8 Firearms Myths Hollywood Still Can't Get Enough Of

8. Sniping Is Easy

It is a staple of Hollywood thrillers. The assassin creeps through the shadows, settles silently into position, and with ominous music rumbling in the background takes aim and seconds later places a round bang on target.

Advertisement

Easy, right? Not quite.

In reality sniping is a far more complex undertaking. A sniper must, among many things, accurately measure range to target, accurately gauge the direction of the wind and its strength, take note of whether they shooting up or down hill, take into account their current altitude and, in the case of long range shots, even the Earth’s rotation. All of this information must then be translated into the correct inputs to the range and windage drums on the rifle’s sight.

A trained, experienced sniper could be expected to do all of this within three minutes. A movie sniper does none of this and yet is ready to fire within seconds.

But the most egregious error is the near perennial lack of a spotter. The spotter aids in making the necessary calculations and guides the shooter onto target in case of a miss. With a sniper rifle, arguably more than any other weapon on this list, being a weapon system that depends on teamwork, even trained assassins need a spotter in order to do the job right.

So, if the assassin needs to gather information, use a pair of binoculars. If they’re going to take the shot, get a spotter in there.

Advertisement