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How To Draw The Ray Gun

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Prepare phasers to "highly visible."

"Rays! From the silliness of the shrink ray to the devastation of the death ray, these are the very foundations of Mad Science!"

PEW! PEW! PEW!

Any gun that shoots light, rays, waves, or something similar. Initially popular during the appropriately named Raygun Gothic era of Scientific discipline Fiction, but back then it was based on pure Phlebotinum, as shooting such things from weapons wasn't known to be possible. In curt, the ray gun was falling out of favor for being unrealistic. And then the light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation was discovered in The '60s. Suddenly the ray gun was brought back from being a Discredited Trope.

But even at present information technology'due south still treated as an Impossibly Cool Weapon, every bit lasers in fiction are oft used in ways they can't really be. And while other ray guns practice exist in Real Life (the U.s. Army has been experimenting with microwave crowd dispersal wave generators, for example), they're still Cool, but Inefficient. However, they can very believably become practical in futuristic settings, where greatly improved science and applied science would allow for the limitations to exist far more hands overcome.

The term "ray gun" became a platitude even by the 1940s, having strong associations with Buck Rogers, Flash Gordon etc., and from at least E. E. "Medico" Smith's Lensman novels, was increasingly replaced by the more bad-ass-sounding generic "equalizer," Smith himself by and large choosing to refer to the weapons by their maker just as we would refer to a Colt or Smith & Wesson.

They are also popular every bit a form of Family-Friendly Firearms. I odd attribute of ray guns in a lot of fiction, specially animation and comic books, is that despite existence much niftier-looking than a stream of bullets, they're actually much less harmful to be struck by than a regular bullet would be. It'due south extremely common for Helm Space, Defender of Earth! to get hit with an "energy axle" and fall downwards dramatically, simply he will scarcely ever actually have a new hole burned through him, and a couple of scenes later on we will see him pulling himself painfully to his feet over again and proverb something corny like, "Ow! Everyone get the license of the truck that striking me?" The event seems more comparable to getting punched really hard than to actually getting shot. This is sometimes justified by the ray gun having a "stun setting," or by the hero wearing body armor or having super powers.

A Sub-Trope of Energy Weapon, Impossibly Cool Weapon. A Sister Trope to Laser Blade. Contrast Kinetic Weapons Are Just Better, for settings where ray guns are Absurd, but Inefficient.

A Super-Trope to:

  • Expiry Ray
  • Disintegrator Ray
  • Freeze Ray
  • Hypno Ray
  • Lightning Gun
  • Plasma Cannon
  • Reflecting Laser
  • Compress Ray
  • Transformation Ray
  • Wave-Move Gun

Compare Pure Energy.

Non to exist confused with ReiGun, Railgun, the president, Nute Gunray or the Rei or a Rei with a gun.


Examples

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    Comic Books

  • The ray guns in the old serials like Flash Gordon.
  • Cadet Godot: Zap Gun for Hire
  • Mutual amongst spacers, but tightly controlled in Warren Ellis' Ignition Urban center.
  • In Reid Fleming, World'southward Toughest Milkman, Reid receives a ray gun every bit a Christmas nowadays from his female parent. When he too receives a prank gift from Mr. Crabbe, Reid decides to endeavor out his new ray gun on Crabbe's roof.
  • Wonder Woman Vol 1: The Saturnians take Reverse Gravity Ray guns.
  • In Silverblade, one fellow member of the Funfair of Killers Vermillion hires to kill Milestone wields a laser gun

    Fan Works

  • Plan 7 of 9 from Outer Space. Megan Delaney goes into Gun Porn particular while selling one to Captain Proton, but finds information technology difficult to tell them apart from common household objects.

    "Oh please," said Malicia. "Kinetic energy weapons are and then passƩ. Why shoot nasty little holes in people when yous tin reduce them to their component molecules at the speed of lite? Behold: the Marking One BEM-Blaster! It'southward calorie-free, sexy, and easily marketable every bit an action toy. The butt has radiator fins for dumping backlog heat and pleasing your girlfriend. A scope sight no-one bothers to use. Invisible power source violating all known laws of physics. 3 settings: Melt, Vaporize, and Disintegrate. Ray focus is adjustable from fan-beam (for room-clearance and blinding photo-electronic equipment) to needle-axle (for slicing through hull plate and shooting nasty little holes in people)."

    "What are you babbling on about?" snapped Demonica. "That's your hairdryer, you lot insolent fool!"

    "Oh...sorry...well how about this one: the Blakes VII sonic lance."

    "And that'south your curling iron!"

    "Staple gun!"

    "Dustbuster!" everyone chorused.

  • In The New Adventures of Invader Zim, one of Dib'south new teammates, Steve, eventually creates some makeshift free energy guns for the team to use against the Irkens. At beginning, they're pretty unreliable, as they'll short out if used likewise much, but afterward a while he fixes this and starts using them regularly.
  • Subverted in Rocketship Voyager where the only ray gun we see is a cumbersome crew-served weapon burdened with a nucleo-electric power pack, liquid-helium cooling coils and radiation-proof gunshield. Its beam is just visible when firing through smoke and ash, and is diffused by smoke and distance so when B'Elanna Torres (who is wearing tungsten alloy space armor) is fired upon information technology just sets off her radiation alarm.
  • In Vocalism of the Condor, shortly after Tao turns on a slew of subconscious functions in the Golden Condor, its onboard AI busts out a rotating, sun-shaped energy turret in the Condor's neck to scare Lord Shimatsu. Towards the stop, when faced with the Dark Condor and its superior Black Suns, Esteban has the Condor employ its backup battery to overcharge the turret. It works well, just overheats the turret before long.

    Film

  • Blasters and turbolasers in Star Wars.
  • The antimatter guns in The Rocky Horror Picture show Show.
  • Sky Helm and the World of Tomorrow has Dex build one for the protagonist. It'southward unreliable and the shots are a parody of Special Furnishings Failure: goofy slowly spreading rings directly out of period comics and inexpensive science fiction. Still, information technology's very impressive at melting Totenkopf's robots.
  • The Hidden: The expert alien has a special type of gun that is required to kill the evil alien, but he needs it to leave its homo host beginning every bit it incinerates their own kind but is harmless to human tissue.
  • In Back to the Future, when Marty disguises himself every bit "Darth Vader from the planet Vulcan", you tin run across that he has a 1980s hair dryer tucked into his belt as though it were a ray gun of some kind. In a Deleted Scene, he threatens George with it, claiming, "My estrus ray volition vaporize you if you do not obey me!"
  • The 6th Day. The "foosh gun" is a chemic light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation handgun used by the villains (and afterwards by the protagonist). While information technology has a visible axle, there's a Surprisingly Realistic Result in that flames vent from the sides of the handgun on firing, equally waste material gas from the chemical reaction is expelled.
  • DC Extended Universe:
    • Man of Steel has the Kryptonian plasma rifles and pistols that shoot more often than not blueish energy projectiles.
    • Justice League: Parademons pack plasma rifles that shoot mostly red energy projectiles, and they brought heavy turret guns of the same tech with them.
    • Aquaman: Atlanteans developed h2o-powered blaster rifles technology. David Kane adapts this technology into the helmet of an armor that he develops, becoming Black Manta.

    Literature

  • E. Eastward. "Md" Smith probably did more than to popularize ray guns than whatever other single writer back in the Gilded Age of Science Fiction.
  • Isaac Asimov:
    • In one book they apply "diminutive ray guns" that apparently eddy the blood of any organic affair hit until information technology explodes.
    • "C-Chute": When Demetrios Polyorketes tries to ambush one of the Kloros that boarded their send, it blasts him with a pinkish ray that leaves him paralyzed and in nifty hurting.
    • "The Feeling of Ability": Technician Aub uses a protein-depolarizer on himself to commit suicide. The results aren't given in detail.
    • In the Foundation series, they use Atom Blasters (shortened to but "blasters" in the subsequently books, after the age of Atom Punk had passed).
    • "Victory Unintentional": The Jovians greet the ZZ robots by opening fire with some sort of heat ray, raising the ambient temperature of their target xc degrees centigrade (roughly 150 degrees Fahrenheit). The ZZ robots were built to be nearly indestructible, and then they don't notice the issue immediately.
  • In Lone Huntress Lisa prefers to remove her prosthetic limb before climbing into her Powered Armor, replacing information technology with a Arm Cannon containing an array of weaponry - a laser, a Lightning Gun, Freeze Ray, and a Laser Bract all see utilize. The tradeoff is that all of them are continued to her armor's power supply, giving her a greatly reduced "ammo" capacity. Past contrast, a standard laser rifle consists of a handle, a "butt" that is actually the light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation itself, then a dainty big battery for sustained firing.
  • The Dreamside Route:
    • Orson carries a personal equalizer, powered by the solar cell that fuels all of his electrical weaponry.
    • The Aesir has a larger roof-mounted model.
    • Some Freedom Corps troops also wield energy projectiles.
  • The brusk story "The Ray-Gun: A Love Story" is about a ray-gun.
  • The nigh mutual weapon in Valhalla is the microwave gun, which as the name suggests, is a gun that fires microwave beams. Described as having invisible beams and making no sound, this stands every bit somewhat of a subversion to the common ray gun trope.
  • Ane Biggles story mentions these every bit a possible explanation for the inexplicable crashes of multiple Allied aircraft flying a particular supply route. It turns out to be something rather simpler: Japanese intelligence officers were slipping packets of chewing gum laced with a powerful narcotic into the cockpits of the planes, causing the pilots to pass out at the controls.
  • Arthur C. Clarke, always a stickler for hard science in his short stories, subverts this. A group of pub patrons lampshade this trope while arguing whether ray guns can fifty-fifty exist, prompting one to tell a story within a story of an astronomer that uses a highly polished mirror to reflect his married woman's headlight beams back in her confront when she'due south driving habitation from ane of her trysts - attempting to murder her by driving her off a dangerous road. Unexpected outcome ensues. It wasn't the tryst that annoyed him - is was the low-cal pollution from her headlights interrupting his studies of the heavens that drove him to such measures.
  • Northwest Smith uses a "Heat Gun" in the stories past C.L. Moore.
  • Used in the tagline of The Chronicles of Professor Jack Baling: Luminescence. Madness. Ray Guns.
  • Mark Delewen and the Infinite Pirates has Marking and Tirt using one each; in stun mode.
  • The "Oestrus Ray" weapons used by the Martians in the classic The State of war of the Worlds.
    • Too the disintegration weapons used along with the heat rays in the 1953 film version.
  • The Boojumverse features ray guns equally standard sidearms. They are used past Colonel Sanderson in "Mongoose" and Black Alice in "Boojum".
  • Nita in the Young Wizards serial has a spell that manifests equally a paw-held terawatt linear particle accelerator rifle.
  • Physician Grordbort'south Contrapulatronic Dingus Directory is a tongue-in-cheek sales catalog of Steampunk destructive devices, though information technology's unsaid many of their Upper-Grade Twit customers are Compensating for Something.
  • Helm Futurity's proton blaster is shown on the Pulp Magazine covers shooting a stream of ever-expanding rings. In the Allen Steele reconstruction novel Avengers of the Moon this is handwaved equally smoke rings created by the invisible plasma axle.
  • In one of the Gil the ARM stories by Larry Niven, someone tries to murder Gil with a hunting laser. Fortunately he sees the reflected flash in a window and fires dorsum earlier the weapon recharges. It'south mentioned that information technology would be easy to build a light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation that fired a continuous invisible beam, but that wouldn't be very sporting.
  • Animorphs: Andalite shredders and Yeerk Dracon beams fill this purpose (and even have phaser-like ability levels so they can stun, blow holes in, or vaporize targets). Despite the proper noun, shredders are really the less evil of the two- the Yeerks reverse-engineered Andalite shredders so they didn't kill as quickly, the victim feeling their cells exploding. Spacecraft-mounted versions are powerful enough to ignite a planet's atmosphere from orbit.
  • The Voyage of the Space Beagle. The radiations emitted by the vibration pistols and crew-served diminutive disintegrators is invisible, so a 'tracer beam' is used for aiming. In that location's also reference to the smell of ozone and the potentially lethal furnishings of secondary radiation from a near miss by a disintegrator axle.
  • Laser weapons are mentioned as a threat in Friday. More than realistically than usual for this trope, they are treated as invisible instant death. Before in the same continuity in The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress, mining lasers are used to attack spacecraft.
  • Gilt in the Sky, the 1958 sci-fi thriller by Alan E. Nourse. The sons of an Asteroid Miner are investigating his death at the hands of an evil mining corporation. They presume he institute a rich ore strike and was murdered for it. Halfway through the novel they remove Dad's aboriginal .44 revolver from its holster to defend themselves and observe information technology's a completely unfamiliar weapon not synthetic for human easily, with no hole in the muzzle, yet it can burn a six-foot wide hole in half-inch steel plate. It's and then they realise the stakes are way higher than illegal merits-jumping.

    Alive-Action Television set

  • Phasers and disruptors in Star Trek.
    • The tie-in Star Armada Technical Manual really features a weapon chosen a 'ray gun', although this is actually a mislabeled prop used in the show as a signal beacon.
    • The Captain Proton holodeck program in Star Trek: Voyager has your typical black-and-white Zeerust wait, including ray guns and Dr. Chaotica's Decease Ray. When Paris is coaching Janeway on how to deed inside the programme, he reminds her to employ the term "ray gun" instead of "phaser".
  • Firefly believes Kinetic Weapons Are But Better, but there are a couple of examples.
    • The "Lassiter," aa antique laser gun stolen by the crew of Serenity in the episode "Trash".
    • Also the laser gun used past Rance Burgess in "Heart of Golden". Information technology's a sign of his wealth and status that he enjoys bragging well-nigh.
  • The overabundance of "ray guns" of similarly-cheesy design in scifi is lampshaded on Doctor Who, when the Doc is shown a bunch of unidentified alien devices suspected, largely on the basis of shape, of being weapons. As he searches for something that might really hurt the Monster of the Week, he tosses bated the rejects, reciting:
  • Cherry-red Dwarf's bazookoids are mining lasers used as weapons.
  • Common in Power Rangers and Super Sentai. The all-time-known would probably exist Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers' Blade Blasters, which also become dirks.
  • Total Recall 2070: Blasters exist alongside regular firearms and are issued to all CPB officers.
  • Wonder Woman: Ray guns appear multiple times. Wonder Woman'due south bracelets work likewise against them as they do against bullets.
    • In "Going, Going, Gone", Sheldon Como and Vladimir Zukov try to agree off Wonder Woman with these as she assaults Como'due south submarine. They're hopelessly overmatched.
    • In "Listen Stealers from Outer Infinite", the alien Skrill use them for multiple purposes including attacking Wonder Woman and leveling a building.
  • The Outer Limits (1995): In "Lithia", Major Mercer was armed with a light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation pistol when he placed in suspended animation in 2015.
  • The Twilight Zone (1959): In "2", the soldiers from both armies were equipped with laser weapons, judging by the discarded rifles that the human being and adult female find.

    Magazine

  • Analog:
    • The January 1941 effect has an paradigm on folio 103, the first page of Manly Wade Wellman's "Lost Rocket". In this image, a cosmonaut in outer infinite is firing flames through infinite with a handheld gun.
    • The November 1942 outcome features a character firing some sort of free energy beam from a gun, only it is blocked by Some Kind of Force Field.

    Music

  • The main weapons used by the Killjoys in My Chemical Romance's Danger Days. Jet Star, lead guitarist Ray Toro'due south grapheme, was fifty-fifty called 'Raygun Jones' in early on concepts.
  • Weapons used by GFRIEND in the space opera-esque music video "Fingertip".

    Pinball

  • All of the futuristic explorers in Atari'due south Eye Earth pinball are armed with either Laser Blades or Ray Guns. Makes sense, given that they're exploring a Lost World filled with giant dinosaurs and monster apes.
  • The unnamed male character in The Atarians uses one.
  • Stewie Griffin in Stern Pinball'southward Family unit Guy shoots the letters in P-I-N-B-A-Fifty-L with one.
  • Used past the spaceships in Stellar Wars
  • In Laser War, everyone is armed with Ray Guns shooting easily-dodgable laser beams.

    Tabletop Games

  • 1001 Science Fiction Weapons for D20, by Plain Brown Wrapper Games, has nigh of the subtropes, and a few extra concepts besides; including a whole section (or more) on:
    • Plasma weapons .
    • Multiple tech levels of lasers.
    • Some free energy-based stun weapons.
    • Death Rays.
    • Life-draining and life-transference rays.
    • Shrink Rays.
    • Rays that makes thing explode.
    • A solar ray.
    • Mind-affecting weapons such as evil rays and cocky-immolation rays (which brand targets impairment themselves by whatsoever means available, non limited to immolation).
    • Flesh-melting and warping rays.
    • A short section on disintegrators.
    • Entropy projectors.
    • Lepton weapons.
    • Coagulators (which harm only living things with blood, making their blood coagulate inside them and existence ideal for times when you lot demand to impale someone sheltering in your send's reactor room) and even more exotic things, like the energy weapons of the mysterious Witherslant Masters and the ray specifically made to harm plant matter and nada else. Plus the Generic Ray guns, which burn a beam that looks suspiciously similar a scratch on the moving-picture show. Add together other energy weapon concepts, similar sonic, microwave, ion, particle beam... loads of bloody fun.
  • Mekton has an elaborate construction system for equipment from switchblades to planet-killing space fortresses, including a dizzying array of "Beam Weapons" (ray guns).
  • Munchkin has a Ray Gun in its space expansion (bated from whatsoever number of -aser weapons), which appropriately plenty gives a bigger bonus for any player named Ray, Raymond, or Reagan.
  • Paranoia has laser pistols and rifles, energy pistols, blasters, stun guns, and plasma generators. Lasers are actually more common than projectile guns, then reflec (shiny plastic) armor is more common than kevlar.
  • Rocket Age: A staple. Nicola Tesla adult modernistic versions of these based off Aboriginal Martian designs and the Ancients even had Heat and Freeze Rays.They massively outclass nigh conventional weapons in the setting and include the ability to stun enemies.
  • Traveller naturally offers a range of laser, plasma, and fusion weapons to encounter all your needs.
  • Slipstream: Rayguns are common weapons, given the retro style of the setting.
  • Warhammer 40,000 has a number of ray-gun-wielding troops.
    • The standard Imperial rayguns are classified as "las weapons". They fire a laser beam capable of bravado a homo'due south arm off (they've been nigh frequently been compared to midrange quotient rifles in terms of kinetic strength). Though they're unfavorably compared to flashlights, they're near invariably fielded in huge numbers. The Imperium also fields meltaguns, which are a brusque-range, anti-tank microwave gun. Just pray that the guy shooting 1 at you lot happens to be a lousy shot, or bad things happen.
    • The Necron Gauss Flayer is an electromagnetic Disintegrator Ray that shoots bolts of green lightning that tin can break down the Weak Strength that holds matter together, tearing its target apart at the molecular level. The take hold of? The ray has to be fired through a crystal with exact specifications, right down to the atom, so it's almost impossible for any other race to emulate.

    Video Games

  • In Orphan (2018), the boy finds a ray gun that he tin can wield every bit a weapon against the alien invaders.
  • The Quake serial has a few. The original Convulse features the Enforcer enemies, who are soldiers with light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation guns which shoot carmine-yellow projectiles, after available to the Ranger as the Laser Cannon in Scourge of Armagon. Quake Two and Quake Iv both have the infinite-ammo blaster pistol, a Ranged Emergency Weapon, and its bigger and not-so-emergency sibling, the Hyperblaster.
  • All 5 Super Smash Bros. games have the "Ray Gun" particular. Different some other energy weapons though, it only has limited ammo.
  • BioShock two: Minerva'southward Den introduces the Ion Laser, which accurately to what the proper noun states fires a continuous axle of concentrated free energy as long as the player holds the trigger and has ammo. The axle has two extra variants, Thermal (sets targets on fire) and Outburst (can be charged up).
  • The first Power Stone game has an unlockable Ray Gun which fires rings of energy. The sequel introduces more types of energy weapons, such every bit the Beam Gun, 3-Way Shotgun, v-Way Shotgun, and Powerful Buster.
  • Call of Duty: World at War, of all games, has a ray gun, past name, available randomly in the Nazi Zombies bonus mode and sneakily subconscious in one of the singleplayer levels, along with its larger cousin, the Wunderwaffe, note Wonder Weapon on a downloadable map. The former fires dark-green rays surrounded by rings, and the latter some sort of electricity. Both accept a very retro Raygun Gothic look to them, and are very good at killing zombies.
  • Several of the weapons in The Conduit are various forms of ray guns. To give but two examples: the Carbonizer Mk16 fires a behemothic beam that cooks enemies from the inside, and the alien Strike Burglarize can be charged to fire a One-Striking Kill axle.
  • Aside from the obvious example of the alien blaster, the Fallout series has a number of weapons resembling ray guns, such equally the laser, plasma, Gauss, and (almost particularly) pulse guns.
  • Averted with nearly weapons in the Mass Event series, which fire tiny kinetic projectiles at superfast velocities. A few exceptions practise appear, however, such equally the Collector's particle beam weapon, forth with the geth's plasma shotgun and pulse burglarize.
  • Team Fortress 2: I of the Soldier's many, many alternate weapons is now a small-scale handheld ray blaster called the "Righteous Bison" or a larger over-the-shoulder one called the "Cow Mangler 5000". The Engineer and Pyro have ray guns of their own, with the "Pomson 6000" for the former, and the "Phlogistinator" and "Manmelter" for the latter. A afterward update gave the Engineer and Scout a pistol reskin called the C.A.P.P.E.R..
  • In the offset No One Lives Forever game, you tin find and use a retro-looking light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation gun on the HARM space station. It instantly disintegrates the target and has plenty accuse for about 500 shots.
  • Xenoblade Chronicles X has two instances of this. On ane hand, it contains the weapon blazon known as Rayguns, which in this game are closer to the size of gatling guns and on the other hand, 1 of the elements you lot become is beam. Near every gun type weapon has one nether the beam element, meaning you tin can take assail rifles, snipers, gatling guns, psycho launchers and dual guns also be rayguns by definition. And of form, the default raygun is a beam element.
  • The Dispersion Pistol from Unreal is one with a indigestible, well-used style.
  • Persona 5: Goro Akechi's ranged weapon of choice in the Metaverse are these, although in reality they are children's toys. The Animated Adaptation reveals that when he was younger, ane of his favorite toys was a ray gun that he'd play with when pretending to be an ally of justice.
  • Time Gal: This is Reika's primary weapon.
  • Being an Cantlet Punk post-nuclear holocaust world, Energy Weapons are a staple in the Fallout series, only the various conflicting blasters and the recharger rifle and pistol in Fallout: New Vegas all-time fit the classic appearance and function of 50s rayguns.

    Webcomics

    Web Original

  • An episode of How it Should Have Concluded mocks this trope, showing a member of the avengers shouting "Pew! Pew! Pew!" while firing.
  • Yaeger's pistol, the LumiĆ©re, in The Mercury Men.
  • Bee and Puppycat'south Puppycat is a Ray Gun. Though he seems to need someone to hold him and cock his tail so he tin fire.

    Western Animation

  • DuckTales (1987): Equally the theme tune says, . . . racecars, lasers, aeroplanes . . .. Gyro's "Article of furniture Mover Ray" from "The Coin Vanishes", appears in the opening. Huey, Dewey and Louie are wielding it against the Beagle Boys.
  • An episode of The Tick had a ray gun which turned people into some guy named Ray.
  • G.I. Joe, where such weapons were prominent on both sides.
  • Crazy Stunts duel pistols in Skysurfer Strike Force.
  • Birdman (1967) episode "Monster of the Mountains". The villain Chang threatens Birdman and Birdboy with a "uranium ray" gun, but Avenger (Birdman's pet eagle) swoops in from behind him to knock it out of his easily.
  • Rick Sanchez of Rick and Morty pretty much ever has at least one, personally-fabricated though dissimilar most, his tend to be wildly gory and/or lethal.
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2012):
    • The Kraang use laser pistols, rifles and cannons. The episode "TCRI" features them using a Lightning Gun.
    • Tiger Claw has two light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation pistols. One fires hot, red energy blasts, the other fires ice beams.

    Real Life

  • Although they turned out to be mistaken, Allied advisers who learned of the plans for German "reprisal weapons" in the mid-years of WW2 put both "death rays" and "engine-stopping rays" college on the list of suspects than "long-range rocket missiles".
    • Apparently radar originally came to the attention of the British government subsequently they put out a request for proposals for directed-free energy weapons.
  • Accordingly enough, Nikola Tesla developed plans for his "Teleforce", essentially a particle-axle weapon, but unfortunately (fortunately?) never actually built a working device.
  • The Soviet laser pistol was an endeavor at this, with such existence called "Soviet light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation Revolver". Naturally though, despite their name, they were not used to burn Frickin' Laser Beams. Rather, they were meant to disable optical sensors on enemy aircrafts.

Source: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/RayGun

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