Armor Piercing

Armor Piercing, or AP, bullets are specifically designed with a single purpose: to penetrate armor.

AP bullets usually have a sharp point, and are coated in copper. They are generally tipped with a solid metal, such as copper or steel, and have cores filled with tungsten carbide or hardened steel. In Fallout, AP bullets have the effect of lowering the target's damage resistance, while decreasing the overall damage that weapon does.

Fallout 3 doesn't have AP bullets, but has three armor penetrating weapons. These are the player created unarmed Deathclaw Gauntlet, the ranged Microwave Emitter, and the unique Man Opener. They are not the strongest weapons in the game, but they have the unique property of ignoring target armor, which make them as effective against an adversary in power armor as they would be against an unarmored raider.

Inconsistency over effectiveness
Due to a mistake in their design, AP bullets are actually vastly inferior to JHP or FMJ variants. This is best observed while fighting the assault rifle-toting gaurds in Vault 15 in Fallout 2. Both rifles are initially loaded with 5mm JHP, and deal about 22 points of damage in a mid-ranged burst against Combat Armor. However, the guards only carry 5mm AP to reload with. Subsequent bursts from the same distance often fail to deal any damage at all.

Even against targets with high damage resistance, the resistance reduction does not make up for the reduced damage. In addition, AP bullets do nothing to reduce the damage threshold of the target's armor, making the armor piercing aspect less powerful than intended.


 * This inconsistancy is not the case with AP Rockets or HN AP Needler Cartridges, which are both substantially better than their "normal" counterparts.


 * The latest release of the Fallout 2 Restoration Project includes an option to fix AP ammo modifiers, making them work as intended in Fallout 2. Fallout ' s inability to be modded prevents a fix, while Fallout Tactics' penetration stat functions perfectly.