This is a Low-Poly M14 rifle that is game-ready,real time rendering etc...
Information on the gun:In the late 1930s the M1 Garand was one of the most advanced infantry rifles. However during the World War II attempts were made to improve its overall performance. Since the mid 1940s a number of experimental weapons, based on the M1 Garand were developed in the United States. Eventually these developments resulted in the M14 battle rifle. Its prototype competed against a locally-produced version of the Belgian FN FAL. Both weapons scored well during trials, but the US design was selected as a winner. The M14 was adopted in 1959 and gradually replaced the M1 Garand in the US Army, US Marine Corps, and US Navy service. Until 1964 it was a standard-issue service rifle. It was the primary infantry rifle in Vietnam.
In 1945, Earle Harvey of Springfield Armory designed a completely different rifle, the T25, for the new T65 .30 light rifle cartridge [7.62×49mm] at the direction of Col. Rene Studler, then serving in the Pentagon.[12] The two men were transferred to Springfield Armory in late 1945, where work on the T25 continued.[12] The T25 was designed to use the T65 service cartridge, a Frankford Arsenal design based upon .30-06 cartridge case used in the M1 service rifle, but shortened to the length of the .300 Savage case.[12] Although shorter than the .30-06, with less powder capacity, the T65 cartridge retained the ballistics and energy of the .30-06 due to the use of a recently developed ball powder made by Olin Industries.[12][13] After experimenting with several bullet designs, the T65 was finalized for adoption as the 7.62×51mm NATO cartridge.[12] Olin Industries later introduced the cartridge on the commercial market as the .308 Winchester.[12] After a series of revisions by Earle Harvey and other members of the .30 light rifle design group following the 1950 Fort Benning tests, the T25 was renamed the T47.[12]
The T44 prototype service rifle was not principally designed by any single engineer at Springfield Armory, but was a conventional design developed on a shoestring budget as an alternative to the T47.[12] With minimal funding available, the earliest T44 prototypes used T20E2 receivers fitted with magazine filler blocks and re-barreled for 7.62×51mm NATO, with the long operating rod/piston of the M1 replaced by the T47's gas cut-off system.[12] Lloyd Corbett, an engineer in Harvey's rifle design group, added various refinements to the T44 design, including a straight operating rod and a bolt roller to reduce friction.[12] This includes a blend,obj,fbx and mtl files