Richter-Roth Liberator

The Richter-Roth Liberator autorevolver is a series of semi-automatic, revolver handgun, largely considered the standard personal sidearm of the CMA Navy branch.

Known to the majority of Colonial Military personnel as simply the Liberator, the R&R Liberator was designed to harken back to the CMA’s roots as protectors of the frontier and explorers of the unknown. Its revolving chamber invokes images of frontier marshals and frontier rangers, of gunslingers and frontier justice, in the minds of colonists. It could be chambered with various different types of ammunition and was intended to function in all manner of hostile climates and conditions.

Such was the Liberator’s reputation and esteem that many of their officers chose to procure it as their sidearm of choice. This proved to be such a common choice that it was widely accepted as standard issue option despite the CMA having never formally adopted it. Even more than a hundred years later it is still found at the side of many colonial naval officers who consider them a sign of prestige and symbol of their station. They were famously used by Rear Admiral George E. Elliot during his service.

Variants
The Liberator comes in several models, classified by caliber. Additionally, each model has its own barrel length and metal finish options. Right-Roth produced countless different variants during their production, some of them under license by other companies. Other companies would even copy their design and sell their own knock offs.


 * Model 357: .357 Magnum caliber. Can also fire .38 Special.
 * Model 44: .44 Magnum caliber
 * Model 500: .50 R&R Magnum, can also fire the shorter .500 R&R Special.

Optional finishes include stainless steel, matte stainless steel, nickel-plated, titanium grey, ebony black, or custom jobs. Barrel options include 2", 4", 6", 8", 10".