40mm Autocannon
40 mm Autocannon is worth mounting when the Trampler can stay fed on 40 mm shells and keep a firing lane long enough to cash in on steady auto-gun pressure.
Worn 70 mm Shotgun Cannon fits best when worn-tier shotgun-cannon pressure matters more than spending the slot on the armored body.
This turret only earns a slot when the Trampler can feed it 70 mm shotgun shells and actually force close vehicle fights often enough to justify a shotgun cannon. It sits in the worn T2 line and comes separate from the armored body, so the real choice is whether the gun family matters more than extra protection on the mount. The unarmored body makes more sense when the route wants the worn-tier shotgun cannon and armor is not the deciding factor; if shell storage, repairs, or approach angles are already the real bottlenecks, this slot still underperforms for the same reasons.
It matters most when a worn-tier turret body shows up on a run that already wants close-range 70 mm pressure on the Trampler.
40 mm Autocannon is worth mounting when the Trampler can stay fed on 40 mm shells and keep a firing lane long enough to cash in on steady auto-gun pressure.
40 mm Autocannon Armored is worth the mount slot when the Trampler can stay fed on 40 mm shells and actually hold firing angles long enough to use the armored body.
70 mm Shotgun Cannon makes sense when your Trampler can stay loaded with standard shotgun-cannon shells and actually press close fights.
70 mm Shotgun Cannon Armored makes sense when your Trampler can stay loaded with standard shotgun-cannon shells and actually bully fights up close.
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.
80 mm Naval Cannon Armored makes sense when your Trampler can stay fed on 80 mm shells and actually take the kind of fight where a heavy cannon matters.
Experimental 2x70 mm Twin Shotgun Cannon is the unarmored T4 twin-shotgun turret, so it fits only when your Trampler can push close angles and keep the shells coming.
Experimental 2x70 mm Twin Shotgun Cannon Armored is the armored T4 twin-shotgun turret, so it only makes sense when your Trampler can actually feed a two-shell close-pressure mount.
The best case is a Trampler with stable 70 mm shotgun shell supply, close fights it can actually force, and a route where the same gun family matters more than extra armor on the mount.
This version still loses to empty shell racks, bad approach angles, and a repair budget that is already breaking. Going unarmored does not solve those problems.
Yes, when the route needs shotgun-cannon pressure and the crew can keep it fed with 70 mm shotgun shells.
Ammo supply comes first, then turret tier, armor state, and whether the Trampler can stay positioned long enough to fire.