured or otherwise just be inaccessible.
Japanese gun design is amazingly straight forward and effective. Also the Japanese paratroopers did have their day on the sun, they captured the Indonesian oil fields from the Dutch in a rapid offensive that caught the allies off guard
It was modeled after the German paratrooper take down Mauser. *_"A specialized variant of the Arisaka rifle, the Type 2 was Japan's attempt to emulate the Germans in the manufacture of paratroop rifles."_*
The US evaluated this and other Mauser rifles of the time right after ww2 and found that the Arisaka was the best mauser style rifle design. And the poor man who actually made it (Nambu) never gets enough credit.
@@FunhausRyanC&R arsenal did a video on what they considered the best rifles of WWI and the Arisaka actually placed first, I would suggest maybe watching that video it was pretty interesting
In the words of my possibly immortal but definitely German grandmother "They can make those shiny swords but can't make a gun for shit without stealing one of ours."
This is also surprisingly similar to the mechanism which held together Katana blades. A small pin was inserted at the base of the handle which held together the hilt and the blade. Once you pull that pin out, you could completely take the sword apart.
Japanese paratroopers could also carry the type 89 grenade discharger which would attached to a special container clipped to their harness allowing them to fire directly onto the landing zone which sounds insane and completely badass
Fun fact. The rifle used by the serial killer in the first Dirty Harry film actually was a heavily sporterized and modified Type 2 Paratrooper rifle. While that rifle nowadays is worth a lot, back then there wasn't any real market for Imperial Japanese milsurp, so the rifle was considered almost worthless. The actual milsurp market for Imperial Japanese arms wouldn't really develop until the 90s and early 00s.
I own one of those my great grandfather brought it home as a war trophy. I have both halves of the gun the bag. It came in some of the ammunition, some of it clips and its bayonet
The amazing thing about it is you'd expect there'd be failures but it stood the test of time. Thank God too cuz original parts for it is hella expensive and close to impossible to get some.
In 1942 Japanese Airborne Operations happened in Dutch East Indies: In the Islands of Celebes on the northern part of the island. Exact place is North Celebes Province. The Airfield is Kalawiran Airfield. There are around 500 paratrooper against around 350 KNIL soldiers guarding the airfields. They are also used in Malaysia and other parts of South East Asia. For people in Celebes Island they got a nicknamed of “Tentara Lonceng” means “The Bell Army” because they look like a walking bell with their big steel helmet and short bodies. They secured the airfield in just 6 hours of fighting. This is known as “The Battle of Manado.”
So tired of Managerial Outcomes dude. Can't believe you worked with him. Wtf
Easy there pal, MO is a great guy
I was so confused for a second lmao
Thank god he didnt start cooking pizzas on that oven of his
Yea. I hate that guy too.😅
Dude will literally colab with anyone
"For their gun autism" had me rollin 😂😂😂
This is exactly why I love Kal-Tec 😢
Not to mention their absolute tank autism
japanese ver of wunderwaffe
@@My_Name_Is_Mud.Kel*
Me too. Especially as a german myself.
This is why i use milltech
I fuckin knew it 😂
I was thinking the same thing lol.
Granted I use the Sovereign. Something about using a shotgun from 1877 in 2077 that is just funny to me.
Ay beat me to it
Wake up Samurai
CYBERPUNK MENTIONED
I keep hearing Arasaka
WAKE THE FUCK UP SAMURAI
Wake the fuck up samurai
Then wake the fuck up you have a city to burn
Maybe we're all bout to go cyberpsycho, choom...
*Cielo music intensifies*
Cyberpunk brain rot is real
for real
You have no idea how chromed out my brain is right now on that shit
Brain gonk
Fr
My brain is shortcircing rn
"The Japanese weren't necessarily known for their airborne operations..."
Idk, seems like they were pretty well known for them- just not the kind where anyone would land and need a rifle
They had one fantastic airborne drop on, I wanna say, Singapore. The war they started evolved very quickly to them not having the advantage, being on the defensive for most of the war after that, resulting in there not being much use for their paratroopers. The Allies didn't do it much either in the Pacific.
Believe both sides did para drops in the Philippines
@@tomhenry897 That's interesting, I didn't know that.
They used Airborne unit to captured various points in Dutch East Indies. The famous one was the operation to captured Palembang Airfield and Kalimantan Oil field.
@@AJadedLizardThe IJA used paratroopers several times in attempts to neutralize US airfields on Leyte during the landbattles which followed the IJN's defeat in the battle of Leyte gulf.
They used Ki-49 and Ki-57 to land troops at night, success was different per day and airfield, but in the end the operations failed and only a fraction of the paratroopers managed to fight their way through American territory back north around Ormoc to other IJA troops
Really missed a hell of an opportunity not calling it the parasaka
Goddamn. Fuck you for being so smart…. It shoulda been me!
I’ll never not call this gun that from this day on. Thank you kind sir!
That got a giggle out of me
Corpo gonk broke his Arasaka 😂😭
Choom forgot he had gorilla arms
@@Semper_Fidelis_Can never go wrong with the Malorian series. Overtures especially. Theres also the Malorian 3516 but thats one of a kind.
@@rumanmian9573 you can’t go wrong with Constitutional Arms ngl. I got jumped by those commie implant stealers the other night but I had my unity in hand and managed to fight them off. Can’t go wrong with MA either tho ngl
Ever notice how managerial outcomes looks like administrative results?
just saying we haven't seen em in the same room
I don’t really see it
never seen them together
fr
Am I having a stroke?
"It aint got no gas in it!!"
I was thinking the same thing 🤣
Arisaka in a different timeline they were made my Arasaka
Arasaka was a pilot in WW2, which means it is not impossible that he could have gotten his hands on one of these
“The Japanese weren’t exactly known for their *airborne* operations” I beg to differ
*Sacred Wind enters the chat*
Airborne operations ≠ aerial warfare as a whole.
Japanese paratroops didn't do that much during WW2.
Edit: doing paratroop operations, that is. They mostly got used as elite light infantry.
List them
Only know of one
Go ahead. Differ
@@MosoKaiserThat was until they decided to fuck with America's boats lol 😂
Cyberpunk 2077 instincts kick in "Did somebody say...Arasaka?".
😬
I'm pretty sure Arisaka and Arasaka are almost supposed to be the same company
Ain't no way he parodied a sentence from the Unabomber's manifesto 💀
He did
What line?
@@HarrisonGoldfarb he parodied the line "the industrial revolution and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race"
“I think I just broke my Arisaka”
“What’s wrong with it?”
“AIN’T GOT NO GAS INNIT!!!”
Arasaka? *crying+I really want to stay at your house intensifies*
The "Oh Sh!t" got me!!!! 😂
Imagine landing in enemy territory only to find half the gun missing. 😂
Imagine losing the other half of your rifle upon landing in some trees 💀
You're telling me we're only one letter away from a major cyberpunk synchronism? No wonder John hopkins is the leader in cyber prosthetics in this timeline, fuck.
Cyberpunk’s writer picked the megacorp’s name from this rifle and its inventor! The company’s founder (as well as Saburo, his son and the current head) both also served in the imperial military in cyberpunk’s timeline
Uncle Ted would be proud.
Icl the intro sounded like the intro to ted kaczynskis book
Oh no the arisaka has ejectile disfunction
I know wha' wrong wi' i', ain' go' no gas innit 🗣🗣
It kinda reminds me of how some katanas are held to the blade by a single pin or a couple pins to make blade cleaning and restorations easier, but instead with guns lol
I read online a sporterized Type 2 starred as Scorpio’s sniper rifle in the original Dirty Harry. Sporterization aside, it’s an interesting highlight of the various weapons in the film
I love that whoever the armorer was for that film just decided to give him every single bad guy from WWII gun. He also had an MP.40 and a P.38. Wish he'd had a Nambu Type 14 instead, just to be on brand.
San Francisco Gun Exchange was an amazing store in its day. They had numerous WW2 Japanese guns on display. They might have helped with prop guns.
They are 100% known for what they do in the air😂
That such a dumb fucking idea with so much heart, God bless whoever came up with it lol
I mean not really, better to have a rifle that can be easily broken down and put back for use by an individual soldier or sailor than in a cache that could get lost or captured or otherwise just be inaccessible.
V we need to break into arasaka with rogue again. Come on V pwetty pwease
Nah I'd win
“To show you the prower of frex tape, I saw this gun in harf!”
Idk why this is in my feed but the “oh shit” caught me off guard and I laughed really hard. Thanks for that
The collab we needed
Japanese gun design is amazingly straight forward and effective. Also the Japanese paratroopers did have their day on the sun, they captured the Indonesian oil fields from the Dutch in a rapid offensive that caught the allies off guard
If by amazingly straight forward you mean cheap knock offs of other countries weapons and by effective you mean blowing up in your face then yeah.
All i know about that gun is that its really good at stabbing Bots in the WAW Campaign
“What’s wrong with it?”
My automatic answer was: “It ain’t got no gas in it!”
It was modeled after the German paratrooper take down Mauser.
*_"A specialized variant of the Arisaka rifle, the Type 2 was Japan's attempt to emulate the Germans in the manufacture of paratroop rifles."_*
I have a Chinese Arisaka. It's a pretty rare find. Obviously it's a Japanese rifle but the maker and armory marks are Mukden, a Chinese armory.
I don’t know, dude the Germans have the FG 42 yeah that thing is dope
The US evaluated this and other Mauser rifles of the time right after ww2 and found that the Arisaka was the best mauser style rifle design. And the poor man who actually made it (Nambu) never gets enough credit.
Why is it the best? Do you know what to search to bring up those results?
@@FunhausRyanC&R arsenal did a video on what they considered the best rifles of WWI and the Arisaka actually placed first, I would suggest maybe watching that video it was pretty interesting
In the words of my possibly immortal but definitely German grandmother "They can make those shiny swords but can't make a gun for shit without stealing one of ours."
"Gun Autism in their design" is now my new favorite phrase 😂
Damn I wish I could afford one.
Japan: *sees Mosin*
Japan: well someone's gotta fuck it up
Rising sun ammo box goes hard
Now I regret not buying the one I saw for sale at the gun show
the killer in dirty harry used a bubbaed type 2 whic is perhaps the worst crime he comitted in that movie
I saw one in the movie, Manchurian Canidate. Original 1963
Now imagine having this modification done to MAS-36? A true citizen rifle.
Who else likes to live dangerously and carry a Nambu 94?
Safety? Always off 😤
Nice can they make more of these Even in tactical.❤
What in the world are you talking about 😂
@@wisemankugelmemicus1701 you know make more of this gun in the video. It's cool
@@dawaynefxdghbjdixondxfghjk2065 The Empire of Japan hasnt existed for 79 years, I don't think they will
@@wisemankugelmemicus1701not even if we say please😢
This is also surprisingly similar to the mechanism which held together Katana blades. A small pin was inserted at the base of the handle which held together the hilt and the blade. Once you pull that pin out, you could completely take the sword apart.
“Whats wrong with it?”
🗣️‼️IT AINT GOT NO GAS IN IT‼️
It’s a piece of history don’t you dare lose it
In 20 years, you’ll thank me
Thank you for the Ted reference
ATF officer 1: write that down! write hat down!
ATF officer 2: writing!
Japanese paratroopers could also carry the type 89 grenade discharger which would attached to a special container clipped to their harness allowing them to fire directly onto the landing zone which sounds insane and completely badass
i know wass' wrong wit' it ain't got no gas in it.
Thanks dawg
"Ain't got no gas innit!"
Ahhhh the HairySacka. That’s what me and the boys called this gun when we played COD: World At War.
Fun fact. The rifle used by the serial killer in the first Dirty Harry film actually was a heavily sporterized and modified Type 2 Paratrooper rifle. While that rifle nowadays is worth a lot, back then there wasn't any real market for Imperial Japanese milsurp, so the rifle was considered almost worthless. The actual milsurp market for Imperial Japanese arms wouldn't really develop until the 90s and early 00s.
Ted Kazachisky manifesto reference 😂
That breakdown rifle is sick, nice piece! 💪
I own one of those my great grandfather brought it home as a war trophy. I have both halves of the gun the bag. It came in some of the ammunition, some of it clips and its bayonet
From shitposting on the gram for a few hundred to making collaborations, love it keep it up!
Heatblur just get better and better man! I’ve got massive respect for them
After Trauma Team ditched this rifle and swapped to Militech weapons, they really saw their client survival rate go up.
I saw one of these in person at a gun store in Lubbock Texas a few years ago. Absolutely beautiful gun
"not know for their airborne operations"
Oh boy, do i have news for you.
I am so happy for the Vintage Warfare x Administrative Results bromance manga arc, I'm here for it.
I heard "Arasaka" and you know what that means.
You know that system, or at least very similar, is still being made today. I like it
The amazing thing about it is you'd expect there'd be failures but it stood the test of time.
Thank God too cuz original parts for it is hella expensive and close to impossible to get some.
That black skirt was definitely the best
ARASAKA? *Johnny Silverhand Theme*
Man i love the color on those stocks. Mine is much darker and aged. Yours looks like they were very well kept.
Damn, didn’t realize how rare these are. I’ve got one that someone in my family brought back along with the bayonet
admin "i broke it" lmao
“Gun autism” 😂
The crossover I was waiting for
"Hey bro, You wanna trade gun fronts?"
Cyberpunk itch acting up rn
I was in no way prepared for “gun autism” lmaoooo
That’s such a cool looking rifle
holy shit someone in stafford, UK, is selling the type 2 para version... not a 7.7 fan but damn what a neat historical piece!
Gun autism is a crazy way to say that
"While the Japanese weren't known for their airborne operations" i nearly choked...😅
"And while the Japanese weren't necessarily known for their airborne operations" erm...Pearl Harbor
My cyberpunk obsession is going to force me to own one of these arisaka rifles
(Its spelt arasaka in the game and its not a rifle, its a mega corp)
"Yu broke da gan son " fudd voice
I feel like you could do really good Rick and Morty Impressions. You have a similar tone to Justin Roiland’s voice
The Type 2 is definitely one of my dream guns, shame they've increased in price so much
You know what's also rad unit 731 those were the coolest troopers out there shame they never got scouted by Broadway
I have had several, they are modeled after the Mauser
It’s honestly a good design for a take down rifle especially one will a large cartridge, the whole thing that hurts it is that’s it’s an arisaka
Man see gun
Man happy
Oh they were known for their airborne quite well, they just didn’t use guns very often, the vehicle was the weapon you see.
“Oh shyt”😂
In 1942 Japanese Airborne Operations happened in Dutch East Indies: In the Islands of Celebes on the northern part of the island. Exact place is North Celebes Province. The Airfield is Kalawiran Airfield. There are around 500 paratrooper against around 350 KNIL soldiers guarding the airfields. They are also used in Malaysia and other parts of South East Asia. For people in Celebes Island they got a nicknamed of “Tentara Lonceng” means “The Bell Army” because they look like a walking bell with their big steel helmet and short bodies. They secured the airfield in just 6 hours of fighting. This is known as “The Battle of Manado.”
that's one way of saying that they had really invested engineers and designers