With slower ROF balancing it. Interesting.
Definetly think the Light Rifle will be my weapon, since it offers both the BR and DMR in the same package. Besides, the thing is pretty darn cool.
The question is, Firepower or some other perk, and if Firepower, what is my secondary?
Firepower with Storm Rifle is the superior loadout.
So have I. I'm the guy who brought you guys the Binary Rifle vid actually.
The RoF of the BR and the LR felt the same to me. Unless someone did an actual frame count (on non-offscreen footage) or something of the sort, we don't really know how the RoFs compare. The only exception is if the two weapons have a blatantly different RoF (they don't).
The unscoped ROF of probably comparable to the BR, the scoped ROF was noticeably the slowest of the headshot rifles.
Seriously don't understand why people would want an iPhone 5. (Especially those who already have an iPhone 4 or 4S.)
The only two positive about it are that it has a 0.5" larger screen, and a slightly better processor (still not equal with current competition, the HTC ONE X and Samsung galaxy SIII.)
It has no youtube nor google maps, costs your right arm, and doesn't work with all your current docks, chargers, etc. It doesn't have any modern features like NFC nor a decent camera. Has an Irreplaceable battery, no external memory, I could probably go on...
The iPhone is now a cash cow product. It's is not leading the smart phone industry in innovation by a long shot. The OS hasn't seen a UI update in 5 years (and is ugly as sin IMO), and the hardware has inferior screen size, screen resolution, pixel density, camera, no NFC than the competition, but it is without a doubt still a solid device. For people that are on the iPhone train, and possible the rest of the Apple ecosystem, it's a good upgrade.
Now, I won't hide the fact that I get a little upset when Apple declares it "the greatest screen ever on a phone" when that it blatantly false, or when the media declares some new iOS feature that is already in other mobile OS's some revolutionary never-done-before feature.
Likewise. They're just so... snappy. They feel great. Social networking is heavily integrated (can't wait for skype integration). Yeah, Apple have more apps (700,000+ v 40,000+), but quality over quantity.
Most importantly, I love how I have 6 email accounts synced to it over 2 different liked inboxes, with tile notifications for exactly how many unseen messages.
I'll have this
40,000? Windows Phone Store has about 150,000 apps.
Not at all, I'm just suggesting that iOS users might have a slightly harder time working with Google products (YouTube, Gmail, Docs, Maps, Drive, etc)
To be fair, Android is the only phone OS with a great experience working with Google products. Google as done their best to pretend that Windows Phone doesn't exist.