80mm Shell
80mm Shell feels worth the space only in runs where the Trampler already has an 80 mm cannon and the crew expects to fire it.
80mm Naval Cannon makes sense when your Trampler can stay fed on 80 mm shells and actually take the kind of fight where a heavy cannon matters.
This cannon feels right when your Trampler can keep 80 mm shells stocked and hold a firing lane long enough to make the heavy shot count. The unarmored body is easier to live with when the shell supply is stable and the vehicle is not already bleeding repairs. If those basics are missing, the gun starts to feel like dead weight fast.
80mm Shell feels worth the space only in runs where the Trampler already has an 80 mm cannon and the crew expects to fire it.
High Velocity 80 mm Shell only makes sense when you actually want that variant on a matching 80 mm gun instead of just carrying the plain shell stack.
80mm Proximity Fuse Shell only makes sense when you actually want that variant on a matching 80 mm gun instead of just carrying the plain shell stack.
Pristine 80 mm Naval Cannon is the long-range Trampler cannon that pays off when your crew wants precise component hits instead of close brawling.
It feels best with 80 mm shells in storage, a run that expects deliberate vehicle fights, and enough crew attention to keep the cannon working when the lane opens.
This mount does not fix empty shell racks, bad firing lanes, or repair pressure. If those problems are already showing up, the cannon usually feels too heavy for what it gives back.
The 80 mm Naval Cannon uses the 80 mm shell family, including the base shell plus High Velocity, EMP, and Proximity Fuse variants.
No. It is a Trampler-mounted cannon, so its value starts with the vehicle setup rather than your carried weapon slots.