Good handgun for cave exploration

Being a true lover of deep caves and the undergrounds I have decided to bring my girlfriend on a three day trip inside a pretty huge cave. I'm packing the essentials but I've decided to carry a gun after she told me that it would make her feel better since we encountered wildlife the last time we explored a cave.

Problem is that I am not sure about what gun I should bring. It should be light enough, small and easy to use in the dark without going deaf since I'm not gonna pack earpro. It should also be pretty cheap. I am thinking of bringing my model 10 in 38 because revolver are neat. Any recommendations?

250 Piece Survival Gear First Aid Kit

LifeStraw Water Filter for Hiking and Preparedness

250 Piece Survival Gear First Aid Kit

  1. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    >use in the dark without going deaf
    even a 22lr will make you deaf in enclosed spaces

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      Indeed but I can't really bring something with a suppressor since the size would be a problem. Also it should be able to drop a man sized creature in a minimal amount of shots. Not that Im paranoid but I'm more scared of a "The forest" situation than a bear. Even if the odds are just me being a schizophrenic paranoid.

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        Wear an ear pro lmao.

        • 2 years ago
          Anonymous

          >I HATE THE GOBLIN KING

          • 2 years ago
            Anonymous
      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        >mutant babies, albino cannibals and three legged vegana monsters
        what fricking forest do you live near?

        • 2 years ago
          Anonymous

          I DO NOT WANT TO TAKE ANY RISK.
          Ive decided to bring a 44mag in a hamerless snubnose configuration. Im packing 44spe in the cylinder and im bringing 12 round of 44 magnum in hollow point and homemade AP pissing hot loads. If i ever need to shoot at something it shall be deaf and blind before it dies.

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      suppressed .22lr

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous
    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      So you mean soliders go deaf when they are clearing out a building of terrorists? I don't think so friends or else they would be useless without being able to hear after firing the first round

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        The walls of buildings typically are not hundreds of feet of solid stone.

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        >shacks made of camel poop are the same as caves with hundreds of meters of solid rock on all sides

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        I find it hilarious you’ve gone through life assuming that soldiers don’t wear ear protection. $17500 for every infantry kit and you think they skimped on that

        • 2 years ago
          Anonymous

          >You think they skimped on that
          Errrr

        • 2 years ago
          Anonymous

          They did skimp lmao, and it's costing them some serious cash now.
          Why do you think they want every dude to have a Suppie now?

          • 2 years ago
            Anonymous

            Iirc the class action ads are against 3M, not the gubbernment. Sovereign immunity is a b***h, but we’ll all pay for it with the disability gibs

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      >moron noguns who failed highschool science think gunshots are louder I'm enclosed spaces than open spaces

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        > what is echo and reverberation

        have a nice day, today

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        >moron who actually failed high school physics

  2. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    keltec cp33 with a supressor and subsonic rounds
    throw a flashlight on there and an arm brace and you have the best option for cave exploration
    theres no way around it, the only gun you can use without deafining yourself is a 22lr with subsonic and a supressor and the cp33 is barely larger than a supressed pistol but carries a lot more rounds and can be modified more

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      This is unironically the best option for OP, although he's seemingly too moronic to accept that considering he claims even having a supressor on his pistol would make it too big. You could fit that through any cave youd ever end up in if you were willing to not be a gay and drag it a little bit

  3. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    1911 and shitty mag light

  4. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    There is no reason to take a gun. There is no skinwalkers, wildlife, or anything dangerous like that down there. Even if there were, which there is none, we would mean you no harm.

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      I’m on to you.

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        I have no clue what you're talking about. People get lost all the time. Even in cities with road signs and GPS smartphones and people still get lost. You're just being over paranoid, there is no threat except your own imagination.

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        the mammoth caves is an entrance to hell

        • 2 years ago
          Anonymous

          Mammoth cave is cool, went there as a kid

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        This is just a map of state parks, which happen to have caves because why would you not put a park around the natural feature

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        tfw NW GA

        • 2 years ago
          Anonymous

          Same, anon. Stay out of the caves.

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      aw yeah m8?

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      Dammit Larry you used the wrong pronoun again, we'll never eat another human and live their life in their stead at this rate

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        This is not Larry, this is Steve, Larry's twin brother's skin suit.

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        This is not Larry, this is Steve, Larry's twin brother's skin suit.

        There is no reason to take a gun. There is no skinwalkers, wildlife, or anything dangerous like that down there. Even if there were, which there is none, we would mean you no harm.

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      >we

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      He's not planning on bringing his gf back out

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      >doesn't exist
      >mean you no harm
      ok

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      Do you get good internet resection down in that cave?

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      Hey, dude! Can you recommend a cool cave to a few gnarly fellas to explore? My lawyer and doctor friend are looking for new hang for our summer trip, yo!
      >pic unrelated

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      This guys is right if you mean actual deep caves. There's no large animals down there and it's just another thing that can get you caught in narrow spaces.

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      I know if I was trapped in the pitch black, couldn't move, and knew there was no chance of rescue, I'd definetly like I way to kill myself that didn't involve bashing my head against a rock

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      >[...]
      >Every week the mass of 3-D, four-color worm lines expanded laterally and vertically beneath their maps of Europe and Asia and the United States. Junior officers took to comparing the adventure to Dungeons and Dragons without, exactly, the dragons or dungeons. Wrinkled non-coms couldn’t believe their luck: Vietnam without the Vietnamese. The enemy was turning out to be a figment of one very disfigured major’s imagination. No one but Branch could claim to have seen demons with fish-white skin.

      >[...]
      >In the absence of an actual specimen, scientists had named the enemy homosexual hadalis, though they were the first to admit they didn’t know if it was even hominid. The secular term became hadal, rhyming with cradle. Middens indicated that these ape creatures were communal, if seminomadic. A picture of harsh, grinding, sunless subsistence emerged. It made the brute life of human peasantry look charming by comparison.

      >But whoever lived down here—and the evidence of primitive occupation at the deeper levels was undeniable—had been scared off. They encountered no resistance. No contact. No live sightings. Just lots of caveman souvenirs: knapped flint points, carved animal bones, cave paintings, and piles of trinkets stolen from the surface: broken pencils, empty Coke cans and beer bottles, dead spark plugs, coins, lightbulbs. Their cowardice was officially excused as an aversion to light. Troops couldn’t wait to engage them.

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        >[...]
        >The military exploration entered its tenth month. It seemed that the new world was empty after all, and that the nation-states had only to settle into their basements, catalog their holdings, and fine-tune new sub-borders. The conquest became a downright promenade. Branch kept urging caution. But soldiers quit carrying their weapons. Patrols resembled picnics or arrowhead hunts. There were a few broken bones, a few bat bites. Every now and then a ceiling collapsed or someone drove off an abyssal roadway. Overall, however, safety stats were actually better than normal. Keep your guard up, Branch preached to his Rangers. But he had begun to sound like a nag, even to himself.

        >[...]
        >It was as if the entire subplanet had flushed the toilet. From Norway to Bolivia, from Australia to Labrador, from wilderness bases to within thirty feet of sunshine, armies vanished. Later it would be called a decimation, which means the death of one in ten. What happened on November 24 was its opposite. Fewer than one of every ten would survive.

        >It was the oldest trick in the history of warfare. You lull your enemy. You draw him in. You cut off his head. Literally.

        >A tunnel at minus-six in sub-Poland was found with the skulls of three thousand Russian, German, and British NATO troops. Eight teams of LRRPs and Navy SEALs were found crucified in a cavern nine thousand feet beneath Crete. They had been captured alive at scattered sites, herded together, and tortured to death.

        • 2 years ago
          Anonymous

          >[...]
          >Half raving, Branch watched his President address the nation in prime time on December 2. No makeup tonight. He had been weeping. “My fellow Americans,” he announced. “It is my painful duty …” In somber tones the patriarch enunciated the American military losses incurred over the past week: in all, 29,543 missing. The worst was feared. In the course of three terrible days, the United States had just suffered half as many American dead as the entire Vietnam War total. He avoided all mention of the global military toll, an unbelievable quarter of a million soldiers. He paused. He cleared his throat uncomfortably, shuffled papers, then pushed them aside.

          >“Hell exists.” He lifted his chin. “It is real. A geological, historical place beneath our very feet. And it is inhabited. Savagely.” His lips thinned. “Savagely,” he repeated, and for a moment you could see his great anger.

          • 2 years ago
            Anonymous

            >[...]
            >The robots were released in pairs—plus one soloist—at seven different sites around the globe. Scores of scientists monitored each one around the clock. The “spiders” held up quite well. As they crept deeper into the earth, communication became difficult. Electronic signals meant to flash unimpeded from the Martian poles and alluvial plains were hampered by thick layers of stone. In a sense, the labyrinth underfoot was light-years more distant than Mars itself. The signals had to be computer-enhanced, interpreted, and coalesced. Sometimes it took many hours for a transmission to reach the top, and many hours or days to untangle the electronic jumble. More and more often, transmissions simply didn’t surface.

            >What did come up showed an interior so fantastic that the planetologists and geologists refused to believe their instruments. It took a week for the electronic spiders to find the first human images. Deep within the limestone wilderness of Terbil Tem, beneath Papua New Guinea, their bones showed as ultraviolet sticks on the computer scan. Estimates ranged from five to twelve sets of remains at a depth of twelve hundred feet. A day later, miles inside the volcanic honeycombs around Japan’s Akiyoshi-dai, they found evidence that bands of humans had been driven to depths lower than any explored, and there slaughtered. Deep inside Algeria’s Djurdjura massif and the Nanxu River sink in China’s Guanxi province, far below the caves under Mt. Carmel and Jerusalem, other robots located the carnage of battles fought in cubbyholes and crawl spaces and immense chambers.

            >“Bad, very bad,” breathed hardened viewers. The bodies of soldiers had been stripped, mutilated, degraded. Heads were missing or arranged like masses of bowling balls. Worse, their weapons were gone. Place after place, all that remained were nude bodies, anonymous, turning to bone. You could not tell who these men and women had been.

            • 2 years ago
              Anonymous

              >One by one, their spiders ceased to transmit. It was too soon for their batteries to go dead. And not all of them had reached their signal threshold. “They’re killing our robots,” the scientists reported. By the end of December, only one was left, a solitary satellite creeping on legs into regions so deep it seemed nothing could live.

              >Far beneath Copenhagen, the robot eye picked up a strange detail, a close-up of a fisherman’s net. The computer cowboys fiddled with their machinery, trying to resolve the image, but it remained the same, oversized links of thread or thin rope. They keyed in commands for the spider to back up slightly for a wider perspective.

              >Almost a full day passed before the spider transmitted back, and it was as dramatic as the first picture sent from the back of the moon. What had looked like thread or rope was iron circlets linked together. The net was in fact chain mail, the armor of an early Scandinavian warrior. The Viking skeleton inside had long ago fallen to dust. Where there had been a desperate black struggle, the armor itself was pinned to the wall with an iron spear.

              >“Bullshit,” someone said.

              >But the spider rotated on command, and the den was filled with Iron Age weaponry and broken helmets. The NATO troops and Afghani Taliban and soldiers of a dozen other modern armies were not, then, the first to invade this abyssal world and raise arms against man’s demons.

              • 2 years ago
                Anonymous

                >[...]
                >“Major,” a voice said, “you need to see this.”

                >Branch followed the man to a steep overhang where the dead had been laid neatly side by side in a long row. Under their dozen light beams, the platoon saw the bodies had been dusted in bright red ochre powder, and then sprinkled with brilliant white confetti. It was a rather beautiful sight.

                >“Haddie?” breathed a soldier.

                >Beneath the layers of ochre, the bodies were indeed those of their enemy. Branch climbed across to the overhang. Close up now, he saw that the white confetti was teeth. There were hundreds of them, thousands, and they were human. He picked one up, a canine, and it had chip marks where a rock had hammered it from some GI’s mouth. He gently set it back on the ground.

                >The hadal warriors’ heads were pillowed on human skulls. At their feet were offerings.

                >“Mice?” said Sergeant Dornan. “Dried-up mice?” There were scores of them.

                >“No,” said Branch. “Genitals.”

              • 2 years ago
                Anonymous

                >[...]
                >Rifles twitching side to side, the spellbound Rangers closed in on their vaporous kill. At last, thought Branch, behold the eyes of dead angels. He finished refilling his spare clips, scanned the upper tunnel for latent intruders, then got to his feet.

                >Ever cautious, he circled the chamber, threw light down the left fork, then the right. Empty. Empty. They’d taken out the whole contingent. No stragglers. No blood trails leading away. One hundred percent payback.

                >They gathered in a semicircle at the edge of the dead. Over by the heaped kill, his men stood frozen, their lights casting downward in a collection pool. Branch shouldered in among them. Like them, he froze.

                >“No fricking way,” a troop darkly muttered.

                >His neighbor refused the sight, too. “What’s these doing here? What the frick these doing here?”

                >Now Branch saw why his enemy had died so meekly.

                >“Christ,” he breathed. There were two dozen or more upon the floor. They were nude and pathetic. And human. They were civilians. Unarmed.

                >Even mauled by the shrapnel and gunfire, you could see their awful gauntness. Their decorated skin stretched taut across meatless rib cages. The faces were a study in famine, cheeks parsed, eyes hollowed. Their feet and legs were ulcerated. The sinewy arms lay thin as a child’s. Their loins were cased in old waste. Only one thing might explain them.

                >“Prisoners,” said Spec 4 Washington.

                >“Prisoners? We didn’t kill no prisoners.”

                >“Yeah,” said Washington. “They were prisoners.”

                >“No,” said Branch. “Slaves.”

              • 2 years ago
                Anonymous

                >There was a silence.

                >“Slaves? There’s no such thing. This is modern days, Major.”

                >He showed them the brand marks, the stripes of paint, the ropes linking neck to neck.

                >“Makes ’em prisoners. Not slaves.” The black kids acted like authorities on the subject.

                >“See those raw marks on their shoulders and backs?”

                >“So?”

                >“Abrasions. They’ve been humping loads. Prisoners, labor. Slaves.”

                >Now they saw. Cued by Branch, they fanned out. This had just gotten very personal.

              • 2 years ago
                Anonymous

                what is this?

              • 2 years ago
                Anonymous

                What creepy pasta is this?

                Anon is posting excerpts from "The Descent" by Jeff Long

              • 2 years ago
                Anonymous

                Damn couldn’t find an audiobook,

                Thanks though

                https://www.angelfire.com/trek/caver/
                What gun did you think Ted took with him?

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        What creepy pasta is this?

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        Thanks for this, just bought the book. Looks like a good read.

  5. 2 years ago
    BigC

    there shouldn't be any wildlife deep inside a cave except mice and bats, nothing else is capable of surviving deep inside a mine/cave where it's pitch black and still being able to navigate and eat
    t. i explore mines and caves as a hobby

  6. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    Throw frags alternating with WP every ten feet. It's the only way to be sure.

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      I say we roll in there and nerve gas the whole fricking nest.

  7. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    You've gotta be the only anon who's ever played cave explorer involving a girl, if you know what I mean.

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      Not following.

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      By this cave analogy are you implying OP's gf has a ginormous traversable cavity for a vegana?

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        We indeed frick in the caves. But she is tight. You never truly lived until you fricked in a cave.

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        As big as a house as big as a house

  8. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    Just beat the frick out of anything with a big fricking maglite. It's a modern trench club. I don't know shit about caves but if shit like skinwalkers were real, they'd probably be on animal planet or national geographic. It's just some shitty sp00ky urban legend. It's just fantasy like goblins and dragons. I bet the most dangerous thing in there is some tiny parasite or foriegn bacteria. A bowie knife, machete, or large dagger should fit the bill too.

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      >if it’s not on animal planet it doesn’t exist
      Moron.
      >skin walkers are legendary creatures
      Well considering they are shape shifting witches I going to have to agree.

  9. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    get a tokarev, they are thin and if the lights go out you can produce a huge fireball out the muzzle

  10. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    convince your girlfriend bear spray would be better because ricochets or some bullshit.
    Don't bring a gun in a cave.

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      I just realized your biggest threat would be another human which is possible.
      You find some meth'd out golem zoomer.
      Maybe not so bad to bring a .22 revolver you can stow away in a jacket or zipped in a pocket.

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      Bear spray in a cave sound like a good way to get gazed. Im packing heat skinwalker stay away.

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      >bear spray
      > inside a cave
      Truly, a dizzying intellect.

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        Foam delivery would work fine.

        • 2 years ago
          Anonymous

          >Because an enraged bear in an enclosed cave complex will be totally less confused, pissed off, and in extreme pain than a non-foam delivery mechanism.
          I wish I could watch a video of (You) doing this. I'd probably jerk off myself to death laughing. good luck when that foam-covered bear embraces you.

          • 2 years ago
            Anonymous

            It's for skinwalkers not bears, duh

        • 2 years ago
          Anonymous

          Foam and gel are shit, they have a 45-90 second delay to effect.

  11. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    you might as well ask "what's a good gun for rock climbing?" there's no reason to take one you absolute chud

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      Oh no, no no no,
      I’ve seen videos and heard stories of bears coming after people while they rock climb. With the belayer needing to run and the climber hard pointed into the cliff hoping for the best.
      And then I’ve seen bears climb rocks, sure a big momma grizzly probably isn’t going to climb up after you but if she starts clawing up your rope, it’s not going to be a fun descent.

      So what’s the best gun for rock climbing, isn’t as dumb a question

  12. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    wildlife in a cave is either completely harmless and you can stomp it, or you'll need 10mm, so there's no way for you to keep your hearing and stay safe

  13. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    I'd go in there with a Iroquois Burl Wood War Club

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      Looks like your great great grandfather’s hip implant

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      based. clubs were good enough for cavemen, don't need anything else

  14. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    anon you will die a dumbass without a guide

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      I've already done a lot of cave exploration and I've already visited this cave I'll be fine.

  15. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    shoot them before they can point their wand at you. if they get a shot off you'll be paralyzed or worse. be aware they can come from hidden doors you can not see so don't get complacent
    bring one of their wands back for us pls

  16. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    There's an abandoned mine near my town that I've been itching to check out. Can anyone spoonfeed me material on how not to die? Technique, gear, hell I'll take an online course it it lowers the chance of me plummeting to my death.

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      Bring along a generator and a huge fan. You need to ventilate the mine to get clean fresh air in. While the mine was still active there would have been ventilation shafts, put the huge fan there to pull fresh air in.

      Always carry at least 3 separate lights with spare batteries for each of them.

      Secondly bring a live canary in a cage. If the bird passes out, turn around and get out quick!

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        I was thinking more along the lines of harnesses and gas masks, but canary it is I suppose. Any way of getting good air other than the fan method? I figured I could filter the bad shit with muh mask but never thought about a total lack of oxygen.

        • 2 years ago
          Anonymous

          Yeah, most people don’t realize that heavier gasses accumulate in mines and usually displace the oxygen. Hell, in most confined spaces lack of oxygen in the air is a problem. Even in a sealed steel tank, the rusting process can take all of the oxygen out of the air leaving a deadly, invisible, and odorless danger. The worst part is that you won’t even know it’s happening. The respiratory system is governed by the amount of CO2 in your bloodstream, not the lack of oxygen. You won’t even know their is no oxygen, you will just pass out.

  17. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    >cave exploration
    >handgun
    actually a good idea, you can blow your brain out if you get stuck instead of slowly dying (3 days of so) when you get stuck

  18. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    i read this post and my tinnitus immediately acted up.

  19. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    Jokes aside, what the frick are you expecting to run into down there? Ten years of spelunking and I've never seen anything bigger than a blind fish.

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      I don't know i just want to be ready for anything. Have you ever been mugged by a basketball american? If not why do you carry a gun ? Because you could one day be mugged by a basketball american. SAME FOR THE CAVE.

      • 2 years ago
        Anonymous

        Black folk dont go out to nature

        • 2 years ago
          Anonymous

          Skinwalkers do.

          • 2 years ago
            Anonymous

            good point but dont you need supernatural tools for that? maybe some kind of sage incense slowburning matchstick and a few silver crosses and memorized 16th century jesuit incantations? last i heard, skinwalkers were immune to bullets

  20. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    .44 super Blackhawk and 12 speed loaders.

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      >speed loaders
      >Blackhawk
      Noguns need to die in a fire

  21. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    >YWN fight glows and paranormal creatures in the Mammoth caves as you reach the entrance to [redacted]
    Why even bother living

  22. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    >I'm packing the essentials but I've decided to carry a gun after she told me that it would make her feel better since we encountered wildlife the last time we explored a cave.

    What wildlife homie? There's nothing in a cave that'd require a gun you paranoid loon.

  23. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    I've actually given years of thought to this after I played a game that ended with a fight underground. I always wondered what my setup for cave fighting would be and after a few years I finally figured it out. I pretty much just asked myself what a tunnel rat would want if they had access to today's gear.

    My answer:
    >Glock 17
    >tritium night sights
    >High-quality weapon mounted light
    >33-round magazine with a few backups (magpul makes 21 round magazines that seem to be a good cross between easy of carry and capacity)
    >Teflon-coated hollow points like Federal Syntech Defense or maybe a frangible hollow point
    >suppressor if you feel like going through the trouble of getting one

    If you're worried about bears or something I might consider something else, but if I had to actually fight in a cave, this is what I would bring. IIRC .38 caliber revolvers were pretty common among real-world tunnel rats so the model 10 would be a good fit if you're just doing it for the vibe.

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      38 revolvers were preferred by tunnel rats when possible because the concussion from a 1911 blast was overwhelming in those small crawlspaces.

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      Dude, the Teflon coating was just their to help keep the barrel cleaner. It doesn’t do anything when it comes to penetration depth. It’s purely a meme. The extreme penetrators made of solid brass though, those are no joke.

  24. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    Get hearing protection such as the kind with tiny holes in the middle to allow for quiet sounds but still reduces loud noises. Or get electronic hearing protection to amplify tiny footsteps.

    I would suggest a 9mm Beretta, .45 ACP revolver, or a .410 revolver. You can also try a blackpowder short shotgun.

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      >activate gyrorotation

  25. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    >Cave
    >Gun
    >EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE

    I'd want something suppressed because the acoustics in there are going to frick your ears if you have to fire it, I guess a suppressed 9mm although a .22 would be less damaging on your ears.

    Honestly man I'd recommend like a nice big knife or a hatchet if you fire a gun in a cave you'll both have hearing damage.

  26. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    Literally all you need for a fun round of cave explorer

  27. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    OP this is a pretty good way not to get invited to caving trips

  28. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    modle 10 is ok, or a 9mil with a light

  29. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    >thinking mere mortal bullets will protect you
    Kek

  30. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    There are no skinwalkers in caves, we hate caves.
    Also skinwalkers hate garlic, they cannot stand it if you rub yourself own with salt and garlic, it's just the worst.

  31. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    So do you think OP is dying via cave people, a la the decent style, or via entering literal hell, a la as above so as below?
    Or just getting soul raped by a skinwalker/fleshgaite?

  32. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    This is what you are looking for

    • 2 years ago
      Anonymous

      With subsonic 300 blk

  33. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    >after she told me that it would make her feel better
    and then everyone clapped.

  34. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    1911 and a K-bar, go full tunnel rat

  35. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    you're going to get Corona again. Caves are bat country!

  36. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

    My dick is great for exploring caves

  37. 2 years ago
    Anonymous

Leave a Reply to Anonymous Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *