Brandon from Texas Plinking creates a video showcasing real-life guns featured in the popular video game PUBG. He tests various firearms, including a cast-iron skillet, to see if they can stop bullets. The skillet is unable to stop most bullets, except for birdshot from a 12-gauge shotgun. Brandon also tests other guns, such as a revolver, 1911, M9, shotgun, AK-47, M16, Mini-14, and a bolt-action rifle. The video showcases the guns' capabilities and compares them to their in-game counterparts.
Here are the key facts extracted from the text:
1. The video is about testing firearms from the game PUBG in real life.
2. The host, Brandon, is not a video gamer but knows about PUBG and its guns.
3. Brandon and his friends looked at the list of guns in PUBG and chose which ones they could represent in the video.
4. The video features a cast-iron skillet as a "weapon" from PUBG.
5. The cast-iron skillet was purchased from Amazon for $30, with $10 for one-day shipping.
6. The skillet is tested with various firearms, including a revolver, 1911, and shotgun.
7. The shotgun used in the video is a Remington 870 Marine Magnum with an 18-inch barrel.
8. The video features a double-barrel shotgun, a Fox model B from Savage Arms, chambered in .410.
9. The host also tests an AK-47, an M16, and an M14 variant.
10. The video features a Springfield Armory M1A with a Sage International EBR chassis.
11. The host tests a custom precision rifle chambered in 6.5 Creedmoor.
12. The video features a Steiner T5 Xi 2.5-25x56 scope.
13. The host tests an Accuracy International AWM rifle chambered in .300 Win Mag.
14. The video features a crossbow, but the host admits to not knowing much about crossbows.
15. The only projectile that did not penetrate the cast-iron skillet was birdshot from a 12-gauge shotgun.
16. The video ends with a giveaway for the cast-iron skillet.