Heavy weapon dude



The heavy weapon dude, referred to as the former commando in the Doom II manual, and sometimes called the chaingunner, is the third and most powerful type of human trooper which has been turned into a zombie during the invasion of Earth by Hell. It is the first of the new enemies introduced in Doom II to make an appearance in the game. The heavy weapon dude is a robust, red-eyed bald man with a bloody mouth, wearing bloodstained, red body armor and boots over slate-gray pants, and carries a chaingun with its accompanying ammo belt. Its skin tone is darker than other zombies, and it is larger in breadth and stature. Its attack behavior of firing until its target is out of view, shared with the arachnotron and spiderdemon, can make mincemeat out of the toughest of Doom marines. The official description of the heavy weapon dude follows:

"Geeze, weren't shotgun zombies bad enough? At least when you fade these jerks you get a cool chaingun."

- Doom II instruction manual

Combat characteristics
The heavy weapon dude attacks by firing its chaingun, which does slightly less damage per bullet than the player's chaingun and has a rate of fire that is also slightly lower. However, once it begins to fire, it continues firing while standing still until its target either dies or leaves its line of sight, or the monster is stunned (causing it to move immediately afterward) or destroyed.

When killed, its right side rips apart, with the head exploding, and the right arm falls off as the other half of the body collapses backward. It drops the chaingun, which contains 10 bullets, or 20 on the "I'm too young to die" and "Nightmare!" skill levels. If the monster subsequently respawns or is resurrected, the chaingun remains.

Tactical analysis
Because heavy weapon dudes employ a ranged attack that starts quickly and continues in rapid succession (even the spiderdemon pauses briefly in its tracks before firing, giving the player a fraction of a second to take cover), which cannot be dodged, the player must avoid spending any time within short or medium range of them, if possible.

Compared to the zombieman and the shotgun guy, the heavy weapon dude is exceptionally more dangerous, as the higher hit points mean it can survive a shotgun blast if the numbers come up low (the shotgun does 35 damage minimum, which is always enough to take out one of the other zombies if all the pellets hit). Continuous fire from the player's chaingun at close range almost always prevents the zombie from firing, while chaingun "tapping" normally limits it to retaliating with a couple of shots during the remainder of its existence. If there are multiple chaingunners in a clustered formation, usage of the rocket launcher or plasma gun is recommended. Since, like all monsters, heavy weapon dudes do not have any limits on ammunition used, multiple chaingun zombies at any good distance can quickly drain the player's health in the time it takes to cross a large room. In such a situation, it is essential to remain in motion.

The heavy weapon dude's high rate of fire makes it a formidable presence in monster infighting; provided it survives the initial blow (given their 70 hit points, this is usually the case with an unharmed one), one of these zombies can often take down a healthy cacodemon or revenant. A heavy weapon dude can also sometimes defeat a mancubus or an arachnotron at close range when it manages to continuously stun its opponent, preventing any return fire. Like all hitscan-firing enemies, heavy weapon dudes will eagerly turn on each other if provoked.

Because of their unrelenting automatic fire, and their tendency to appear in large numbers, they are not enemies to be taken as lightly as the other former humans. They should be considered a high-priority threat in cases where there are many in an enclosed area, even when there are more powerful enemies nearby. Close-range encounters with heavy weapon dudes can rapidly get you killed if they are not disposed of quickly.

Heavy weapon dudes can be found in some stock maps on distant ledges or alcoves, usually across the room from the player, or to the side of the player. This allows them to attack from a distance and attempt to restrict the player's movement. However, they can also be placed above the player's view, where they can freely fire at the player at a steep elevation along which the player cannot aim. This creates a very dangerous, constrained region of terrain, in which the player must neutralize the monster to pass with no additional damage. In the "Nightmare!" skill level, taking damage in such situations is almost guaranteed.

Final Doom is noted for presenting a large number of these foes, especially on the "Ultra-Violence" difficulty.

Data



 * 1) This table assumes that all calls to P_Random for damage, pain chance, blood splats, and bullet dispersal are consecutive. In real play, this is never the case: counterattacks and AI pathfinding must be handled, and of course the map may contain additional moving monsters and other randomized phenomena (such as flickering lights). Any resulting errors are probably toward the single-shot average, as they introduce noise into the correlation between the indices of "consecutive" calls.
 * 2) The target must be close enough to compensate for the monster's inaccurate aim.
 * 3) Assumes that direct hits are possible, which does not occur in any stock map.

Appearance statistics
In classic Doom, the heavy weapon dude is first encountered on these maps:

The IWADs contain the following numbers of heavy weapon dudes:

Doom RPG
In Doom RPG, the chaingun zombie appears as the "commando" monster class. There are three variations, identified by color:


 * Troop (yellow)
 * Commando (blue)
 * Assassin (normal colors)

Their attacks are capable of destroying jammed doors, much like the axe does, and they will attack three times consecutively. They are weakest against plasma weapons.