SCOUT-class Mjolnir

From Halopedia, the Halo wiki

Template:Ratings

The Mark VI MJOLNIR Powered Assault Armor/S variant, otherwise known as the Scout Armor, is a type of United Nations Space Command body armor.

Introduction

Scout is a variant of the standard Mark VI MJOLNIR powered battle armor. The armor uses advanced materials to give it stealth properties. It is an armor permutation in Halo 3 multiplayer, and like all armor permutations, it has no effect on gameplay.

Development and History

The SCOUT and RECON projects were run as parallel projects intended to develop a single variant of the MJOLNIR Powered Assault Armor with stealth capabilities and no impact on endurance; however, the SCOUT variant relies heavily on advanced materials. It was tested at ONI's Ordnance Testing Facility B5D at Swanbourne, Perth, Australia.

Characteristics

Helmet Characteristics

It features a cap-like protrusion along its rim, a beak-like protrusion under the chin, and a thin, slit-shaped visor. Its general shape could be compared to a Dirt Bike helmet without a large stretch of imagination.

Shoulder Characteristics

It's shoulder pads are remarkably similar to the original Marine armor from Halo CE and the shoulder plates of the Brutes in Halo 2.

Chest Characteristics

The chest plate is similar to the EVA and CQB chest plates in that it is merely an attachment. It is an H shaped plate over the upper torso and a pair of articulated plates attached to its bottom.

Unlock



Gallery

Trivia

  • The official Halo 3 Strategy Guide incorrectly says that the shoulder pads are unlocked by gaining the Used Car Salesman achievement.
  • The Scout chest piece had a glitch, in that it would lock itself. Luckily, Bungie recently fixed the glitch in an auto-update.
  • The unknown attacker from the Red vs Blue: Reconstruction trailer wears a Scout Chest piece.
  • This armor is commonly utilized on Xbox Live by snipers, who belive the visors squinted design makes them less visible to their targets.

Template:MJOLNIR Variations

Sources