Top 10 Fictional Movie Guns
The Best Weapons That Never Existed (But Totally Should)
(1)
🦾 Auto-9
RoboCop (1987)
“Dead or alive, you’re coming with me.”
Built from a modified Beretta 93R and permanently welded inside a custom shroud, the Auto-9 is the ultimate dystopian sidearm. Full-auto fire, massive flash, infinite ammo — and it stores inside RoboCop’s leg.
You couldn’t build a more absurd law enforcement pistol. And yet, it totally works.

(2)
đź’Ą M41A Pulse Rifle
Aliens (1986)
“I like to keep this handy… for close encounters.”
Made from an M1A1 Thompson and a SPAS-12, the Pulse Rifle remains one of sci-fi’s most copied designs. With a digital ammo counter, grenade launcher, and caseless ammo, it defined Colonial Marine swagger — and made us all want one.

(3)
🎮 The Golden Gun
The Man with the Golden Gun (1974)
One bullet. One kill. One incredibly stylish assassin.
Scaramanga’s modular pistol assembles from a lighter, pen, cufflink, and cigarette case. It’s silly, impractical, and perfect for Bond’s world of bespoke villains and gadgetry. Bonus: it became legendary again thanks to GoldenEye 007 on N64.

(4)
🛸 Zorg ZF-1
The Fifth Element (1997)
What doesn’t this thing do?
Machine gun, rocket launcher, flamethrower, poison dart gun, net launcher — oh, and it has replay mode, where the bullets follow the first round’s trajectory.
It’s more weaponized Swiss Army knife than firearm, and Luc Besson made it look good.

(5)
🔫 DL-44 Blaster
Star Wars (1977)
Han Solo’s blaster is a heavily modified Mauser C96 with added scope, muzzle booster, and all the attitude in the galaxy.
It’s loud, lethal, and probably breaks every spacefaring safety regulation — but it’s perfect for the fastest smuggler in the Outer Rim.

{6}
⚡ Star Trek Phaser
Star Trek (1966–Present)
The calm, clinical sci-fi sidearm. Elegant, efficient, and built for control.
With settings from “stun” to “vaporize,” the Phaser is both iconic and philosophically fascinating — a gun designed to minimize harm in a universe that still has conflict. Its design has evolved, but its concept remains timeless.

(7)
🧠Deckard’s Blaster
Blade Runner (1982)
Part revolver, part bolt-action rifle, part mystery. Deckard’s blaster has become one of the most replicated and revered sci-fi weapons of all time — even though no one’s quite sure what it actually is.
It’s heavy, analog, and somehow more believable than most modern props.

{8}
🪖 Morita Series Rifle
Starship Troopers (1997)
Fully automatic, high-capacity, and absolutely perfect for hosing down hordes of bugs.
The Morita rifles were built on real Ruger Mini-14s, disguised under bulky sci-fi shells. Loud, chaotic, and completely impractical — but they fit the tone of the movie perfectly. One of the best examples of a real firearm transformed by prop magic.

(9)
🧲 EM Railgun
Eraser (1996)
Arnold Schwarzenegger with an X-ray scoped electromagnetic railgun. What more do you need?
Yes, it’s ridiculous. Yes, the science is nonsense. But that scene where he blows a plane in half? Glorious.

{10}
🔊 Noisy Cricket
Men in Black (1997)
Tiny. Shiny. Devastating.
The Noisy Cricket is a running joke with consequences — and when Will Smith finally pulls the trigger, the recoil launches him into a car windshield. Bonus points: it was inspired by the real Colt Junior pocket pistol.

Final Thoughts
These guns may be fictional, but they’ve made a very real impact on pop culture, design, and the way we imagine futuristic firepower. Whether built from real parts, entirely invented, or digitally enhanced, they all share one thing in common:
When they appear on screen, you remember.
🎥 Which fictional gun do you want to see covered on the channel? Let me know in the comments — and check out the rest of the site for the real firearms behind Hollywood’s most iconic shootouts.



