Kill Shot Bravo Hack !!LINK!!
This is an online multiplayer sniper game design to give the real shooting experience, the battle in this game gives you an amazing feeling because you are saving innocent people all around the world from terrorism. In the game, you will get a location and a helicopter will drop you at that location and you have to go to the battlefield with your amazing guns and kill the enemies with your awesome shots, killing them and pass the mission will give you some amazing rewards like money that you can use to buy more weapons and military gears.
Kill Shot Bravo Hack
Assault missions are score-based. Aim for explosives as enemies are stationed close to them at the start. Blowing an explosive will kill multiple enemies at once. Get more points for doing headshots, multiple kills, long-distance kill shots, and V.I.P kills.
Breach missions require you to use a shotgun. They are easier to do but will require you to upgrade your weapon as a mission prerequisite. Look out for enemies with knives as they will rush to kill you. Eliminate them quick!
, ,v .ff V VHft-T1"TEE NATIONAL TRIBUNE: WASHINGTON D. CwnTHURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1892.-TWELVE PAGES.U,jiFIGHTING THEIJ OVER. - -What Our Veterans Have lo Say AboutTheir Old Camiuiisr.3.ON THE RESERVE.Wliat Happened to the Second Corps BurinsJuly ami August, 1SG4.WHEN tho Army o the Potomacsettled down to the sieeof Petersburg tho old Second Corps thatenrp- which had stood at Ucttysliurp liko a wall of fire against the assaultsof Pickett, Pettigrew and Lonpstreet was assigned the duty of acting as the reserve; and atthat word tho old veterans who once wore thotrefoil on their raps tho littlo red, whito orblue ladpc so like a clover leaf will call tomind the quick alarms, the miduijiht marches,tho extra fatiuuc duties and the desperates battles which became their portion while the reitof the army lav intrenched before the enemy.The Second Corps had well nish cxhaiiscd itsstrength in the opening charces f the Rr?Js'6aul' at Petersburg ou tho IGth. 17in aud IStuof June, ISM. white, lod by tho heroic Hancock, i' had already fought its way from the"Wilderness to Cold llarJor, whereDcitli Biul clmiser liKd 'jJountl the puim f iliot-e brave men;Oioomy hilt ami lowiy K!e:n held a Ircbel foe.But now that fighting seemed over for t'.ietime being and the lines of tho Umou armycircled partly around Petersburg lor au allSummer siege and AViuter leo. as it provedit found uo place among its follows at the front,but,inst ad. tho cuiiuus ptospect of laying offaud in the rear niaiked off for it.I well remember the sense of relief we felcas our column f the First Division (Bat low's)filed out of the woods where our position hadbeen, and tejok the high and open rad that lodto the Jerusalem Plank road. Wc felt like veterans whose wars wete over an J henceforth-wc would rest from blood-died. Tor a season, atleast, far from the din of musketry and thounceasing pop. pop. pop of the pickets, thatthrough the livelong day and night kept up aJTourth-of-July racket in dead earnest.And so wocongratnlated ourselves on thegood time that awaited us, pro' ably on thoBlackwaler. a new and pleasant district towardwhich we were marching; hut we stopped tocamp aud actually laid out company streets,aud lay down to sleep and pleasant dream-.Kow it was that Sergt Cash, or "Abe," as Icalled civ tcntmate, reveled iu sleep. He couldafford to take one good bleep now; for " weren'twe relieved V" And so it was that, instead ofgettiug his breakfast at the time tho rest did,lie didn't get any at -all; for just as 1 had eaten,miac and given him Kome water, au exceedingly mean-looking officer, a mounted Aid,brought orders to move atouce, as they usuallydid -when we were comfortably fixed. And sovauished that camp, aud before Abe could saygrace he saw the last of breakfast and was onthe march pgain.Yet we were going to the Blackwaler, so theysaid, aud the beaming Min of June shone ou acolumn of armed men with tranqu.I faces andou a dusty road winding through green fields!and piuu torcsl; far away to tiie rear.But presently it seemed to wind to the right,and then wc seemed lo "saiell a mice" wowere goiti:: to another attack aud we ou thereserve ;It was the struggle for the Weldon Eailroadou the 21st and M of June, which ejraut ultimately won, and thus dosed one line of conimuuicition to the enemy.The column had marched rapidly for severalbouisaud readied a point wueie the road weutthrough a pine thicket, when it moved veryslov.Iy. We badsomo cavalry in advaucc nuelpretty soon their carbines began to rattle,that "exciting, irregular filing which alwayspreceded a battle, the combat of ti.e skirmishers. Wo kept advancing, however, "twostepsaud a halt" stand awhile, sit down, then gittip and go ou. Weiuuded men now appeared,coming trom the front some borne on strete;hers to the rear, uhere the Surgeons weie iureadiness to bind up their wounds or to amputate limbs that were shattered.While we vt:e lookiug at them au ordercama to detail men to go out as flankers, and I,with others from my company, was detailedfor that duty. The enemy had brought abattery iuto action aud the shells began towhiz over our heads. As my name was calledI stepped forward to the middle of the road,yrliero the detail was falling in, aud was looking around for the rest of them when a shellcame like a flash of lightning and burst whoroI had been silting, killing four men outrightaud wounding three others, with some ofwhom I had been talking. Tlieu auother shellcame aud burst over us iu the road, so that wcwere hidden from each other by the smokowhich envelop -d us, but, strauge to say, nouewere injured by it. Wc had learned to carelittle for artillery fire or shells at long range,but tins, in a skirmish, was fearful. No battleeusued that day; we were simply "'feeliug thoenemy.Wc flankers went through the woods to theleft looking for the enemy ivith one eye andfor water with tho other, but were withdrawnbefore we found cither.In some elistriets in Virginia we conld obtaintr&ter by digging just below the soil about afoot. Ou the Peninsula, especially by thePaniunkey Hirer, the clayey substratum heldwater, and ou this occasion, with a gun ou oueshoulder, I carried a spade (which someone elsehad thrown away) -oil the other, iu hopes ofgettiug drink, for we were sufferiug fromthirst.Our division slowly returned tho way itcame. Some thirsty men were crowding arounda well, while oJlieera vainly shouted for themto leave before the enemy came, but still theylingered near the cncliautiug place till an officer ou horseback drove among them and at thepoint of his revolver persuaded them to obeycrdere. We did not go far on our way hack,or in a (short liiuo wo halted and, forming aline, built breastworks aud xverc joined by thejest of the corps. The next day we had abattle with the usual foe of the Second Corps,the rebels under the skillful Geu. A. P. Kill,aud were put to a. great disadvantage and lostover 1,000 prisemers 1,700, according to Humphrey's "Virginia Campaign and four guns.Gm. Hancock was away at the time on account of his wound troubling him, and wewere taken out to the thick woods near wherewe had been tho day before, where we couldliarelly see the end of a company, andmonkeyed around," as the boys used to say,till wc lost our bearings and were then attackedby the cucmy iu three columns.Wcu wo think of the many struggles ourmen had with unseen foes in the woods,and the disasters whicli often followed, it iseasy to account for the distrust we felt as woentered such places, and a certain ' backwarduess to go forward," and so it resulted herethat wheu the enemy flanked us on the left apanic ran along the line from left to right likothe " snaking " of a row of bricks, and thewhole Luo broke aud "skedaddled" to theicar.We had taken a position at last in tho woods,connecting with the left of the Irish brigade,and keeping close to the ground. Now,whether we had aline of skirmishers iu ourfront or not, is an item I never could find out,but the battle commenced, aneLJjuHclSs.came""itippiug" through the woods invisible shaftsof death fiom unseen hands. A friend (GilbertEvans; bad tcmiorary command of the nextcompany, aud during a lull came and told ustiiat oue of his men had just been killed.That made matters serious: tho first man killedthrows a gloom over the regiment, aud makesmen realize how slim tho chances are for allof living.The bullets now came faster, and our menbegan to fire, although no foemau could beKeen iu the hazv woods. I also essayed to fire,but as I pulled the trigger the cap oulysnapped, and as 1 turued to put on another, Ieaw tho line en the left giving way, and theIrish Brigade getting reaely to go, for they wererising from the ground. A bullet crushed alittle sapling in front of me, so I hurriedlyprimed my gun. aimed at the green space iuthe direction of the foe, fired, and fell back.Then 1 felt solitary enough. The only manto be seen was the elcad man ou the ground,with a handkerchief over his face; doubtless,there iu that loucsome spot his boucs areblea hing now, as many others are in the " OldVirginia lowlauds."1 remember how, in my flight, I bopped overxnauy fat haversarks which had been thrownaway, probably by now recruits or conscripts,of whom there were many now in the army,wid Kome of them sadly impaired tho " morale "of the rest. Upon reaching the road I met thetroops all in disorder, officers and men allkaslcuiiig to the point from -which we started,(and I did not stop to count them, but helped toswoll their numbers, catching sight of tho meniu gray up a wood road moving parallel to us.When we got to the open fields wo tookit easy.Some of us filled our canteens at a well, reformed the lino in tho breastworks, and waitedfor the rebels.Wo didn't have to wait long, for thoy massedin the woods 200 yards distance, mado twocharges from it, but were quickly and easilyrepulsed. Our batteries iu the breastwork hadachauco to "get in their work," and afterward shelled the woods as a " discourager"of intimacy.After that we had a peaceful time for morethan a mouth. Wo encamped right there bythe breastworks, aud stood at arms every morning before daylight to prevent surprises at thatcritical hour. Two or threo days after thofk'hting some of our men found two woundedrebs in tho woods, who were brought into ciunpaud kindly cared for. One was shot throughtho body and arm, and yet had survived. Hoconversed calmly with theboys when it seemedas though he should have been crazed or deadfrom his wounds and privations. Tho onlyattention they had received for their woundswas from the welcome rain, which, as usual,came down after a battle." All signs fail in dry weather," except cannonading, and wc found it so. How wc hadwatched tho skies aud tho rolling clouds forsome promise of a change, but none was giventill the cannon's deadly voice resounded overthe parched hills and valleys; then the heavensrelented, and how appropriate! When menaio arrayed to slay their brothers, the angelsmight weep as well as the sympathizing clouds.We picketed by turns in the heavy woods infront, -whore tho brazen face of war was beguiled by sylvan chat ins, and iu its shadydepths we escaped from the "monotony ofcamp life." On the picket-lino we listened tothe voices of the inneiceut quail, always talking of "Bab White, Bob White," as if we knewhim, and sometimes heard tho music of therebel bands, and wondered what we would doif attacked in tho night, for the woods weretangled and the path back to camp long andcircuitous. Wo had no j:ood rallying point, although there was a picket support where wecould not find it ourselves.But in camp the heat of Summer was wiring a southern sky. looked down upon thoUnion army as if in league with the waywardStates to make us miserable, and during theblistering month of July wesawthe green fads-from our sight aud the landscape turn to thebarren waste which a camp always made.2ow, however, the kind ministrations of theSanitary and Christian Commissions wero veryvaluable, for they supplied us with some vegetables, and even sun kraut, which supplemented the dry ratiems of the troops to somepurpose.Yet now it strikes me that my subjectshould be the "Adventures of au Army Corp-,"for our movements the rest of the seasonhelped to make history, and we were led fromone campaign to ano her.In the last week of July wc broke ramp andtried to break into l.tchmnml. . Our corpspasscel along the rear of tiie army to the light,and. muTi'hiiig nil nixht. crossed the Appomattox at niiduiht and the James Jiiver in thomorning ou pontoon bridges.Wu had been wo:idr5nt: all night where wewere gIng and what we wero matching for,but as we ii eared the James wc found our. Theheavy booming of our gunboat', reminded usthat it was a titm of war, and if we entertainedan idea that we wero only mi a reronnoissauce.that idea soon purled com patty with us. for orowo cios-j the bridge our ears were saluted withthe rumbling souuei oJ musketry on the otherside.By this time our column hc-d b?gun to strangle, as is often the case on a furceel march, forsome cannot keep up, and so the "coffee-coolers"appeared by the wayside, who chtorcel usbv saying, "Ah. boys! the Johnnies are waiting for you." "Don't hurry." " Plenty ofwork for us out there," etc Now, a "coffeecooler" was one who stopped to cook a cupof coffee by the way when there was no regular time to halt for that purpose, and iu thecourse of the moniin;: many did, includingmyself. Tho trouble was it gave those whowanted to shirk a chance to do so. However,our resimont.strasalctsand all, got tosether ingood shape, and were on the field iu time forthe duty assigned us. and bowed to the ironeompltmt-tits of the rsbel artillery, advancingover a fielel whereon were scattered the massivefragments ol the shells our gunboats hadthrown. -The First Brigade of our-diviioii had alreadycaptured bysturma rebel battery of iron piecesiu a small earthwork in the eelge of a woods,ami had el riven the eneniv from the position.and now as we advanced another battery wasshelling ns from an open fiedd, but was soondriven off by our own batteries, which had tinlimbered in tho grassy plain as wo went on.That was all the Gghtingdone on this occasion. We remained two or three days in tholocality Deep Bottom and then recrossed theriver at dark aud made another night marchback.Wo now saw tho hand of Grant. Our uiovoraeut had been a demonstration against Ii:ch-mond to alarm the foe on that side, whtlo thogrand attack was made in the center, for as wcncared. Petersburg at daylight we heard heavycannonading and found out that tho Uurnsidomine had been exploded, and had blown up arebel fort with its guns and garrison, besidesspreading dismay iu their lines.But hero Gram's strategy was defeated by anaggravating blunder of some ouo else. Thetroops detailed to lead tho assault hadbeen changed at the last moment. Consequently the division which did attack was halfan hour late, aud by that lime the enemy hadreformed their lines and repulsed every advance with much slaughter.What a disappointment it xnuEt have been tothe silent General! What preparations hadbeen mado to fight tho final battle of the war!How the batteries had been concentrated tobear on the position, with mortar-guns plantedand masked, and line after lino of the infantrywere massed iu rear of the point of attackready to ru3h through and drive tho rebelarmy to destruction.It was one of those Southern days of battle,and while tho sun was pouriugdowu all hisbeams of rosy light, yet the air was murkywith the sulphurous smoke of powder. Ourcorps also was arrayed iu front of the minowaiting for the order which never came, andhour after hour passed with only the skirmishers engaged, or a "few random guus which thofoe were sullenly firing," till the afternoon,aud then, as the idea of tho day snemed to bogiven up, wc were pul in motion and taken toa new camping place.Here we remained for a few weeks occupiedin the peaceful pursuits of drawing rations,drilling, aud doing fatigue duty, as occasion required, such as leveling a redoubt, which tooka large force with picks ami shoveU nearly allnight, aud other duties, till about the 13th ofAugust, when we were suddenly marched toDeep Bottom again, where our "Itescrve"Corps fought a heavy battle. This movementwas a campaign by itself, and it seemed asthough wo were about to strike for Richmond,when instead we recrosscd the river and Etruckfor the other cud of the army and tho WeldonBailroad, on the flank of tho rebel right. Thismado hard marching, aud wheu we got therewe were thoroughly jaded, but proceeded to destory the road, which brought ou the battle ofBeam's Station, where wo lo3t over 1,000 ofour men as ptisoners, aud 17 guus, having neverlost a gun before from our,divislou.rIt wasAfPniilhagain who did it, "ApplePie Hill" his men called him, who attacked uson the third day out, as our men predicted, forwe were having a picnic. We changed off inthe work. Hud while one part of the forco toroup tho track, made big fires of the ties, andbent tho rails in them, the other part wero ouguard, deployed in heavy skirmishing order,and moved leisurely through one cornfield afteranother as the working force ad vauced in theirpath of destruction.The com being ripe, we bad a feast of it.We had roast cars and " lob ecouse," which iscorn scraped off tho ear and stewed withchopped pork. Seasoned with pepper and saltit tasted like oyster soup, and whs the favoritedish of tho boys iu blue. Wo also had plaincorn