Nerf max force manta7/11/2023 ![]() Though its 2010 stint was short, this gun remains the most expensive Nerf gun to find still in the box. Unfortunately, the gun’s firing mechanism was prone to jamming and led Nerf to develop the auto-firing mechanisms of the subsequent N-Strike models. However, despite the obvious advantages to backyard shenanigans, the Longstrike and its sight were discontinued not long after it hit the shelves. It was a pretty complicated toy, complete with an in-box barrel extension and mounted sight for extra range, giving the gun the power to launch rubber nubs into unsuspecting faces up to 35 feet away. For an in-box example of this coveted Nerf sniper rifle, collectors shell out $600 or more. The most expensive nerf gun is the N-Strike Longstrike CS-6. ![]() The gun, complete with its tripod and ammo belt, clocks in at a hefty 7.7 pounds. In addition to being nearly the most expensive Nerf gun that money can buy, the N-Strike Vulcan is also the heaviest gun that Nerf ever made. It is now a rare collector’s item, fetching $520 in good condition. This gun debuted in 2008 and was a flash-in-the-pan success before being replaced by guns with fewer complex parts. The tripod also closes to allow the user to take the Vulcan EBF-25 into the thick of it, firing from the hip at 3-5 BPS (bullets per second) into your smug friends’ smug faces. Not many Nerf guns came complete with a war-ready tripod, much less a bolt-action primer that allowed you to load belts of ammo and auto-fire 25 darts at a time from behind cover. ![]() As a bonus, this drone is the only way that avid Nerf collectors can get their hands on the high-quality “Elite” darts, which are thin and black and (supposedly) ultra-accurate.Ĭontinuing the N-Strike series’ domination of this list’s most expensive Nerf guns, we have the N-Strike Vulcan EBF-25, a mounted machine gun that shows off its Nerf ammo belt as it pelts your friends. The Terrascout’s rarity is partly due to it being sold as a Toys R Us exclusive toy. The most expensive version of the Terrascout Drone also had an HD camera mounted to it that allowed you to do some serious recon. What would have been a military secret 30 years ago, today is a powerful toy that you can control by remote, activating a fully automatic firing mechanism that can shoot 35 darts at a time. The Terrascout Drone’s $315 price tag is due to its unique technology and how difficult it is to find in perfect condition now, even just 5 years after it was launched in 2017. But it still shoots foam darts at your unsuspecting targets, so we’re counting it. The Terrascout Recon RC Drone is not quite a “gun” so much as a mobile Nerf turret. Without the lucrative markets of other stores (especially Toys R Us, at the time), the CS-6 was almost destined for rarity from the outset. This gun was an exclusive sold only at Walmart, which is an interesting decision when you think about how toy stores drove the market for these Nerf guns. Owning a Whiteout Series Deploy CS-6 gun now costs around $300. The gun was retired from the shelves early back in 2010 and this has contributed to it becoming a collector’s item. However, the CS-6 does have a nifty strap, quick-reloading ammo clips that each contain six Nerf bullets, and a button that switches on a flashlight for added accuracy. There are no auto-firing, camera-targeting, remote-controlled mechanisms here. This gun is old school, going back to that running through the backyard, pumping the reloader behind cover, and popping out to blast your friends a bullet at a time fun that made Nerf popular to begin with. The second N-Strike Nerf gun on our list is the N-Strike Whiteout Series Deploy CS-6, a beefy pump-action rifle that looks like a multicolored kiddie version of Master Chief’s gun in Halo.
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