This is my eighth nerve, not to mention those of my son. The concept of the lever "Winchester" tempted me well but I had some reservations because of what I had read on the scope and accuracy of the model and the fragility of the lever in case of repeated reloads with one hand. I finally broke down and I do not regret it. The range is equivalent to that of an Alpha Trooper or Retaliator; precision level, it is true that the darts "swirl" curiously during their flight, but eventually they always more or less back to their original direction, and we can hope to achieve a man-sized target. Not least, the reset system main argument Slingfire, keeps its promises: already very pleasant in "normal" use, despite a rather long lever stroke, it becomes downright heartening use "sling" on one hand. The operation, to be performed with conviction but without brutality, is actually feasible given little training and concentration, which makes it all the more rewarding, and the lever seems sufficiently flexible and robust to not suffer a long time ( in my opinion, gables let go before.) In addition, the Slingfire is sufficiently short, lightweight and well balanced for easy shooting at arms. Finally, the aesthetic is nice, very well thought ergonomics for a teenager or an adult (a young child will fail to arm the lever) and the quality of implementation, as usual in Nerve, excellent (although the decor is a little less polished left side.) Finally, the Slingfire does not stand out from his brothers in scope or accuracy, and its weapons system limits the rate of fire (but not that much, nothing to do with Retaliator or Barrel Break), but all seems well reported secondary to the immense pleasure that its handling. The choice to focus on the pleasant with the useful reminds me Havok Fire, and as the latter Slingfire exceeded my expectations. EDIT: I just saw on YouTube reloading "Terminator reversed", one complete turn backwards, very easy to make (but with both hands) and extremely spectacular! The Slingfire consolidated its position "SHOWGUN" not the most effective in a Nerf war (but not shabby either), but undoubtedly the best to impress his audience. A treat!