💰 Grifter Reviewtechusa / Richard Masucci

  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
It's a Mossberg Maverick 88. No reason for him to have a folding stock pump shotgun though, personally I would get a fixed stock shotgun that is semi-auto. Primarily because if he doesn't shoot guns at all and especially if he hasn't shot shotguns before (even trap shooting), a high-stress scenario like home defense might mean that he hesitates to rack the pump after each shot, since he doesn't have the muscle memory for that. Yes I understand pump actions are technically indestructible, but I would rather have a semi where I can just spam birdshot down a hallway rather than pump after every shot.
This man is unironically following sleepy joe's home defense advice. It's safe to say he's going to shit himself and drop the gun if he touches off a 12ga indoors. He isn't going to have to worry about racking another shell.
 
It's a Mossberg Maverick 88. No reason for him to have a folding stock pump shotgun though, personally I would get a fixed stock shotgun that is semi-auto. Primarily because if he doesn't shoot guns at all and especially if he hasn't shot shotguns before (even trap shooting), a high-stress scenario like home defense might mean that he hesitates to rack the pump after each shot, since he doesn't have the muscle memory for that. Yes I understand pump actions are technically indestructible, but I would rather have a semi where I can just spam birdshot down a hallway rather than pump after every shot.
Kinda surprised he didn't just get a turkshit shotgun. Do agree 12GA isn't a great self defense option for someone who doesn't shoot a ton and is horribly out of shape like Rich is. Wonder if he wanted the shotgun specifically or a fudd salesman told him to get it.
 
It's a Mossberg Maverick 88. No reason for him to have a folding stock pump shotgun though, personally I would get a fixed stock shotgun that is semi-auto. Primarily because if he doesn't shoot guns at all and especially if he hasn't shot shotguns before (even trap shooting), a high-stress scenario like home defense might mean that he hesitates to rack the pump after each shot, since he doesn't have the muscle memory for that. Yes I understand pump actions are technically indestructible, but I would rather have a semi where I can just spam birdshot down a hallway rather than pump after every shot.
If it's a Mossberg, it has a tang safety, so his thumb has to go around that retarded stock to operate it properly. There's a reason they come with a traditional stock or a pistol grip with no stock at all, but leave it to retards to tard up a retard-proofed gun. Watch the retard get around this by storing it loaded with the safety off.
 
It's a Mossberg Maverick 88. No reason for him to have a folding stock pump shotgun though, personally I would get a fixed stock shotgun that is semi-auto. Primarily because if he doesn't shoot guns at all and especially if he hasn't shot shotguns before (even trap shooting), a high-stress scenario like home defense might mean that he hesitates to rack the pump after each shot, since he doesn't have the muscle memory for that. Yes I understand pump actions are technically indestructible, but I would rather have a semi where I can just spam birdshot down a hallway rather than pump after every shot.
if you walk into any gun store in america and say "i want to buy a semi auto shotgun" they will tighten their suspenders and try and get you to buy a $1500 one. they just pointed at the $300 special edition mossberg they had in stock and he bought it because it had a name brand he recognized, it was cheap, and the shopkeeper glazed him for making a 'sensible, responsible choice' because pump action shotguns are considered to be the most reliable and simple firearm for a layperson in america next to a double action revolver
 
Such a bizarre choice to get a pump action shotgun.

I don't know shit about guns or home defence but usually people seem to have pistols or assault rifles.
Pistols and rifles are easier to handle, shotguns are horrifyingly effective if you know how to use them and are not fat which Richard is.
 
If it's a Mossberg, it has a tang safety, so his thumb has to go around that retarded stock to operate it properly. There's a reason they come with a traditional stock or a pistol grip with no stock at all, but leave it to retards to tard up a retard-proofed gun. Watch the retard get around this by storing it loaded with the safety off.
Maverick 88s use a cross-bolt safety, not a tang. There's also plenty of shotguns further up the market that have both a pistol grip and a stock. It's a perfectly workable config for both pump and semi-auto.
 
Pistols and rifles are easier to handle, shotguns are horrifyingly effective if you know how to use them and are not fat which Richard is.
shotguns are also super common for home defense, even though a pistol or rifle is probably a lot better, like you said, unless you know what you’re doing.

But guns aren’t very hard to use at close range in the event of a home intrusion, just point and click. They really are that simple.
 
"I have a gun in my home and I don't know how to use it" is definitely up there as one of the smartest things to post openly on the Internet.
 
Oh boy... (X/A)
View attachment 7055610View attachment 7055622
Not a gun expert, but this doesn't seem like a real one to me.
This is literally the poor man's SPAS12, from what I've heard these stocks are universally detested as being the most uncomfortable piece of shit to shoot with and were only popular in the 90s when ergonomics were considered an luxury which is why you see it in GTA 3 and Postal 2
 
Maverick 88s use a cross-bolt safety, not a tang. There's also plenty of shotguns further up the market that have both a pistol grip and a stock. It's a perfectly workable config for both pump and semi-auto.
Yeah, it's just the tang safety that makes pistol grips more cumbersome. I'll be honest, I've never actually held the 88, I assumed it was just a cheapskate version of my beloved 500.

What really gets me chuckling is how easy it would have been to spend a month or two studying the basics of the thing, find a place to shoot one in person, maybe even buy a replica to practice some kind of manual of arms, and by the time he did that he probably could have put aside the extra few hundred to get a better gun. Truly a 'deletes his million subscriber channel' move.

We don't follow these people because they do smart things.
 
Yeah, it's just the tang safety that makes pistol grips more cumbersome. I'll be honest, I've never actually held the 88, I assumed it was just a cheapskate version of my beloved 500.

What really gets me chuckling is how easy it would have been to spend a month or two studying the basics of the thing, find a place to shoot one in person, maybe even buy a replica to practice some kind of manual of arms, and by the time he did that he probably could have put aside the extra few hundred to get a better gun. Truly a 'deletes his million subscriber channel' move.

We don't follow these people because they do smart things.
It's definitely a watered down 500 but they're alright for the price, I had one for a while and it did a decent enough job. The main thing it loses out on is aftermarket but as far as a barebones 12-gauge goes, it beats Turkshit by a country mile.

I think Dickers did just enough to get what could be quantified as a not entirely shitty purchase that he can post online and never actually learn anything about. Unless he's get paced through Thunder Ranch (lmao) or some other practical course of usage, his local NRA shill or ex-E4 is going to take money off of him for things that he frankly could have learned by watching like half an hour of videos on YouTube.
 
It's a Mossberg Maverick 88. No reason for him to have a folding stock pump shotgun though, personally I would get a fixed stock shotgun that is semi-auto. Primarily because if he doesn't shoot guns at all and especially if he hasn't shot shotguns before (even trap shooting), a high-stress scenario like home defense might mean that he hesitates to rack the pump after each shot, since he doesn't have the muscle memory for that. Yes I understand pump actions are technically indestructible, but I would rather have a semi where I can just spam birdshot down a hallway rather than pump after every shot.
Assuming he'd need more than one shot to blow out the back of his head. He probably just wants to pretend racking it alone would scare someone off.

But to your point of it being indestructible, I personally would always take a pump action for the reliability.
 
Back
Top Bottom