Build · PvP · PvE · Gunslinger
ROOC - First time trying Rebelion Gunslinger Gatling gun + R.I.P on PVP with random, PVE dmg test
Reviewed against the current ROOC guide pool and still useful for today's build planning.
Summary
A mixed PvP and PvE test for Rebellion Gunslinger that focuses on Gatling-style play and how the class feels in live combat scenarios.
Best for
Players who want footage-based context for Gatling Gunslinger before deciding whether the route fits both group fights and PvE testing.
Our take
Good as a feel-check rather than a polished build manual. The value is seeing Gatling pressure in action, then comparing that play pattern with Desperado and rifle references already listed on the class page.
Codex reading
ROOC Codex indexes this as a PvP resource for Gunslinger. The practical reason to open it is: Players who want footage-based context for Gatling Gunslinger before deciding whether the route fits both group fights and PvE testing. That context matters because the same source can be strong for one account stage and wasteful for another.
Our reading of the guide is intentionally narrow: Good as a feel-check rather than a polished build manual. The value is seeing Gatling pressure in action, then comparing that play pattern with Desperado and rifle references already listed on the class page. Use that note as the filter before copying stats, skill order, cards, or gear priorities from the source.
Relevant tags for this page are Gunslinger, Rebellion, Gatling, PvP, PvE. If those tags do not match what you are building right now, start with another class or topic page before investing resources.
How to use this guide
Use this as a PvP reference for Gunslinger, but copy the decision logic before copying the exact numbers. ROOC builds can change quickly when server level, refine access, card supply, and guild PvP priorities move.
For this guide, pay special attention to damage timing, target selection, and stat efficiency. If your account is newer, under-geared, or mostly F2P, follow the cheaper stat, skill, and gear priorities first, then treat expensive upgrades as later optimizations.
Original guide by Dai K on YouTube. We link to the source and add our own summary and verdict; we do not reproduce the creator's content. Open the source ↗