The Best Backup Gun: Nerf Hammershot / Rebelle Sweet Revenge
If your primary blaster does use clips, you’re going to want a sidearm when those clips inevitably run out. If your primary blaster is noisy and you see an opportunity to sneak up on someone, you’ll need a backup gun. They’re basically identical, which is great because they share one of the best designs Nerf has ever conceived: a five-shot revolver that only requires a single hand to operate. Which means you don’t have to drop that primary blaster when you pull out your backup.
The only real differences between the Hammershot and Sweet Revenge are slightly different aerodynamics, and the fact that the pink gun comes with a (cheap plastic) holster in the box. Nerf sells a fabric holster for the Hammershot too, though.
If your primary blaster does use clips, you’re going to want a sidearm when those clips inevitably run out. If your primary blaster is noisy and you see an opportunity to sneak up on someone, you’ll need a backup gun. They’re basically identical, which is great because they share one of the best designs Nerf has ever conceived: a five-shot revolver that only requires a single hand to operate. Which means you don’t have to drop that primary blaster when you pull out your backup.
The only real differences between the Hammershot and Sweet Revenge are slightly different aerodynamics, and the fact that the pink gun comes with a (cheap plastic) holster in the box. Nerf sells a fabric holster for the Hammershot too, though.