The Weapons of Sci-Fi: The BLASTER
On the hips and in the hands of some of the most iconic characters in science fiction are these large-framed handguns that blur the line between the far future and the Old American West. When discharged, these weapons send a bolt of killer light and energy towards their enemies. These weapons are the "blasters" and they populate all media forms of science fiction since the introduction of the word into the general sci-fi lexicography in 1925, but their more accepted form came after 1977. In this latest entry into The Weapons of Sci-Fi, FWS will be exploring and explaining the most and celebrated type of sci-fi weaponry, the blaster.
What is an "Blaster"?
In general, the term "blaster" refers to an large-framed handheld weapon similar in style and layout to a conventional semi-automatic pistol, revolver, or even a more futuristic "ray gun" type. The majority of science fiction blasters are directed energy of various types, but they can be kinetic energy as well. Often, the blaster is seen as a powerful offensive anti-personnel weapon that can blow smoking holes into people, knock them down, or even burn them down to basic atoms with powerful bolts or blasts of energy. The blaster is the weapon-of-choice for heroes, soldiers, villains, space pirates, space western gunslingers, and half-witted scruffy-looking nerf herders.
What is the Difference between an "Blaster" and an "Ray Gun"?
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Blasters are larger, heavier, more gun-like future DEWs firing violent bolts of light and energy. These bright blasts of energy punch into their targets with a nearly kinetic force instead of frying or burning of the Ray Gun beams. Also, blasters were more tools of warfare, law enforcement, and space bar brawls than the ray gun being wielded by explorers, astronauts, and space ranger heroes. In more recent sci-fi, the blaster reigns supreme over the classic/retro ray gun. That is where the current status of the ray gun lives...in retro sci-fi works, while the blaster is still being used.
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Witnessing John Wick, John McClane, or Jack Bauer end the lives of their targets with supreme Samurai-like pistol skills is ingrained into us as an audience as the mark of the elite ass kicker due to the difficulty of achieving these feats in the real world. When I used to take to the paintball field with my Tiberius T8 pistol, many people commented on how badass it was that I had a pistol, when to me it was about being ready for when my carbine ran out of gas...never be weaponless, my friends.
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So, when science fiction tales started to become popular, the idea of space guns that did not fire projectiles but beams was a bedrock of the new genre and to separate this new space age from today, these beam weapons were not rifles in most cases, but funky, futuristic pistols that looked nothing like current handguns, despite the influence from Westerns. Again, the link between hero of any time period was married up to an pistol became further entrenched as tradition. That tradition was carried onward into the soundless void with space heroes like Han Solo, Spike Spiegel, Apollo, Ronon, and Buck Rogers.
What Do Those Blasters' Fire?
Despite the vast number of examples of blasters seen in science fiction, there is no single type of lethal energy that the science fiction blaster fires. It can be kinetic energy or directed energy, however, most common form of the blaster is as an directed energy weapon. The actor Harrison Ford has wielded two of the most important blasters in sci-fi cinema: the PK-D M2019 from BLADE RUNNER and the DL-44 from Star Wars. The M2019 Detective Special is rumored to fire a .44 magnum bullet and the DL-44 heavy blaster pistol fired an cohesive burst of powerful light.
The DEW blasters of science fiction, of which, are the most popular, are often are cited as firing plasma or particle bolts of great power and impact. Older blasters of sci-fi were said to have fired laser bolts. KEW blasters greatly range from Gauss projectiles, Railgun rounds, or even chemically propelled larger pistol rounds, like .44, .454, .45ACP, and even .50. These often are shown as revolver-like large frame hand cannons. Another unique ammunition type featured in some blasters is rocket propelled projectiles (AKA: Gyrojet).
Are There Real-World/Real-Steel Blasters?
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Science Fiction and the Blaster
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Most sci-fi weaponry designs at the time varied, but the majority of them were fantasifull unrealistic design with all manner of rings, discs, colors, and shapes with little attention being paid to the reality of actual firearms or the real science behind directed energy weapons. Even the original Star Trek series Phaser was an inheritor of those ray gun designs instead of an actually firearm. That all changed in 1977 when the world witness Star Wars and the iconic space pirate gunslinger Han Solo and his trusty BlasTech DL-44 blaster at his side. Time and time again, FWS restates just how massive the impact of the original Star Wars film was on the whole of science fiction and how it altered everything from that point onward. This includes sci-fi weaponry and the term "blaster". From that point onward, the term "blaster" was forever imprinted on the general public, fans, creators, and the toy industry that Han Solo's sidearm was the new standard and symbol for all of blasters to follow. After this, science fiction cover art, video games, tv shows, movies, animation, music videos, and even toys all patterned their blasters after the DL-44 and other Star Wars blaster pistols.
On top of this of this trend, there was return of the revolver to science fiction with Rick Deckard's android retiring blaster/revolver from 1982's BLADE RUNNER ushering in this trend that fused the sci-fi blaster with the old-school wheelgun of the Old West gunslinger. It seems that Harrison Ford weapons of choice altered science fiction! From this point on, the trend of large framed sci-fi sidearms was established and took firm hold that continues onward until today with works like Firefly, Farscape, and Destiny. However, there is another avenue for the blaster to make inroads into the realm of science fiction and general society: toys.
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In addition to the space gun toys of the era, there was also the marketing of Cowboy revolver toy guns to kids. These two separate influences of the Old West gunslinger and the space hero created the blaster as we know it. When Stars Wars erupted onto silver screens in 1977, Kenner toys was ready with their iconic and transformative toyline that included an Han Solo laser pistol. Kids of my generation soon where channeling their inner space pirate with their own plastic-fantastic DL-44 blaster. This fueled other blaster toys to be released throughout the 1980's that ranged from knockoffs to IR emitters like the Photon phaser.
During the 1980's, you could stroll down the toy gun aisle and take in a number of sci-fi blasters that fired caps, battery-powered lights and sounds, water, plastic balls, and even invisible beams of light. Even today, I can walk down a Target toy aisle and see Nerf blaster-like toy guns and Star Lord's blasters all feeding another generation on the traditional blaster. It's was not just confined to traditional toys. You can purchase Paintball/Airsoft blaster-like sidearms or even high quality copies of your favorite sci-fi blaster for display/wish fulfillment/cosplay needs. When you take to a laser tag center, you will be armed with a IR blaster like weapon. These toys, whatever the era, are one of the most popular vectors of bring new blasters lovers into the fold and forge new creators that will include blasters in their future works.
Examples:
The BlasTech Industries DL-44 Heavy Blaster Pistol from the Star Wars Universe
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This is the weapon that altered the term "blaster" for the general public as well as science fiction as a whole. Many of us that grew up with the original trilogy during their original theatrical release owned the toy versions of these and all of us wanted have a blaster on our hips during playtime. It very much helped that one of the coolest sci-fi movie characters wielded the iconic DL-44 blaster. Under the sci-fi prop covering, the DL-44 was like many of the original trilogy weaponry Star Wars, sci-fi stylized retrofitted World War One and Two weaponry. In the case of Han Solo's iconic handcannon was an Mauser C96 7.63x25mm "broomhandle" handgun that had been used in the 1967 film The Naked Runner with a custom scope from the 1972 film Sitting Target. All three of the films had the same company supplying the weapons: Bapty & Company Armours. In the SW universe, the DL-44 heavy blaster pistol was built by the massive firearms company BlasTech that constructed military and civilian arms. Both sides of the Galactic Civil War carried BlasTech weaponry. The DL-44 was not marketed to military customers nor standard law enforcement agencies due to massive power output that caused overheating . Most DL-44s were the tools of settlers, smugglers, space pirates, private military contractors, and anyone needing a powerful offensive armor-cutting sidearm.
When Han Solo joined the Alliance after the Battle of Yavin IV, the weapon gained popularity among Rebel Alliance troopers, pilots, and SpecOps units...because Han Solo is just so damned cool and the weapon could ram through standard Stormtrooper armor on the first hit. I always found it interesting that Luke Skywalker carried an DL-44 in TESB along with an lightsaber, showing his duality: soldier and Jedi. In the recent Star Wars: Battlefront, the DL-44 is a beast at close range and can result in blaster duels ending quickly. Despite the vast number of blasters in science fiction, Han Solo's DL-44 is often patient zero for this type of sci-fi weapon.
The Colonial Warriors DE Sidearm Blaster from the Classic Battlestar Galactica
The classic BSG has been part of my life since I was two watching its initial run broadcast run. After the show was cancelled, it would be rerun throughout my life, and while was never a big classic Battlestar Galactica fan, I respected the look, some of the story, and the design of the spacecraft. One element of the Colonial Warrior that I always liked besides the leather jacket they wore, is there blaster sidearm. While the weapon is referred to as an "laser", it is likely an plasma-based DEW and its power output is about 315 kilowatts with unknown capacity. From the original costume, the blaster is fed from small brass-colored "recharging" cylinders hanging from a Colonial Warrior belt. From my memory, the blasters were never reloaded on-screen.
The Colonial Handgun/Revolver from the Rebooted BSG universe
When the BSG universe was rebooted and reimagined in 2003, the weapon in the hands of the colonial military was a hybrid of two design wrapped around an Smith & Wesson Model 686 .357 magnum revolver with an additional underslung mounted barrel for micro-grenades, and many sites framed along the same lines as the LeMat Revolver. Drawing inspiration from the original Colonial Warrior blaster and Decker's detective special from BLADE RUNNER, the new Colonial handgun was to be the main weapon of the show....it didn't last long though. The show would use the new design for the first season when it was replaced by an FN FiveSeven 5.7x28mm handgun fitted with an micro grenade launcher and the old design would make appearances in flashbacks and in 2012's Blood & Chrome.
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The 2019 PK-D .44 Detective Special from the BLADE RUNNER Universe
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The Peacekeeper Pulse Pistol from the Farscape Universe
One of my big sci-fi regrets is not watching Farscape and FWS does not cover it enough, but I knew when it came time to discuss blasters, we had to cover the Peacekeeper pulse pistol! Besides the rather cool alien design, one of the most unique elements about the Pulse Pistol is that it is powered by an organic source: Chakan oil from the Tannot root. Mixed with chemicals, the Tannot root is broken down and made into organic explosive oil that charges an DEW for about 500-600 shots of red or yellow energy bolts in both lethal and less-than-lethal. One of these common Peacekeeper pulse pistols was owned by John Crichton and named “Winona”. The prop for the show came in at about 8 ½ inches and could have an attached laser sight.
The AGL Arms Factory .45 Long Colt Revolvers of the Trigun Unvierse
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A few years ago, FWS covered the return of Sci-Fi Revolvers and I missed the Long Colt revolver from Trigun and there is seemingly no end to the comments I get reminding me that I did indeed miss one of the most iconic revolver in all of sci-fi. It will not be missed here. Two AGL Arms Long Colt .45 Revolvers are seen on planet Gunsmoke in the Delta Tri system in the hands of the humanoid plants Knives and Vash. These long-barreled break-open revolvers house plant material to make otherworldly and bond them to Knives and Vash, who referred to the weapons as “our brothers”. These custom made revolvers fired a 20th century “Long Colt .45” cartridge which is an revolver/rifle round and is commonly seen in the Taurus Judge revolver, but the damage is projected as much more in the series than a standard Long Colt .45. These anime revolvers are not based a single real-steel, but elements of the S&W Schofield revolver and the Mateba 2006m auto-revolver. Given the Space Western setting of Trigun, the appearance of these fanasty revolvers is more to do with the Western tradition than sci-fi blaster…but this unique revolver needed to be finally discussed.
The Imperium Plasma Pistol from the Warhammer 40k Universe
When most think of weaponry from the grimdark universe of 40K, it is often the Bolter or some far-future melee weapon. While there bolter pistols, they fall more in the assault pistol or machine pistol classification rather than an blaster. However, there is the Imperium plasma pistol that could be considered an blaster: the violent plasma pistol for the Imperium of Man. Carried by officers in the Space Marine Chapters and the Imperial Guard, it is a mark of an elite warrior, but have some drawbacks that can make them dangerous to the user as well as the enemy given that the baster uses an nuclear reactor to generate the superheated gas to generate plasma. This can cause overheating and reloading issues, but the trade off is an heavy damage weapon that has a psychological fear factor even to the user! I mean the weapon would melt your enemies, burn off your hand, or cook off and kill you and your buddies!
The General Arms LawGiver Pistols from the Judge Dredd Universe
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In the terribly misguided 1995 film starring Sylvester Stallone, the "LawGiver II" is constructed around an Beretta 92FS or an Taurus PT92 (there is some debate) with an sci-fi shell surrounding the 9mm pistol that featured a series of red lights on either side of the prop gun to add dramatic effect for the selection for the various ammunition and this effect was activated by a squeeze sensor either side of the prop, This selection was made via voice only it seems. Six practical firing prop LawGivers were made for the film along with two that motorized barrels for the "Double Whammy" ammunition type.
This more blaster-like LawGiver II was not the weapon from the comics and fans were not happy with it design it being a good design that has been replicated by fans and websites for sale. When it came time to reboot Judge Dredd, that mistake of the 1995 LawGiver was altered for the more realistic and gritty 2012 Dredd film that featured an improved Mk.II that was very close to the comic. That LawGiver Mk. II was constructed around an Glock 17 that fired seven various types of ammunition in the film. The weapon is seen being reloaded on-screen like a convention pistol, rather than the box magazine at the forward assembly. Hopefully, we see more of the LawGiver in the near future with more Dredd films.
Star Lord's Quad Blasters from The Guardians of the Galaxy
One of the most fun sci-fi films released in the 21st century has been The Guardians of the Galaxy films and given how much of the film channels great sci-fi themes and tropes, laser blaster were a must. On the hips of Star Lord were twin dual emitter-shaped blasters, called “Quad Blasters”. Seen in the cartoon series, toys, recent comics, and the two movies; the Quad Blaster is strongly designed and presented. To me, the twin barreled M-shaped blasters of Star Lord echoed the Cygnus robotic sentry laser blasters of Disney’s 1979 sci-fi flop Black Hole, but instead of twin laser beams at every trigger pull, Star Lord’s weapons-of-choice use their dual emitters to great effectiveness. Each barrel is controlled via its own trigger and both barrels are able to fired simultaneously . The top barrel fires the lethal option via an plasma bolt while the bottom barrel fires an electric shock blast. When both are fired and it can stun and kill at the same time or affect a stronger target. With its hearty construction, the Quad Blaster frame can be used for melee attacks.
Major Magnum Handgun from 2000AD's Rogue Trooper Comic
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2000 AD’s super-soldier comic book Rogue Trooper is an insane, beautiful gem of military science fiction comics. The “hero” of the comic is Rogue Trooper, an genetically engineered super-soldier designed to survive and fight in various hostile environments, like those on Nu-Earth. Bio-Chips allowed for the memories and personalities of the GI Troopers to be stored and placed into new bodies to retain experience and training. To keep these biochips alive and functional, slots were built into various GI Trooper’s equipment, like their weapons. One such weapon picked up by Rogue during his quest was an large framed, multi-barreled pistol designed for the GI program called “Major Magnum”. This was the name of the GI Trooper whose biochip inhabits the pistol, who attempted to Rogue for deserting the army and was even sold to the highest bidder. The weapon itself had 10 types of bullets, micro-missiles, and even less-than-lethal drug darts and was massive platform. I believe that the storyline with the hand cannon was limited and did not enter into Rogue’s standard equipment.
The Laser Blasters of Captain Power and the Soldiers of Tomorrow
In 1987, an bold experiment in merging television and interactivity was attempted in the Military SF live-action/robot apocalypse TV series Captain Power and the Soldiers of the Future. In the hands of the valiant Cpt. Power team was a host of large frame laser blasters that seem to be Earth military stock post Metal Wars, only Tank carries a heavy blaster rifle and it is only Cpt. Power that carries the gold color blaster to match his armor. Style is important even at the end of the world. There is never much said or explained about these weapons of the 22nd century.
The Dread robotic forces have blasters that fire pinkish bolts, while Power's team fires blueish with another setting allowing for beam for maximum dwelling time. The figures of the TV series were made by Mattel with each action figure coming packed with an laser blaster of various types. There was an more rare Captain Power gold colored blaster pistol, called "the power laser", that, unlike the rest of the toys, did NOT work with the interactive TV signals. Instead, the "power laser" blaster toy was a form of the laser tag games that were popular in 1987. This laser tag blaster had an visible white light that interacted with an sensor target that allowed for three modes of play or classic laser tag with your friends. I am sure how common these were and I never saw them in stores during the toyline's run...but it is cool that the Power Laser was based on Cpt. Power's golden blaster and shared the same design as the action figure as well.
The 1986 Worlds of Wonder Lazer Tag "Starlyte" IR Blaster
One of the "it" Christmas toys of 1986 was Worlds of Wonder's Lazer Tag infrared gaming system that used sensors to detect incoming IR beams that upgraded the time honored game of tag into the future. The game of laser tag itself dated back to the very late 1970's and was popularized by Photon: The Ultimate Game of Planet Earth rental centers that popping up around the country. California-based Worlds of Wonder developed the home-based Lazer Tag system to capitalize on the laser tag craze sweeping the nation with their 1986 system that featured one of my favorite sci-fi blasters of my childhood: the StarLyte pistol.
This sleek, very futuristic looking black IR emitter was powered by six AA batteries that fired an semi-automatic beam of infrared light in 57.6 kHz carrier frequency modulated with an 1.8 kHz signal. This beam could be narrowed and the electronic blast sound effect could be muted for space ninja mode and the StarLyte was even fitted with an red electronic dot sight! While black was the standard color for the StarLytes pistols, WoW did product about 20 white StarLytes for manufacturer's sample and props in sales pitches along with being color study pieces to evaluate which color the final production IR emitters were to be. Only six are known to survive with one being the in Laser Tag Museum. For many of us that lusted after the WoW Lazer Tag home system (I owned two of them after Xmas of '86), the blaster was a much beloved feature of the system and was better designed that Photon "phaser" of both the rental and home market systems.
The StarLyte was heavily used in promotion of the toyline as well as in the lame NBC Saturday morning cartoon series Lazer Tag Academy. In that series that lasted less than 13 episode, the StarLyte was a modular tool of anything the writers could come up with...like an 3010 Swiss Army Knife. Despite the overall quality and design of the WoW Lazer Tag system, the company would not last into the 1990's, fall into bankrupcy due to the Stock Market Crash of 1987 and the cooling off the laser tag fad. Lazer Tag was sold off to Tiger Electronics, who redesigned the StarLyte pistol to be less gun-like. For me, the black StarLyte pistol was my first blaster and I used it in backyard laser duals with my friends and brother. Even to this day, I want an StarLyte pistol and rifle for the FWS offices as a reminder of my service during the Great Laser War of 1986-1988. If you would like to know more on this economic contest between Photon and Lazer Tag, then click here to read more.
The Visitors' Directed Energy Blaster from the Original V Universe
In 1983, American television network NBC spent $13 million in then money to show the arrival of an alien race, known as the Visitors, coming to Earth promising peace...but it was a lie. V was an outgrown of the popularity of sci-fi after Star Wars and it was a daring piece of television with the Visitors being a race of space lizard Nazis. Encompassing two miniseries and a short-lived TV show, along with an aborted toyline and an DC Comics series, V, was a full-blown franchise for a brief time period.
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During the second miniseries and the regular series, cheaper materials were used to assembly those blasters. Despite this, all of the original blaster barrels droop down due to some error in the mold itself. The later produced fan Visitor blasters have corrected this error. Like many productions, V used several levels of refinement with their futuristic weapons, with stun models being the bottom and hero being the best. I've read that the weakness of the Visitor blaster is the clear tube that marries the two pieces of the blaster together and it likely the energy chamber/barrier that feeds the lethal DE bolts. With the scale of the production that V ended up being and that several TV series were created resulted in a number of blaster pistols being made and those have found themselves into the hands of collectors today. As a kid, I loved the look of the Visitor laser blaster and desperately wanted one...and I would have gotten one if LJN had been able to bring their aborted toyline to the market. We did get the reptile alien DE pistol in the form of an ARCO produced toy gun that saw limited released under the V brand in the US. Instead, ARCO repackaged their V toy gun kit that allowed the conversion of the base pistol into the full sized rifle into the Matchbox ROBOTECH toyline with a new paint job and packaging. There was an attempt to use these toy dart guns for the 1987 Masters of the Universe film and some of these ARCO toy guns were sold on eBay as screen used V props!
The Neutra-Laser from Bravestarr
When I was ten, there was several Space Western American cartoon series on the airwaves, and both featured laser blasters…some were made into toys. Bravestarr from 1987 was a story about an 23rd century Native American frontier lawman sent to the colonial world of New Texas to establish and order with his trusty Neutra-Laser. The show was okay and I never saw many of the toys in stores , but I wanted the over-styled and over-designed Neutra-Laser that nearly faithfully reproduced for the local toy stores. Much like Lazer Tag and Photon, the Mattel Neutra-Laser fired IR beams to interact with the figures and the playsets.
Then there was Adventures of the Galaxy Rangers that mixed animation Western and Eastern styles with terrible writing that aired around 1986-1987. Much like every other 1980’s cartoon there was an tie-in toyline…but this one never materialized in the American market. Produced by Galoob, who had a number of troubles bring toylines to market (1987 TNG toyline anyone?) never released the figures in the States due to the failure of the series, but they were a limited release international.
Even that released was limited to six figures, all armed with the DE revolver-like blaster seen in the series as the only toy gun in both hero and villain along three Z-100 robotic horses. There were prototypes of the “Six Shooter” DE blasters in both an battery operated light-up toy gun and a water gun that seemed to mimic the style of the Galaxy Rangers. Pity they were never released.
Eddie's Toon Revolver from Who Framed Roger Rabbit?
One of the best and most imaginative of movies of the 1980's was Who Framed Roger Rabbit? and it is one of those films I never want to see touched or remade. In the film, gumshoe detective Eddie must journey into Toontown and given the danger, he has to use a special form of protection: an Toon Gun. This revolver, based on the Smith & Wesson 625JM and was given to Eddie by Yosemite Sam for helping him out in a case. The Dum Dum ammunition were small Toon characters based on Old West characters that cannot simple to hit a target. I just had to include this entry on FWS because when I am ever going to talk about Who Framed Roger Rabbit? here on FWS?
The Legion's Standard Issue HEL-Gun from Alien Legion Series One (1984-1987)
One of the most underrated Military SF comics is Epic Comic's Alien Legion that ran throughout the mid-1980's and early 1990's. While I was an big fan and collector of the series back in the day, and I was into the second series that came out in 1987 that featured better art, more aliens, more guns, and cool stories. The original series that ran from 1984-1987 had the Legion of the three galaxy TOPHAN government carried standard weapons: the High Energy Laser Gun pistol (AKA the HEL-Gun). Yep, every legionnaires in the three galaxies only carried these pistols as their only means of offensive and defensive operations with the HEL-Rifles only making an appearance in the graphic novel..which makes no sense. By the time of the second series that was reworked, there was vast buffet of alien weaponry. The HEL-Gun was sliver pistol that fired an yellow beam blast of great power that was mostly fired from the hip or could be aimed down slights with what looks like an electronic reflex IR slight.
The Imperial Klingon Disruptor Pistol from the Star Trek Universe
I've always felt that the standard Klingon distruptor pistol was more akin to an blaster of sci-fi gunslingers than the Federation phaser, that is why I included it on this list. For over 100 years, the basic Klingon distruptor pistol has been a mainstay of the Klingon Defense Forces, pirates, outlaws, and various traders. Prized for its violent green bolts and rugged design, it was a good choice in bad situations.
The basic shape and style of Klingon pistol/blaster was seen in the classical original series, where the more human looking Klingon warriors used an elaborate designed silver colored disruptor pistol that formed the basic style associated with the proud warrior aliens.
The original series Klingon weaponry was upgraded for the 3rd Trek movie in 1984 by Phil Norwood.
In 2006, Christie's auction house sold one of the screen used disruptor pistols for over $4000 and it gives it size as 17 inches. The lot description informs us that four disruptor pistols were made for Star Trek III: The Search for Spock, with one being the hero prop made from solid cast resin and three rubber made for stunts. The disruptor pistol would be redesigned by RAC props' Richard Coyle for Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country with one of the goals of the redesign for the alien sidearm to fit better in an holster by mostly altering the muzzle emitter. It is believed that the redesigned ST VI Klingon pistols were used for other Star Trek productions and the most commonly seen Klingon disruptor. In the sixth Trek film, propmaster Richard Coyle designed a one-off Klingon distruptor "shotgun" pistol with an hand pump section seen in the hands of Brigadier Kerla. There is no real information on why this distruptor was fashioned in this way.
The Earth Defense Directorate Directed Energy Blaster from Buck Rogers in the 25th Century
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The character of Buck Rogers has been in science fiction since its near beginning and he has been a hero for generations of fans due to Buck being reinvented and reworked throughout his history. I grew up with the Glen A. Larson vision of Buck Rogers that ran for two seasons on NBC from 1979-1981 that was developed to capitalized on the Star Wars popularity. As with any good sci-fi at the time, there had to be blasters, and there were a number of them. The one that I've always had a soft spot for is the Earth Defense Directorate DE blaster that fired yellow beams. This large blaster was more angler than the Colonial Warrior blasters from Glen A. Larson other TV show: Battlestar Galactica. There is very little about the blaster online and its seems that the props were about 12 inches in length and had a small push button trigger with the trigger possibly being tied to an light at the end of the barrel. Few of the actual props have been seen with several stunt props sellings. Some sites have cited poor quality of the hero props and that there were few hero props that exist.
Jim Reynor's Revolver Blaster from the Starcraft Universe
One of the most developed characters in the Starcraft universe is Jim Reynor. His character has an air of ronin/space cowboy that is only reinforced by the fact that he used an massive revolver blaster that is called an “Colt Single Action”…which makes no sense in the 26th century. Well designed and seen in the hands of some of the Terran Marines and other, these revolvers are in an enduring image of Starcraft and the blaster…expect this blaster is wielded by powered armor wearing space marines.
The Deep Sleep Operative Flame Gun from Logan's Run (1976)
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The issue with this working flame effect was that gas would leak, even in the screen used props. Not only where there greenish flames, there was the genuine sound effects produced by the reaction. Terrifying prop to be sure. In the universe of Logan’s Run, the Deep Sleep Operatives used this powerful DE weapon that fired charged particles that had the power to kill with a single impact and fire 120 shots on a single charge. This weapon was the primary tool and mark of the Sandmen. In the TV series, the power of the Flame Gun was altered to be censor friendly with power settings similar to the Trek Phaser.
The Bahauser M571 Armor Magnum Hand Cannon from Armored Trooper VOTOM
One of the most iconic military science fiction animes of all time is Armored Trooper VOTOM starring Scopedog powered armor pilot Chirio Cuvie. While the major of weapons are mecha-based, Chirio carries one of the most insane handguns in military science fiction mecha anime: the “Bahasuer M571 Armor Magnum”. This four-shot hand cannon is designed to function as an anti-APS weapons platform, allowing Chirio to take out powered armor with just hand gun that fires massive bullets into the weak spots of the various powered armor of VOTOM. He as also used on people as well. Talk about overkill! We will be discussing Armored Trooper VOTOM in more detail on a future installment of Future War Stories From The East.
The Hand Cannons of the Destiny Universe
To its credit, the battered video game Destiny has a wide offering of weapons to outfit your Titan, Hunter, and Warlock three weapons slots. In the primary weapons slot is an interesting class of weapon: “the hand cannon”. Similar in design to a large framed revolver, these futuristic blasters have massive up close power and are quickly reloaded via an cylinder that pops into the main housing of the weapon.
While they look cool and are certainly powerful, I’ve never relayed on an hand cannon as my primary for my female Hunter character and often go with my standard scout rifle instead, but everyone and awhile, it is nice wipe out the hand cannon and fell like an Space Cowboy badass. Another form of the hand cannon is the Hunter’s solar powered “Golden Gun” available in the “Gunslinger” subclass. This is my favorite Super Ability to have and the powerful blast of the golden flaming hand cannon is nasty, especially in tense PvP: matches.
The Good Samaritan Revolver from The Hellboy Universe
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Magic firearms are an interesting outgrowth of magical bladed weapons of fantasy or legends. The Good Samaritan massive revolver blaster from the Hellboy universe fits into the same ranks as the Caster from Outlaw Star. Given to our red-skinned hero as a young boy by the Touch of Liberty to deal with various supernatural and demonic assholes, the weapon and its ammunition are special beyond belief. Constructed from pieces of the True Cross, metal from church bells, and blessed; it is a holy weapon that fires holy bullets of a massive size and power. These bullets have magic loads and often made from special materials to deal with the special dark enemies Hellboy faces.
Ronon's Particle Magnum Blaster from Stargate Atlantis
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With a one-shot kill ability, the particle magnum was a popular gun among the Atlantis security staff, but only Ronon possessed one…that was until the markers of the blaster were found. When John Shepard was taken by a nomadic human popular, called the Travelers, he learned the origin of the particle magnum was the standard handgun of the Travelers. I’ve always liked the particle magnum from SG:A, but I’ve always felt that the writing staff was trying a wee bit too hard with the character of Ronon and his handgun to make him the cool badass dude with being a more extreme version of Worf and Tyr Anasazi.
The Blaster from The Caves of Steel by Issac Asimov
The Caves of Steel novel was written back in 1954 and is still a great sc-fi book to behold and features the NYPD using some sort of DW blasters in this future world of underground cities, spacers, and robots. In the novel, an Spacer is murdered via an blaster and detective Baley carried an official use blaster. Some of the features of the weapon are explained, like the need for an "ignition bud" to have the weapon be charged and ready to use and that are fitted with radiation chambers. In the novel, the Spacer robot R. Daneel carried uncharged blaster to not violate the First Law of Robotics, especially when he points it at a crowd of rioting humans.
The Moses Brothers Self-Defense Engine Frontier Model "B" from the Firefly Universe
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In the 25th century space western magnum opus Firefly and its accompanying feature 2005 film Serenity we see a number of futuristic firearms of all shapes and sizes. One of the best and lovingly designed is the handgun of Malcolm Reynolds: the Moses Brothers Self-Defense Engine Frontier Model "B". This iconic sci-fi firearm was used by Mal throughout the series and the film in a style similar to an Old West gunslinger with an similar holster. According to Joss Whedon, Mal's space revolver-blaster was based on the .41 Volcanic Repeater pistol from 1855 and the prop was construction around an Taurus Model 85 .38 revolver with an brass sci-fi covering.
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The "Astro Automatic","Cosmogun", and "Cosmo Dragoon" Blasters from the Leijiverse
The blaster would first be seen in the Space Cruiser Yamato film released in 1974 as well as the manga, released the same year. In the hands of the good crew of the Yamato, it was known as the “astro automatic” in the English dub and the “Cosmo Gun” in the original Japanese. It was a pretty standard directed energy blaster at the time with an impressive militaristic design that was not a ray gun type. I’ve always felt that the astro automatic of Yamato/Starblazers was inspirited by the Imperial Japanese Nambu pistol of the 2nd World War while others believe it was based around the funky 8mm 1908 Hino-Komuro pistol.
When Yamato was finally given a live-action feature film in 2010, the astro automatic was featured, but in a more conventional form that mimicked the original design somewhat but is rumored to be based around an airsoft Glock 26. Given Matsumoto penchant for recycling designs, the cosmo gun was restyled for inclusion in the Galaxy Express 999 and Harlock animes/mangas. In this more stylized form, called an “Cosmo Dragoon”, it was extreme powerful and rare weapon of which there was only five in the galaxy with one in the possession of Captain Harlock. These powerful handguns, also known as “the warrior’s gun” were constructed by Harlock’s running buddy Tochiro and where the only weapons able to kill the machine people like the human hunting-and-skinning Count Mecha.
The overall design of these very similar Leijiverse DEW blasters resemble the overall style of the Colt 1847 Walker or Colt 1848 Dragoon Cap-&-Ball revolvers and this could be due to the 1972 western manga done by Matsumoto called Gun Froniter that featured some of the same characters as the space series. Even Tochiro said that he pattern the Cosmo Dragoon after Old West six-shooters. These have been favorite anime blasters and model kits and replicas have been made since the release of Space Cruiser Yamato that greatly varied.
The Cygnus Sentry Laser Blasters from Disney's The Black Hole (1979)
The massive success of 1977’s Star Wars launched a thousand greenlit sci-fi projects with other studios attempt to hit the iron while it was hot. Some were classics in their own right like ALIEN, some were cheap intimations like Battle Beyond the Planets and somewhere just odd…like Disney’s 1979 live-action sci-fi film The Black Hole. This was a film I grew up on and I have a soft spot for it, which includes the twin-barreled laser blaster used by the crew of the Palomino and the “robotic” sentries of the Cygnus.
This dual-emitter robotic sentry laser blaster was seen on-screen firing two beams of red directed energy and was often dual wielded by the sentries and the Palomino human crew during the climax of the film. The props themselves were a nice marriage of the ray gun and the blaster and the laser battle scenes were quite nice in the film. Since The Black Hole was following the tradition of Star Wars there was to be a major rollout of toys by Mego. Action figures, playsets, and even a role-play toy sentry laser blaster were going to be released. There was some release of the Mego Black Hole toyline in the United Kingdom around 1980 by Marx, but much of it never made to market. The action figures that were released did not feature the same iconic blaster design as the film and it seems that toy sentry laser pistol blaster was also unreleased. Pity.
Captain Blasto's Blaster from the 1998 Blasto PlayStation One video game
It would be criminal of me to not discuss the over-the-top space hero character of "Captain Blasto" from the 1998 PlayStation One 3rd person shooter video game Blasto. The title character is an space hero that would be more at home in a plup era sci-fi magazine or an episode of Futurama than the 1990's. Captain Blasto is a space hero of the Earth and lover to the babies of planet Uranus that takes out evil alien invaders from the 5th dimension with his trusty laser blaster. To me, he looked like the father of Spaceman Spiff from Calvin & Hobbes! Blasto's sidearm was a pretty normal blaster that tended more towards the ray gun blaster type than an DL-44. The blaster would be overcharged for a more powerful blast and it often took out most enemies in a few bolts of red energy. Prior to this game's release, there was heavy press and buzz about the game and the voice acting of Phil Hartman in the role of Captain Blasto himself. The game itself was developed by Sony and released by Sony to be an exclusive to their mega-hit, the PlayStation.
I can clearly remember this game being in development with it being heavily advertised in gaming stores and magazines followed by the released that hit with a thud. I barely played Blasto on an ex-girlfriend's son's PSOne when I was in college back in 1998, and did not care much for the game. So, what happened to Captain Blasto? That is a sad story. The much-hyped game was panned by critics for being too difficult, and sales were only lukewarm with the praise for the voice-acting by Hartman being the best element of the game. There was rumors of an sequel in the works until Hartman was killed by his wife just six weeks after the games release...ending any hopes of a sequel. Sony even let the trademark for "Captain Blasto" slip...despite this and the length of time that has gone by, there is continued rumors of an sequel coming.
The Earth Military EM-33 Plasma Blaster from ST:Enterprise
The universe of Star Trek has never been one that featured blasters in the traditional sense...besides the three mentioned on the list. One of the most forgotten Starfleet weapons that is a blaster is the EM-33 plasma pistol from Star Trek: Enterprise. This was only really featured in the hands of NX-01 personnel in the pilot episode "Broken Bow", when it was replaced with the phaser processor, the Phase-Pistol, but not before Cpt. Archer dual wielded some EM-33s in a firefight! Not much exists on in-universe explanation on this blaster save for the name and that it was used by Starfleet, the Earth Cargo Authority, and MACO.
With the missing history of this unique early Starfleet weapon compelling me, I designed and wrote an entire history behind the weapon and how it inspirited the 23rd century "assault phaser" and why the MACOs still use the EM-33. It was a labor of love. The prop itself was designed by Craig Binkley and Jim Martin, who designed the EM-33 around the Desert Eagle and the Jericho pistols. This makes the EM-33 a bit of interesting sci-fi weapon; it is an DE blaster that was based on one of the real-steel pistols that can be compared to an sci-fi blaster. This is one of my favorite Star Trek weapons.
The Cybernetic Soldier Pistol from Angel Cop
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There have been three "waves" or invasions of Anime/Manga to America. The first began with works like Astroboy and Speed Racer, and ended around the time of Battle of the Planets, Gundam, and Starblazers. The second wave was during the 1980's, with works like ROBOTECH, Ulysses 31, Captain Harlock, and Saber Rider and the Star Sheriffs. The 2nd Wave was also marked by the greater importation of VHS tapes, toys, models,and comics to the shores of America. The 2nd Wave was when I was kid, and was a great deal of fun. Today, we live in the 3rd Wave. During the crush of import titles via American distributors like US Manga Corps, Viz Media, and Manga, it seems that a little bit of everything was imported to the states to reap in the cash.
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The Eternia Laser Blasters from The Masters of the Universe Live-Action Motion Picture (1987)
One of the iconic toylines of the 1980's was The Masters of the Universe, and an entire generation grew up playing in the oddball sci-fi/fantasy universe of He-Man and Skeletor. This included me. I had most of the original 1983 toyline which included Castle Greyskull. In addition to the toyline (because it was the 80's), there was an accompanying cartoon called He-Man and the Masters of the Universe that was equally popular in the early 1980's. Once again, an entire generation watched the adventures of He-Man & Company with the phase "I have the POWER!" being part of our daily lives, including me. Good times.
Naturally, this made The Masters of the Universe very popular and successful,a fact not lost on Mattel. From the very beginning of the development of MOTU toyline there was discussions about bring the struggle of good & evil on Eternia to the silver screen. In an odd twist, as Mattel was developing MOTU, producers of the Conan film were attempting to sell toy rights to their fantasy film. Given the surface similarity between Conan and He-Man, the Conan toy rights were rejected and Mattel began developing their own film to MOTU. Scripts were ordered to be targeted to adults and kids.
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The Earth Alliance Auricon PPG from Babylon 5...is it even an blaster?
In terms of 1990's American TV science fiction, Babylon 5 was the other side of the coin to ST:DS9, and for some of us, B5 the better of the two. For four good season, B5 wove a tale of returning dark enemy, a Terran space station devoted to peace, and alien governments politics. It was a brave piece of sci-fi writing and storytelling. Throughout the show, there was one iconic piece of science fiction weaponry: the Earth Alliance PPG compact pistol. But, it is an blaster in the traditional sense? I thought it was worth devoting some space to examining the case of the B5 PPG. The Phased Plasma Gun was the standard DE sidearm of the Earth Alliance personnel that was manufactured by Auricon. The power cell, called an power cap, that feed the PPG seen in the series had a capacity based on the level of power chosen by the user. At maximum setting, only four shots were possible, while there was 20 shots at the standard setting. The PPG was a rather unique DEW seen in science fiction that was a hybrid of the Star Trek phaser and the Star Wars blaster that seemed to me to be patterned after the old-school police snub-nosed revolver preferred by detectives and police chiefs. Adding evidence to this, was that the on-screen used prop PPG used an real .38 revolver grip. This means that the PPG flies in the face of the traditional post-Star Wars blaster being a large-framed weapon, but it does maintain the use of energy (plasma) bolts. I think the case can be made that the PPG is one of the more unique weapons of modern sci-fi and while it may not be an space revolver, an phaser, or an blaster; it is in some ways all of them.
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The genre of Military SF comes in all forms and forges new fans through the various forms of media. For me, witnessing Mobile Suit Gundam and Starblazers at age two and three and then later, ROBOTECH all converted me into a lifelong fan of the genre via military science fiction anime. Via exploration of the genre since the founding of FWS, I discovered that there needed to a dedicated serial devoted to exploring and explaining the realm of anime military sci-fi. The first subject of this new serial is an relatively unknown 1980's "Real Robot/Mecha" centered MSF television series that descend from the success Mobile Suit Gundam: Fang of the Sun Dougram. While the series was never exported to the US market, the mecha was in the form of models and the designs that became "incorporating" into one of the great works of American 1980's military science fiction.