The dart pusher does exactly what it sounds like. When you pull the trigger, it activates the dart pusher. Holding down this trigger revs the flywheels up and gets them spinning. The acceleration is the small blue trigger on the handle. To fire the Rapid Red, first load the clip with those confetti-like Rebelle darts. In turn, the flywheels are powered by 4 AA batteries, inserted right under the barrel. It is powered by two flywheels that sit just behind the barrel. The Nerf Rebelle Rapid Red is a semi-automatic motorised blaster. As you can see above, the internals are nearly identical. How does it work? Exactly like the Nerf Elite Stryfe does, that’s how. It’s a purple blaster, so I can only assume the “Red” refers to that transparent red “decoder” clip that it comes with. It lets you know that this thing is pretty much rapid-fire. The Nerf Rebelle Rapid Red has a fitting name, too. Having the performance of the Nerf Stryfe is always a good thing. So is that a good thing for the Nerf Rebelle Rapid Red? You bet your bottom dollar it is. No matter how it looks on the outside, it’s still a Stryfe underneath. Or in other words: no matter what they call it, it’s still a Stryfe. What’s in a name? That which we call a Stryfe by any other name would shoot as sweet. So the Stryfe would, were it not Stryfe call’d, retain that dear perfection which it owes without that title. So here we have the Rebelle Stryfe, formally known as the Nerf Rebelle Rapid Red blaster. Apparently, it was time for a “girl” version to the Stryfe. Its form and function have been copied and transplanted into various other shells, shapes, and designs. The Nerf Stryfe is the pinnacle of flywheel blasters. Ladies, meet your new favorite Nerf blaster, the Nerf Rebelle Rapid Red! Nerf Rebelle Rapid Red Blaster Dual-wielding this won’t be quite as effective as it is on the Nerf Stryfe. Your other hand will be there all of the time anyway, to hold the extra weight from the relocated battery tray. It also only has one tac rail, up top near the rear of the blaster. These include the stupidly small main handle(coupled with the front heavy nature of the blaster), and the lack of any attachment points for any stocks or extended barrels. If you feel inspired to make alterations or brand new text, I used Agency FB Condensed (bold for the info label, plain for everything else) Just print at 100% on label paper.The Nerf Rebelle Red is a good blaster overall with only a few negatives. Need to take some kind of steps in case a grumpy cop doesn't like those kids in the park playing with those stupid toy guns.ĮDIT: Now, by popular demand, decals! That image file should include everything except for the stripes (which were cut by hand), plus a couple others. With such a dark gun, I decided to leave the tip orange. I also added some labels to the various handles and buttons, like you might see on a real gun. They don't have the best joints or the most consistent widths, but it was good enough. Instead of screwing with the tape some more, I cut out some plain decal paper and ran it along some features. It still looked too plain and way too dark, and I still wanted stripes. I decided to go with Toha Heavy Industries from Tsutomu Nihei's Biomega/BLAME stories the blaster is compact, squared, and surprisingly powerful like the weapons his protagonists use, so it seemed like a good choice. I already planned from the start to add a logo made from decal paper.
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