For your viewing pleasure... timestamps! 0:00 Intro 0:45 Being stealthy 2:00 Unboxing 3:43 External overview. Coop may do it better but I don't care. I'm British. 5:04 Triggle warning 5:35 Sensible Nerf Fortnite IR combos 7:44 IR attachments making other blasters look good 8:05 Tonk 10:50 justajolt target range 12:22 Range test 13:48 Accuracy test 14:48 IMR time 16:11 Review 17:19 How do you even say that
I love this channel. I only watch it when coop hasn't reviewed a fortnite blaster but I still find your videos hilarious. Plus it's good that you review the smyths exclusives cuz ya know, I'm bri'ish
They're 14500 size lithium manganese (LiMn IMR batteries. Thoes ones in particular are red Efest, but they're hard to get now. If you're in the UK, Torchy branded IMRs are suitable for this application. Trustfires are widely available, but much less stable due to lithium cobalt tech. Coolook does some which are Lithium Iron (LiFe), which are more stable, but produce 3.2v as opposed to 3.7. I've got some of them, and they seem a good alternative. Ideally, though, you're after LiMn. You need a special charger for whatever you get too.
@@justajolt omg thank you for the reply I love how you reply to your community, I remember watching your videos when I was younger and its cool to get a reply, keep making videos, you make people around the world happy whenever you upload :3
You probably shouldn't buy fortnite guns if you're trying to actually have something that isn't going to break in the internals on or not going to snap I've had that problem with the SPL I bought two of them and after 10 minutes of constant firing it broke
Is that two SPLs broken? Yeah, springers can be a lot more finicky. To be honest, this is the first time I've had a rev-trigger jam up twice on a new blaster (that I haven't yet messed with!) so early on. The motors in these FN blasters seem quite strong though. I've stress tested them ^_^ ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-stFernJ-PeQ.html
@@justajolt my SP-L had one of the components break. You know how that little flap comes up in front of the magazine for springers to prevent the dart from being pushed out of the front during chambering? It stopped coming up due to a small part where the spring is snapping off, so I put a pen spring or something similar in at the bottom against the shell. Somehow it works now.
@@justajolt also, was abbreviating Fortnite to FN an intentional play on words on what it sounds like (obviously, effing), or perhaps the real steel firearms company FN Herstal, creators of the SCAR-L (AR) and FNX (SP and DP)?
This and the infinus are both $40 in Texas. I like this because you get a decent performance bump with 2-3 IMRs. I like the Infinus for the big mag and auto loading but I dont know if it can even take 2 IMRs.
I seriously love this dude he just screams for a minute and a half and then.... review! Justajolt is chaotic and therefore my brother he is truly amazing
Great video as always sir. I’m going to agree, I think it’s the best looking Fortnite blaster so far... but I haven’t seen the gl yet. Keep up the great work sir.
I picked up a Longshot at a thrift shop with it's original 6 dart mag and missing it's priming bar, the Fortnite Sniper Rifle 6 dart mag, and the Wastelands 10 dart mag, alongside some Hotwheels stuff, for 7 bucks That was a good day
Would have been better if it was a semi-auto ( like stryfe ) internal feeding system with a built in ping noise when the magazine wa empty and it actually looked like a m1 garand
@@justajolt maybe 3.0, since the SMG was also a mag-fed semi-auto. Would be nice if they actually made an automatic tie-in blaster one of these days, between this and the Halo MA40 being semi auto only. It feels weird that the video game assault rifles (besides Soldier 76's, which was Rival instead of Elite darts) don't actually fire in automatic.