Aztalan | |
---|---|
Type | Armor set |
Classification | Light armor |
Manufacturer | Tehachapi (THP) |
Sex | Unisex |
Capacity | |
Inventory | 8,000 SP |
Weapon | S3, S1 |
Utility item | 2x S1 |
Magazine | 4 |
Grenade | 2 |
Environment protection | |
Temperature | -38 / 68 °C |
Pressurized | Yes |
Damage resistance | |
Physical | +20% |
Energy | +20% |
Distortion | +20% |
Thermal | +20% |
Biochemical | +20% |
Stun | +30% |
The Tehachapi Aztalan is a light armour set. Its line of personal body armor provides strategic protection of vital areas while keeping the bearer fast and mobile. It is a small production armour set produced by Tehachapi employing a mixture of plating and reinforced polymer weaves.[1]
This armour set was made famous in 2946, when featured in a Spectrum show, Shadow Siren, by the main character, Déraciné, making the company famous and a trending fad.[2]
In-game description
Fear no frontier while wearing the Aztalan armor. This mixture of armor plating and reinforced fabrics will keep you safe yet swift on your feet. Tehachapi's masterful design gives the armor a subtle yet unmistakable frontier style that also providing ample storage. Suitable for everything from sand dunes to bustling backstreets, the Aztalan is the ideal choice for your next adventure.
Armor components
Set name | Undersuit | Helmet | Core | Backpack | Arms | Legs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aztalan | Lamont Undersuit | Aztalan Helmet | Aztalan Core | Cataby Backpack | Aztalan Arms | Aztalan Legs |
Model
Special Variants
Aztalan "Gelena"
Image | Description |
---|---|
Dark/light grey colour with grey, brown/tan accents & brown/tan trimmings. Only available on the subscribers store. |
Aztalan "Tamarack"
Image | Description |
---|---|
Grey colour with orange, dark grey accents & tan trimmings. Only available on the subscribers store. |
Gallery
Trivia
- Aztalan is a State Park in Wisconsin, United States of America. It is an archeological site of the Mississippian culture.
- The word Aztalan is a derivative of Aztlán. The archeological site was first studied in 1836 by N. F. Hyer. He gave it this name because he had made the mistake of trusting the German dilettante Humboldt, who believed the Aztecs had settled the area. Humboldt had made many gaffes before, like convincing Andrés Manuel del Río in 1801 that he had not discovered a new element, when in fact he had discovered Vanadium.
References
- ↑ Ben Lesnick. "Subscriber flair reveal". Jump Point. Vol. 9 no. 5. pp.34. Retrieved 2021-05-28.
- ↑ Ben Lesnick. "Portfolio: Tehachapi". Jump Point. Vol. 9 no. 4. pp.31–33. Retrieved 2021-05-09.