FAMAG

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FAMAG
FAMAG
TypeAssault rifle
Place of origin Yonderre
Service history
In service1962–present
Used bySee Users
WarsThe Deluge
Production history
DesignerMAG
Designed1959-1961
ManufacturerMAG
Produced1962-present
Specifications
Mass3.5 kg empty
Length940 mm with fixed or extended stock / 710 mm with stock folded
Barrel length418 mm

Cartridge7.5×42mm Yonderian
6.8x43mm
ActionGas-operated, rotating bolt
Rate of fire700 rounds/min
Muzzle velocity765 m/s
Effective firing range350 m
Feed system30- or 40-round detachable box magazines
SightsAperture rear sight on a sliding tangent with flip tritium night sight, forward hooded post, 470 mm sight radius

The FAMAG, short for Fusil d'Assaut de la Manufacture d'Armes de Gabion, literally "Assault Rifle of MAG", is a Yonderian assault rifle. Introduced in 1962, it is the primary service weapon of the Yonderian Defence Force and has been given as lethal aid to New Harren during the Final War of the Deluge. It is also the standard patrol carbine of the Custodes Yonderre.

The FAMAG was designed by MAG between 1959-1961 with a general layout and gas system based on the Corummese Type 56 assault rifle. The FAMAG is a select fire weapon with the fire selector mounted on the right side, traversing vertically between safe, fully automatic and semi automatic. The FAMAG fires the intermediate 7.5×42mm Yonderian cartridge, a shortened version of the 7.5x62mm Yonderian used by previous Yonderian rifles. The 7.5x42mm is very similar to the 7.62×39mm used by the Corummese type 56 but delivers a slightly higher muzzle velocity. The FAMAG feeds from 30 or 40 round magazines curved to account for the taper of the cartridge casings. The FAMAG was designed with an open three pronged flash supressor that doubles as a wire cutter which works by twisting the muzzle onto a strand of wire and firing a round.

The FAMAG has been continually modernized throughout its production with additions like threaded muzzles for taking suppressors, folding stocks, improved fire selector switches and rails for mounting optics, grips, bipods and lights. Following Levantine Union Defense Council standardization on the 6.8x43mm cartridge, MAG has begun producing the rifle in the new cartridge and also offers a conversion kit to convert existing FAMAGs to the new caliber. As of 2026, 7.5x42mm remains the primary caliber used in FAMAGs of the Yonderian Defence Force.

Design

Development history

Pre-adoption trials prototype named FA-X59 still chambered for Corummese ammunition and using Corummese slab-sided magazine

Designers at MAG received six Corummese Type 56 assault rifles in late 1958 and soon set about the process of reverse engineering the weapon. Exactly how MAG acquired the Corummese rifles is unknown, but it has been suggested by anonymous sources within MAG that Kiravian gun runners acted as middle men in the acquisition. The very first prototype, FA-X59, was chambered for the 7.62×39mm caliber used by the Corummese type 56 and was still fed from Corummese magazines. Temporary production of the Corummese cartridge was set up at MAG while the company's ballisticians developed the intermediate 7.5×42mm Yonderian cartridge. The new caliber would allow the recycling of much of the fabrication materiel already used for 7.5x62mm Yonderian. The new intermediate cartridge also had better ballistic properties than the Corummese caliber, owing to higher muzzle velocity and tighter tolerances in production.

In 1960, the Yonderian Defence Force announced a project to supplement the FdC-43 battle rifle by replacing it in the assault role with a new, lighter weapon. Foreign battle rifle designs like the Urcean SAR-40 and Burgoignesc FAL were initially considered because of their lighter nature and shorter overall length than that of the FdC-43, and a single written source from Army Procurement Command even suggested looking into acquiring the production rights to or wholesale importing of the Corummese Type 56 assault rifle. Yonderian designs submitted included the FS-58 by FS (an intermediate design using the unsuccesful 6.5x39mm cartridge) and FdC-57 by AMS. MAG submitted their prototype for what would eventually become the FAMAG, known then as FA-X60. The MAG bid was selected by Army Procurement Command for further funding and development continued until 1962 when it was accepted for service as the FAMAG, short for Fusil d'Assaut de la Manufacture d'Armes de Gabion, literally "Assault Rifle of MAG".

Design features

FAMAG in modern configuration with hand stop and close combat optic mounted

The biggest single improvement over the Type 56 assault rifle the FAMAG is based on, apart from the metallurgical quality of the receiver and the overall quality of the barrel, are the sights: unlike the Type 56, which has the rear sight mounted on top of the gas piston housing on top of the receiver, the FAMAG rear sight is mounted on the rear of the receiver cover, effectively doubling the sight radius.

The gas tube is dove tailed into the front trunnion, and is a single-diameter tube, unlike the Type 56 tube, which has a star-shaped cross-section to guide the piston while allowing gasses to vent behind it. The gas piston has a cog shaped ring on the stem, behind the piston head. The ring's diameter matches the tube diameter, and it acts as the guide within the gas tube, the notches on the ring allowing excess gasses to be vented behind the piston head/guide. This system reduces the number of parts, and simplifies manufacturing as well as assembly/disassembly.

Operational history

Yonderian Defence Force

Soldier of the YDF with FAMAG
DELTA operator with FAMAG

The FAMAG was originally introduced to supplement the heavier FdC-43 battle rifle, giving soldiers a handier weapon for close quater combat and assaults, similar to employment of submachine guns by combatants in the Second Great War. Squad composition as put down by the Yonderian General Staff in 1962 was thus one Mitrailleuse mle 55 machine gun, four FAMAG assault rifles and five FdC-43 battle rifles per infantry squad. In 1967 this was changed to one Mitrailleuse mle 55 machine gun, seven FAMAG assault rifles and two FdC-43 battle rifles, and by 1972 the FdC-43 had fallen entirely out of any and all future organizational planning in favour of the FAMAG, though FdC-43s were retained for reservists in case of war into the 1990s.

The FAMAG rifle has seen extensive use during the Final War of the Deluge in the hands of soldiers of the Yonderian Defence Force, the Royal and Confederate Army of New Harren and private military contractors like Intrepid Enterprises. The rifle's sturdy build and simple gas system allows the FAMAG to operate reliably even in extreme weather conditions with minimal maintenance.

Custodes Yonderre

SWAT teams of the Custodes Yonderre have used FAMAG rifles since the late 1960s as a heavier alternative to the 9mm SMPM-3L submachine gun. The use of FAMAGs was authorized with local readiness units of the Custodes Yonderre in 1986. Starting in 2012, over concerns of terrorist groups and increasingly dangerous gang activity, police cruisers of the Custodes Yonderre started carrying FAMAG rifles alongside the 9mm SMPM-4 submachine gun. The FAMAG is today considered the standard patrol carbine of the Custodes Yonderre.

Royal and Confederate Army

At the request of Commandant of the the Royal and Confederate Army of New Harren Guillaume d'Agostino, thousands of FAMAG rifles have been given as lethal aid to New Harren from Yonderre during the Final War of the Deluge. With Yonderian volunteers as instructors, the Royal and Confederate Army has received extensive training in the use and maintenance of FAMAG rifles and put them to use during the Final War of the Deluge.

Variants

  • FA-X59 - Earliest prototype, still chambered for Corummese 7.62x39mm ammunition and using Corummese slab-sided magazine
  • FA-X60 - Prototype adopted for further development by the Yonderian Defence Force in 1960
  • FAMAG - Production model introduced in 1962
  • MiMAG - Mitrailleuse de MAG, light machine gun/autorifle variant of the FAMAG with a longer and thicker barrel, integral bipod and 40-round magazines as standard, introduced in 1969

Users

FAMAG disassembled

Non-state users

Gallery

See also

List of equipment of the Yonderian Defence Force