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The Klobb is generally considered to be the most lackluster firearm in the game, having poor hitting power, a weak firing sound effect, dismal accuracy, and a small magazine size. When the gun names were changed from real ones during development, its name was originally changed from "Skorpion" to "Spyder," and later changed to Klobb this was apparently due to fears the game's "paintball mode" would lead to infringement claims from the manufacturers of a paintball gun called the "Spyder." The game's manual was created before this change, and still refers to the gun as the Spyder: it is also still listed in the game files alphabetically as if it were named Spyder, appearing between the unused item "Spy File" and the "Staff List" item from Bunker 2. Vz.61 Skorpion with the top-folding stock folded is present, referred to as the "Klobb" after Rareware employee Ken Lobb.
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On board the Frigate, Bond uses his dual Spectres to gun down a Janus soldier. Gold and Silver versions are available as cheats, retaining the weapon's magazine size and fire rate but firing bullets which respectively have the stats of bullets fired from the Golden Gun and Ruger Blackhawk. Unsuppressed versions are also occasionally seen in the hands of enemies, and Boris attempts to use one during Control but fumbles it. In the earlier missions up to Bunker 2 it is suppressed, with only the unsuppressed version available afterwards.
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James Bond's distinctive Walther PPK is included in the game as the "PP7." It is Bond's main weapon, typically one of those given to him at the start of the level, and is used in all the single-player missions. Weapons also do not have reload animations, and all reload at the same speed. One sacrifice made by the game due to the N64's poor texture buffer memory is that weapons used by enemies in a particular level tend to "inherit" textures used in the level in question this means many weapons end up made from clearly incorrect materials, such as the all-black P90 ending up with white and brown wood textures. Weapons are referred to by fictional names which approximate their real ones early builds used real weapon names, but apparently Rare were advised there may be legal issues in using the correct names in the final game without proper licensing. Weapons are divided by class, with all weapons in a class using the same pool of ammunition most pistols and all SMGs, for example, draw from one pool, despite including weapons which use everything from. Goldeneye allows the player to hold every weapon they encounter during a level in their inventory. 2.5.1 Fictional multi-shot grenade launcher.
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