Fang Zhen's hands were extremely steady. Even while firing in quick succession, they didn't tremble in the slightest, and not a drop of sweat made his grip slip.
He fired three shots at each Heavy Armor Soldier: two to the torso, aimed at the chest, and a third to the head.
"BANG! BANG!"
"BANG!"
The two-shot, one-shot rhythm was like a musical melody, a deathly tune where the next beat would inevitably claim another Heavy Armor Soldier.
This shooting method of his was called the Mozambique Shooting Technique. It had been developed by a famous firearms expert, who summarized it from the real-world combat experience of one of his students, a frontline soldier.
That soldier had discovered in actual combat that when you shoot an enemy in the body, they don't immediately lose their ability to fight back due to a surge of adrenaline. So, he later developed a reliable shooting method to incapacitate them.
