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13[[quoteright:320:[[Film/VanHelsing https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/vhcrossbowcrop_2761.png]]]]
14[-[[caption-width-right:320: Some {{vampire hunter}}s put a lot [[WoodenStake on the stake]]. Others use [[MoreDakka more stakes]].]]-]
15
16->''"Now, this isn't really a problem, but something else I noticed is that in the world of ''Dungeon Siege'', bows fire more slowly and do more damage than ''cross''bows, which fire ''faster'', but do ''less'' damage. I honestly have to wonder if the programmers misread the design documents or something, since this is the ''exact opposite'' of reality."''
17-->-- ''WebVideo/RosssGameDungeon'' on ''VideoGame/DungeonSiege''
18
19Automatic Crossbows are crossbows that allow the user to shoot several times before having to reload, just like modern guns do.[[note]]Technically, most examples are ''semi''-automatic crossbows (one bolt per pull of the trigger), while a fully-automatic one would fire several bolts per trigger-squeeze.[[/note]] Many works of fiction are set in a time period when firearms are not available, and crossbows are the nearest equivalent. This is especially true in the fantasy genre, where FantasyGunControl is the default. However, crossbows take time to reload, which can be frustrating for people used to the rapid action of modern gunfights. And to those who are used to modern sporting crossbows, which are much faster to reload but also much shorter-ranged and less powerful than the typical medieval version. Sometimes in a work, the urge to use some GunsAndGunplayTropes is just too powerful. So the obvious solution to this dilemma is to give crossbows the ability to shoot an entire magazine of ammunition without having to reload. Not only do they add [[RuleOfCool instant awesome]], but they allow having MoreDakka.
20
21In real life, it is [[SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome much more difficult]] to create such a weapon than many works assume. Automatic firearms work by using excess energy from the detonation of the propellant to reload and recock the weapon. In a bow powered by elasticity, there is no such simple source of excess energy. This is no fun, as you still want said automatic weapon. There are several ways this might be accomplished. The most realistic options use various types of hand-powered mechanical device to produce repeating bows that are similar to RealLife [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repeating_crossbow historical examples]] but dialed up to the max. Others might use SchizoTech or magic to accomplish this purposes. If it is the latter, the use of magically justified BottomlessMagazines might make the Automatic Crossbow even more powerful.
22
23Subtrope of BowsAndErrors and FantasticFirearms. Compare with {{Multishot}} when one gets similar results with a regular bow.
24----
25!!Examples:
26
27[[foldercontrol]]
28
29[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
30* A character in ''Anime/AfroSamurai'' has one of these. It also comes with an underslung GrenadeLauncher. And the arrows are poisoned.
31* In ''{{Manga/Berserk}}'', Guts' primary ranged weapon is a wrist-mounted repeating crossbow operated by turning a crank, which he primarily uses against humans. His ''other'' ranged weapon is a [[ArmCannon steampunk gunpowder cannon built into the replacement for his left arm]], which he uses to turn the tide against demons. Later in the series, Rickert invents a machinegun-sized repeating crossbow to protect his refugee group against monsters.
32* In ''Creature Girls: A Hands-On Field Journal in Another World'', Daisuke invents a mechanical crossbow-based machine gun/gatling gun for the SpiderPeople, because he literally can't invent gunpowder. Certain technologies, namely gunpowder, electricity, and the internal combustion engine, are banned by societal convention in the fantasy world he ended up in, due to monsters irrationally attacking any settlement that develops them.
33* Pajiramon of ''Anime/DigimonTamers'' wields one. When one arrow is fired, the next immediately slides into place. It's only seen to hold three, but anytime it's offscreen for an instant, it's fully reloaded when we see it again.
34* In ''Manga/FistOfTheNorthStar'' the apocalypse seems to have wiped out all the bullets but few of the guns, so the guns have naturally been retooled to shoot pointed
35* The ''[[RPGEpisode Knight Gundam]]''/''[[Anime/SDGundamForce Lacroa]]'' version of [[Anime/MobileSuitGundamWing Gundam]] [[MoreDakka Heavyarms]] wields a bizarre weapons that's a combination of his traditional [[GatlingGood Gat']] & a crossbow.
36* Favaro's crossbow in ''Anime/RageOfBahamutGenesis'' has multiple arrows loaded in it.
37* A character in ''Literature/VampireHunterD: Bloodlust'' fires quarrels at a rate of roughly seven billion per second out of a ''hand-loaded'' crossbow. No explanation is offered as to how, although it looks like he's pulling a [[Literature/{{Discworld}} Detritus]] -- loading a bundle of them and letting them [[RainOfArrows diffuse mid-flight]].
38** Most of that family were not normal humans. In the book, they're even worse, especially what they do with their sister.
39* Hild from ''Manga/VinlandSaga'' is a former teenage inventor/[[TheEngineer engineer]] who became an apprentice to a hunter after her village and family were wiped out by a viking raid. After some experience with the heavy crossbow her teacher uses and learning both the pros and cons of it, she has a blacksmith make her a highly customized bow which needs far less strength for drawing back the string and can reload very rapidly.
40[[/folder]]
41
42[[folder:Comic Books]]
43* In ''ComicBook/CerebusTheAardvark'', The Roach (in his Punisherroach identity) wields two "pearl-handled semi-automatic" belt-fed crossbows that shoot explosive-tipped bolts and have a firing rate similar to a machine gun.
44* In the Argentine comic ''ComicBook/GilgameshTheImmortal'', a story is set after a nuclear war has returned mankind to the technological level of the Middle Ages. A man, using old and worn construction plans, is building a steam engine, but a priest considers this an abomination and a heresy. The priest leads a mob that seeks to destroy the machine, but the builder casually says that over the years he has acquired some practice, and shows them his latest invention: a crossbow equipped with a rotating drum with 12 arrows. And the mob decides to leave him alone.
45* In one issue of ''ComicBook/TheMask'', The Mask pulled out a repeating crossbow with an ammo belt like a machine gun.
46* In ''ComicBook/ScareTacticsDCComics'', members of the vampire hunting Graveyard Shift tote multi-shot, stake firing crossbows.
47* Amy in ''ComicBook/SonicTheComic'' has one of these as her main weapon that she built herself.
48* In ''ComicBook/{{Valerian}}'', one book ''Land with no Stars'' is set on a primitive alien world where warriors use crossbows as part of their arsenal, including exotic arm-mounted versions that can rapid-fire dragonflies or scorpions.
49[[/folder]]
50
51[[folder:Fan Works]]
52* During ''Fanfic/ManehattansLoneGuardian'', Glintlock makes extensive use of repeating crossbows throughout his career, which are noted to be highly illegal in the setting. The one he utilizes against Leviathan in their fight is enchanted to the gills, granting it [[BottomlessMagazines a bottomless magazine]] and metal-piercing bolts.
53[[/folder]]
54
55[[folder:Film - Animated]]
56* In ''[[WesternAnimation/{{Nine}} 9]]'', 5's weapon of choice is a crossbow made of a clock key and a spring. He uses it to [[spoiler:crack the Seamstresses eye, which is a Crowning Moment of Awesome for a previously timid character.]]
57* In the original ''WesternAnimation/HeavyMetal'' movie, the land where the Tarna segment was set did have guns. But automatic bolt-shooters were in exclusive use by those mounted on giant featherless birds. Well, giant featherless birds that also didn't exist in the medieval age.
58* ''WesternAnimation/{{Shrek 2}}'' features crossbows which can be loaded with multiple arrows and fired one by one in a manner similar to a revolver and held like a Tommy Gun. Probably done partly because of RuleOfCool and mostly because the shooting would be very slow and less dramatic if they had to keep stopping to reload. They prove wildly inaccurate.
59[[/folder]]
60
61[[folder:Film - Live Action]]
62* ''Film/{{Daybreakers}}''. Pump-action crossbows (with flick-out bow section) are used by the humans against the vampire military.
63* In ''Film/{{DEBS}}'' Amy keeps a crossbow with a large magazine in her room.
64* In ''Film/{{Gladiator}}'', when Maximus and his fellow gladiators are fighting the re-enactment of the Battle of Zama, one of the enemy fighters is shown using a repeating crossbow.
65* Gretel from ''Film/HanselAndGretelWitchHunters'' carries an over-and-under version of this, which uses its own recoil to cock itself. It can also rotate to shoot bolts in opposite directions. Also the stirrup, which would normally be used to cock the weapon manually, can be pulled out revealing a large machete for melee combat.
66* Ranulf's handy piece of villain-slaying hardware in 1980's camp sword and sorcery classic, ''Film/HawkTheSlayer''. Unfortunately close-up shots of the crossbow in action make the StopTrick photography rather obvious.
67* ''Film/JonahHex2010'': Jonah uses [[GunsAkimbo a pair of]] magazine-fed pistol crossbows that fire [[AbnormalAmmo lighted sticks of dynamite.]]
68* Captain Navarre (played by Rutger Hauer) in the movie ''Film/{{Ladyhawke}}'' has a double crossbow as one of his two signature weapons.
69* In the movie adaptation of ''Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheTwoTowers'', [[EliteMooks Uruk-hai]] marksmen use quick-reloading, lever-action crossbows during the siege of Helm's Deep. It's a detail that doesn't really come up in the film itself, but the design team at Weta Workshop included it because [[RuleOfCool it's cool]] and establishes the advanced technology used by Saruman's forces.
70* A historically accurate model is seen in use by Sun Quan's army in ''Film/RedCliff''.
71* In ''Film/SinCityADameToKillFor'', Nancy uses one in the "Nancy's Last Dance" story when she and Marv attack Senator Roark's home.
72* In ''Franchise/StarWars Episode VI: Film/ReturnOfTheJedi'', Chewbacca fires his bowcaster twice in a second without reloading at a fleeing scout trooper. EU materials such as ''The Essential Guide to Weapons and Technology'' explain that Chewie's in particular has been modified with an automatic re-cocking system, rendering it semiautomatic.
73* The vampire soldiers use three-stringed crossbows in ''Film/UnderworldRiseOfTheLycans''. Sensible, since the Lycans typically show up in numbers and might be able to shrug off a single bolt.
74* In ''Film/VanHelsing'', its titular hero is given a [[MoreDakka pressurized gas-operated, drum magazine-fed, fully automatic crossbow]] (pictured above) upon his return to the Vatican after the opening fight with Mr Hyde. The Knights of The Holy Order (a multi-faith AncientOrderOfProtectors that resides beneath the Vatican and protects mankind from evil) gives it to him (among other fantastical weapons and gadgets) to help him in his fight against Dracula and his minions. Sadly though, this weapon is only used [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bS9N8dEdZCQ in one scene out of the entire film]] before he switches to regular firearms. Given how [[MoreDakka many bolts]] he fired in that scene he probably ran out of ammo.
75[[/folder]]
76
77[[folder:Literature]]
78* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' novels use this quite a bit.
79** ''Literature/TheTruth'' and ''Literature/TheFifthElephant'' even feature a small spring-powered crossbow that's been so heavily modified that it's a gun in everything but the most technical sense.
80** There's also Sergeant Detritus's "Piecemaker," a giant siege weapon that originally fired six-foot-long iron arrows, which he converted into the [[{{BFG}} biggest handheld weapon on the Disc]] and uses to fire ''bundles'' of arrows. Although it and the not-gun are described, most emphatically, as being ''slow'' to reload.
81*** The issue with the Piecemaker is that it doesn't ''need'' to be fired more than once. Or even ever. In its latest incarnation/modification it's practically the equivalent of waving a rocket-launcher in somebody's face, in proportion to the technology level of the Disc.
82*** The Piecemaker is exemplary of Vimes' [[WeaponForIntimidation philosophy on weapon use]], as ''no one'' would dare antagonise Detritus while he has the thing ready to go (not that many would want to anyway, him being a troll). Vimes even mentions that he got holed-up criminals to surrender on multiple occasions simply by ordering one of the other Watch members to fetch Detritus. Thus far, it's only been used to destroy non-living targets, like buildings. But it's not strictly automatic, less because of reload time than that it uses ''all'' of its ammo in one shot.
83*** The Piecemaker has actually been fired. It applies so much force that the arrows instantly shatter. The target is then hit with a spray of fast-moving wood and metal chips of what used to be arrows. It has the same effect as a shotgun, dialed up to 11. Often being used to vaporize pesky obstacles that block their path.
84** Automatic or multi-shot crossbows are alluded in at least ''Literature/MenAtArms'' and ''Literature/TheLastContinent''. ''The Last Continent'' even used a crossbow to parody ''Film/ArmyOfDarkness''' famous ThisIsMyBoomstick scene.
85** Crossbows in ''Literature/{{Night Watch|Discworld}}'' carry a magazine of several bolts, but the string still has to be pulled back.
86** Lampshaded a bit in the end of ''Literature/GuardsGuards''. The protagonists storm the palace to catch the villain, and when the gate is locked, Captain Vimes, drunk on authority and briefly forgetting he's only ''acting'' like Dirty Harry, orders Sergeant Colon to "[[ShootOutTheLock shoot it open!]]" Colon is not sure how he's supposed to accomplish that with a bow and arrow.
87** In ''Literature/GoingPostal'', Moist, on several occasions, finds himself staring down the barrel of Miss Dearheart's... automatic crossbow, taking the place of the shotgun that a shopkeeper would normally have.
88** ''Literature/{{Jingo}}'' contains probably the only explicit reference to a weapon being truly automatic (or called such at least), but rather than a crossbow, it's a "throwing star hurler." Apparently it fires the little blades fast enough to reliably decapitate at 20 paces. The book also introduces the "Great Leveller," apparently an automatic ballista, and the "Viper Mk 3," which is not elaborated upon besides the tag line "kills people but leaves buildings standing."
89* In Creator/DavidGemmell's ''Literature/{{Drenai}}'' novels, the anti-heroic assassin Waylander the Slayer used a weapon normally referred to as a "double crossbow" -- effectively two small crossbows stuck one on top of the other, allowing two shots without reloading. The second shot often takes people by surprise, which is handy because he's a mediocre swordsman.
90* ''Literature/DungeonCrawlerCarl'': A magical crossbow was awarded to Hekla early in the crawl, and forms the basis of her party, "[[AmazonBrigade Brynhild's Daughters]]". It comes with just one bolt, but that bolt can be fired [[BottomlessMagazines unlimited times]], and the more women join her party, the faster and stronger it gets, until it's almost a continuous stream of bolts. [[spoiler:Unfortunately, the Daughters [[CripplingOverspecialization relied too heavily on it]], and when Hekla is killed and the crossbow looted, the party falls apart.]]
91* Downplayed in the ''Literature/KaneSeries'', Kane's favoured crossbow is a bit more advanced for its time due to Kane's eons of scientific/engineering study. However it's cocking mechanism is only quick because Kane's superhuman strength lets him crank it faster than normal and he still needs to place a new bolt each time its used.
92* In Eric Cox's ''The Relic Guild'' series - Namji, an Aelfir noblewoman and allied magic-user to the Relic Guild, owns a stolen Aelfir pistol crossbow. This item is a master-crafted, {{Magitek}} weapon that uses power stones. While there's charge in the stones, the weapons will automatically reload and cock after each trigger pull. The weapon carries a magazine of pencil-sized crossbolts that are all enchanted with a single-use offensive spell cast by Namji. In a world where {{Magitek}} guns are commonplace, her crossbow gives her firepower that often outclasses enemy firearms.
93* In ''Literature/RomanceOfTheThreeKingdoms'', Zhuge Liang is credited with inventing these, although they aren't used until after his death because of problems of implementation.
94* The introduction of this type of crossbow gives Mat a serious advantage in ''Literature/TheWheelOfTime'' series. They are used realistically, noting how they lack the range, accuracy, and power of longbows and traditional crossbows, but make up for it through sheer numbers. It also points out that anyone can use them with minimal training, making them ideal for irregular forces.
95[[/folder]]
96
97[[folder:LiveActionTV]]
98* ''Series/DeadliestWarrior'' demonstrated the concept during the show pitting Sun-Tzu against Vlad the Impaler. It worked better than they expected.
99* ''Series/IntoTheBadlands'': Baron Chau's forces have a few of these; including both a three-bolt repeating crossbow used by a sniper and a large automated crossbow launcher - although the latter is a truck-mounted and crew-serviced weapon rather than something used by an individual soldier.
100* The Series/MythBusters actually made one. It tended to jam often, but it worked. A large problem with the jamming turned out to be just how it was fired. With the right cranking technique, it worked fairly well.
101* When ''Series/ScrapheapChallenge'' did an episode on repeater bows, they showed a full-size but down-powered model of an original Chinese design dating to 200 AD. It essentially had an ammo hopper on top which was gravity-fed, and a wheel on the side that pulled the string back once with each rotation. It could fire pretty much as fast as you could turn the wheel, getting through maybe 40 shots per minute.
102* This crossbow was one of the weapons improved upon on the Military Channel show ''Weapon Masters''. Chad made a pneumatic steel-framed crossbow that was deadly accurate and powerful at all ranges tested, and could quickly reload itself in seconds from a top-mounted magazine.
103* Adam Hart-Davies, eccentric presenter of the 2000 British history reconstruction show ''What The Romans Did For Us?'', reconstructed a Roman automatic crossbow design. It fired repeatedly, quickly, penetrated an impressive assortment of materials, and didn't jam or fail once.
104[[/folder]]
105
106[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
107* In D20 rpg ''Dark Legacies'', there are standard automatic crossbows out of Dungeons and Dragons, but also there are even more advanced assault crossbows, which are automatic crossbows with an ammo belt to create a constant rate of fire. And a certain class can further mount these assault crossbows on a steam-powered armour and then improve the crossbow with things such as flywheels, high-tension strings and etc. Note that in most fantasy worlds, these assault crossbows would be the highest level of technology. But in ''Dark Legacies'', it's set in our world in the post-apocalypse, demon-haunted far future, so the assault crossbows and other tech is a big step down.
108* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons''
109** The repeating crossbow, which can fire 5 bolts before needing a reload. The next shot is readied by pulling a lever.
110** A spoof article in ''Magazine/{{Dragon}}'', "Gangsters of the Underdark", featured an automatic crossbow powered by a handcrank, known as the Torque-Operated Mauling Machine, or [[FunWithAcronyms T.O.M.M.Y.]]
111** In fifth edition the "loading" property means that a crossbow can "only" be fired every 6 seconds, while the character is still freely moving and potentially taking other actions as well. The Crossbow Expert feat {{exaggerate|dTrope}}s it, allowing a character to ignore the "loading" trait. As a result a high level fighter could loose a total of ''9'' bolts in that same 6 second span. Rangers can do even better with their ability to attack every enemy within 10 ft of a point, so the only limit to how many bolts they can theoretically fire off in a turn is how many enemies are packed into the space (and ammo, of course)
112** In [[http://keith-baker.com/crossbows/ this]] article on [[WordOfGod Keith Baker's]] website, he proposes that in the ''TabletopGame/{{Eberron}}'' setting, which [[DungeonPunk uses magic to recreate many technological advances]], the D&D crossbow's superior reload speed compared to medieval models[[note]]a ''Dungeons and Dragons'' crossbow can fire about five times faster than a real-world one[[/note]] isn't just [[GameplayAndStorySegregation mechanical convenience]] to allow crossbows to be consistently useful on a D&D combat time scale, but could represent an integrated quiver of bolts, allowing it to fire faster than the standard but still taking enough time to reload that it's noticeably longer than a bow and arrow.
113** According to the ''Magazine/{{Dragon}}'' ''TabletopGame/{{Mystara}}'' series ''Voyages of the Princess Ark'', in Cimmeron County a dwarven blacksmith named Smithy and a halfling jeweller named Westron developed a repeating ''pistol'' crossbow, with an intricate mechanism that let it hold six darts, giving the FantasyCounterpartCulture Wild West a six-shooter without abandoning FantasyGunControl. (Later resources regarding the area said Smithy and Westron had eventually invented an actual pistol.)
114** Artificers in the fifth edition - originating from the aforementioned Eberron setting and ported into the base game in the 2020 sourcebook "Tasha's Cauldron of Everything" - can turn any base crossbow into this with the Repeating Shot infusion (a weapon with this infusion ignores the loading property and creates its own ammunition). Note that it doesn't have to be the artificer who uses that crossbow. And it doesn't have to be a crossbow if the DM allows guns...
115* The dwarves in the Swedish RPG ''TabletopGame/{{Eon}}'' invented the Krell-Spaz, a semi-automatic, pump-action crossbow, as well as its derivatives, the Krell-Hon, the Krell-Hon-Spaz, and the Krell-Khan-Hon-Spaz, the last of which is sadly not a viable option in regular combat as it's actually a ''siege weapon'' weighing in at almost 130 lbs.
116* These are commonly used by the Haslanti League and the Mountain Folk in ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}''. The Mountain Folk have a version that can fire ''crystalline bolts'' with such speed that it's basically an assault rifle. For bonus points, it can fire [[FlechetteStorm flechette rounds]].
117* ''TabletopGame/{{GURPS}}''
118** ''GURPS Martial Arts'' has a repeating crossbow that gets ten shots before reloading, but doesn't fire any faster than a normal crossbow.
119** The ''Dungeon Fantasy'' setting has a spring-loaded artifact that works almost exactly like an SMG.
120** The ''TabletopGame/DiscworldRoleplayingGame'' also has a repeating crossbow that is unreliable but still popular in the Brown Islands, if only for the [[DramaticGunCock impressive noise it makes in use]].
121* Steamlogic's ''TabletopGame/MechanicalDream'' has repeating crossbows. The most basic versions can store 3 bolts while the best quality ones can hold 12. Then there's the Arrow Rotary, this is a drum-fed automatic crossbow that can hold 100 arrows and will continuously shoot so long as the trigger is pressed.
122* ''[[TabletopGame/{{Munchkin}} Munchkin Fu]]'' has a repeating crossbow. Called--what else would ''Munchkin'' call it--the Repeating Crossbow Crossbow Crossbow.
123* The ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'' gunslinger archetype, the Bolt Ace, is used for [[FantasyGunControl settings where the early firearms of Golarion are not commonplace.]] It allows the normally slow-to-reload crossbows to act as [[BottomlessMagazines firearms from an action movie.]] One class ability, ''Inexplicable Reload,'' [[LampshadeHanging acknowledges the absurdity]] of a crossbow reloading as quickly as it does -- as many as [[MoreDakka six shots or more in six seconds]] for a sufficiently advanced character.
124* Dark Elves in ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}'' use repeating crossbows as their standard ranged weapon. On the tabletop, their attacks are only Strength 3 to the regular crossbow's Strength 4, but they roll twice for two attacks instead of the one of the regular crossbow. On top of that, both the Dark Elves and the High Elves have repeating Bolt Throwers (ballistae) as their primary war machines; the multi-shot variants trade power and range for rate of fire, compared to regular ballistae.
125* ''TabletopGame/WarhammerFantasyRoleplay'' second edition has repeater crossbows used by both the Dark Elves and some particularly rich and eccentric Imperials. They deal on average about 4 damage to a regular crossbow's 6[[note]]Damage is d10 + the weapon's damaging rating, minus the target's Toughness Bonus and Armour Points. The vast majority of entities in the game average 3-4 TB and 0-1 AP (so about a 3.5 point reduction), and the two crossbows have damage ratings of 2 and 4 respectively. With an average d10 roll of 5.5, that's (5.5 - 3.5 + 2) for the repeater and (5.5 - 3.5 + 4) for the regular.[[/note]] and only have a range of 30 yards against man-sized targets, half of a regular crossbow's. However the repeater's magazine can hold 10 shots and takes 20 seconds to reload once exhausted, the same time as it takes to load a single bolt into a regular crossbow, so it averages about eight bolts per minute to the regular crossbow's two (as it takes five seconds for a character aim and loose a single bolt with either version).
126* In the ''Rogue Trader'' era of ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'', the shuriken catapult actually used a crossbow design for its body and the gravity impellers on it was the bow.
127[[/folder]]
128
129[[folder:Video Games]]
130* ''VideoGame/AgeOfEmpires'':
131** ''VideoGame/AgeOfEmpiresII'': The Chinese use Chu-Ko-Nus as their special unit. Despite having shorter range, it could fire several bolts at once.
132** ''VideoGame/AgeOfEmpiresIII'' has them too. Again, they're weaker than European crossbows, but they fire three times in rapid succession, they're cheap, and when you build them, you also get melee units to protect them. Even a small group of Chu-Ko-Nus is more than capable of MoreDakka, spraying the enemy with a constant hail of AnnoyingArrows.
133* ''VideoGame/{{Albion}}'' tells the story of an Earth astronaut who crash lands on an alien planet that's part alien jungle and part fantasy land. The local civilization hasn't developed guns, but later in the game repeating Automatic Crossbows (referred to as bolt guns) become available as weapons.
134* ''VideoGame/BaldursGate'': Most crossbows hit hard but have a low rate of fire. Coupled with the relative scarcity of their ammunition [[note]]every bandit or kobold has a full quiver of arrows, but bolts must generally be bought in shops[[/note]] this makes them inferior to handbows. Not so with "The Army Scythe", a magical crossbow that fires faster than most handbows and has according to the FlavorText been used to carve out a small kingdom in the past. The only drawback is that you go though bolts even faster than before.
135* ''VideoGame/BloonsTowerDefense6'': The third path of the Dart Monkey uses a crossbow without a quiver to pull arrows from, which becomes especially apparent with the Crossbow Master upgrade, which shoots out bolts at machine gun speeds. [[RuleOfCool Doesn't stop it from being awesome, however.]]
136* ''VideoGame/{{Brigandine}}'': Emperor Zemeckis of Esgares Empire wields a big crossbow called 'Tempest Bow', where he can call out lightning to enhance its bolts. In the vanilla game, he can shoot while moving, but in ''Grand Edition'', [[{{Nerf}} he cannot move and shoot.]]
137%%* ''VideoGame/CastlevaniaCurseOfDarkness'': The Orc monsters have these.
138* ''VideoGame/{{Civilization}}'':
139** ''IV'' has the Chinese Cho-Ku-Nu specialty unit. While not stronger then a normal crossbow, it has the added advantage of causing collateral damage to a stack of units.
140** They return in ''V''. Here, the Cho-Ku-Nu is actually weaker than the normal crossbow but can fire two times per turn.
141* ''VideoGame/ConquerorsBlade'' features two units (Rattan Marksmen and Rattan Rangers) that use ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repeating_crossbow chu ko nu]]'' repeating crossbows.
142* In the 1980s, light-gun shooter ''Crossbow'' an arcade game from Exidy had you protect a hapless group of adventurers from incoming monsters with a rapid-fire crossbow.
143* ''VideoGame/DaemonSummoner'' grants you an automatic crossbow as your first ranged weapon, capable of firing multiple bolts without reloading. It works surprisingly well even against the last boss, a BigRedDevil akin to Satan.
144* The Avelyn in ''VideoGame/DarkSouls'' fires three crossbow bolts in rapid succession, and is reloaded all at once. Unlike many other depictions of automatic crossbows, the Avelyn has three separate bowstrings instead of a single string with a magazine of bolts, but how exactly it is loaded is unclear.
145** The Repeater Crossbow created by Transposing [[spoiler: Slave Knight Gael]]'s soul in ''VideoGame/DarkSoulsIII'' is a drum-fed crossbow.
146* One of the weapons that the protagonist in ''VideoGame/DarkWatch'' can use is a crossbow that can hold several bolts in a clip. Also, each bolt is tipped with explosives - even if Jericho misses, he could still kill the target.
147* In ''VideoGame/DawnOfWar II: Retribution's'' Imperial Guard campaign, one possible upgrade for Inquisitor Adrastia is a hand crossbow that can fire [[TrickArrow explosive-tipped, armor-piercing quarrels]] either singly or in [[RainOfArrows spreads]].
148* ''VideoGame/DeadCells'' has several examples. The handheld Repeating Crossbow and Ice Crossbow are both two-handed weapons where one button while fire bolts as long as it's held down. The Double Crossbow-Matic and Heavy Turret are deployable versions that fire autonomously. The Great War Owl is a side case in that it fires identically to the Repeating Crossbow but doesn't specifically represent itself as such.
149* ''Dead Target'' from VNG Studio has a modernized/futurized crossbow where besides self-cocking, it houses an underside cylindrical magazine so you can shoot 10 times with the basic model before needing to swap out the magazine.
150* ''VideoGame/DeceiveInc'': Madame Xiu's weapon of choice is a crossbow with a revolving chamber.
151* ''VideoGame/DeusEx'' has miniature automatic crossbows that are loaded with box-shaped magazines of darts, and strapped to the back of the wrist.
152* In ''VideoGame/DiabloIII'', the Demon Hunter class can {{Dual Wield|ing}} single shot hand crossbows like a pair of semi-auto pistols without ever apparently reloading. The Rapid Fire skill lets them fire like fully automatic machine guns, even from an old-fashioned bow and arrow.
153* In ''VideoGame/{{Dishonored}}'', you can purchase a fast reloading device, which takes only a fraction of a second to reload your crossbow. (However, even without this device, it still takes only about a second and a half to reload it; and you can reload one-handed.)
154* In the ''Franchise/DragonAge'' universe, there currently exists exactly ''one'' repeating crossbow -- namely, Varric's [[ICallItVera Bianca]], first seen in ''VideoGame/DragonAgeII''. It is unique because it is actually a product of two genius engineers who worked on it at different times, and because Varric had to kill one of them later, while publicly giving him full credit for its creation to protect the other one's ([[spoiler:his OldFlame after whom the crossbow is named]]) identity from the underworld powers [[NoManShouldHaveThisPower that really want to obtain the secret of its manufacture]]. Officially its creation was a fluke that couldn't be reproduced; in reality, they just don't want to. [[note]] The main reason it's being suppressed is that it's actually quite ''simple'' to reproduce if you know how it works, so any advantage it gave would be immediately countered when everyone else builds them too; meanwhile, the already violent world would suddenly be filled with automatic weapons that any random idiot can pick up and use. The creators concluded this would achieve nothing but higher body counts.[[/note]]
155* In ''VideoGame/DragonsCrown'', the common Crossbow weapon your characters could pick has a firing rate as fast as the player's trigger finger. There's also the semi-rare Cranequin crossbow, which has a slightly slower rate of fire but comes with a SpreadShot.
156* In ''VideoGame/DragonNest'', the Archer's crossbow acts for all intents and purposes like a three-round burst submachine gun.
157* ''VideoGame/DragonSaga'' implements this trope in an odd way. The crossbows of the Ranger classes fire ''slower'' than the huge bows used by their Hunter counterparts but deal more damage. They have the same firing rate in shared skills but discard the crossbow in their class-specific skills and switch to a ridiculous array of firearms and explosives.
158* ''VideoGame/DungeonDefenders'' has several examples, most of which can be upgraded to fire even faster.
159* ''VideoGame/DungeonFighterOnline'' features the Gunner class, who can use this type of weapon. Like all the other gun types, [[GunsAkimbo he holds one in each hand]].
160* In ''VideoGame/DungeonSiege: Throne of Agony'', crossbows are all automatic, and only slightly slower than regular bows. They are apparently fired by yarding on a firing crank.
161* ''VideoGame/DungeonsAndDragonsOnline'' has a repeating crossbow, like the tabletop version, but it only fires three shots between reloads.
162** Artificers in the game have access to a power called "Endless Fusillade". For 18 seconds, any crossbow you wield will fire repeatedly without stopping for a reload. (Especially useful if you're using the extra-powerful Great Crossbow, which is normally extra slow.)
163* ''VideoGame/DwarfFortress'' [[{{nerf}} used to]] have bows and crossbows that fired absurdly fast; a dwarf who really leveled up the relevant skill could fire off seven or eight bolts before the first one hit. This was extremely CoolButInefficient, as ranged weapons were also somewhat overpowered at the time and the odds were good that the first arrow or bolt had scored a OneHitKill, so the remainder were wasted. The problem has since been fixed by not allowing units to lose a second shot until the first has landed.
164** All that being said, however, actual rates of fire are slightly difficult to determine, as VideoGame/DwarfFortress is a rather extreme example of VideoGameTime.
165* Maybe with a little nod to the Chinese chu-ko-nu in the RealLife section below, ''VideoGame/DynastyWarriors 7'' players have access to highly-accurate ballistas in some missions. Its {{gatling good}}ness and [[ImprobableAimingSkills never-miss accuracy]] make for some [[CurbStompBattle easy army leveling]].
166** In the same game Lianshi has a normal crossbow as her signature weapon. It functions more like a shotgun than a machine gun, though she never really has to worry about reloading it.
167** The eighth game takes this [[ExaggeratedTrope to a ludicrous extent]] with the DownloadableContent "Revolving Crossbow", which is basically a portable gatling cannon that fires arrows.
168** Similarly, the third ''VideoGame/SamuraiWarriors'' game introduces Motonari Mori, who uses a wrist-mounted version of this that he can even stab people with.
169** Considering the above examples, it is notable that ''VideoGame/BladestormTheHundredYearsWar'' - also by KOEI - completely [[AvertedTrope AVERTS]] this. Crossbow-units have to reload after each shot, taking several seconds - and Heavy Crossbows take even longer since they have to use a hand-crank to do so. Of course, this makes them rather less than practical to actually USE, especially if you don't have some allied units around to run interference while you're busy reloading...
170* In ''Videogame/EndlessLegend'', the comparatively high-tech Vaulters use magazine-fed crossbows as their standard infantry weapon. Amusingly, the Vaulters flee the planet Auriga [[SchizoTech on a spaceship before they even invent firearms]].
171** When Vaulters reappear in ''VideoGame/EndlessSpace'', they upgrade to ballistics and directed energy weapons.
172* ''VideoGame/EverythingOrNothing'': Favored weapon of New Orleans assassin Jean [=LeRouge=]. He can fire three arrows at a time, as well as incendiary and exploding arrows.
173* ''VideoGame/FableII'' features repeating crossbows, which fire much faster than a normal crossbow, but are inferior in terms of speed to pistols, and in terms of power to rifles. And nothing beats a good clockwork or turret rifle.
174* A modern automatic crossbow, built out of a PP-19 Bizon submachine gun and as such feeding from a large helical magazine, is Ajay Ghale's go-to stealth weapon in ''VideoGame/FarCry4''. The standard bow from the last game is still available as well, so it really comes down to player preference (the auto-cross can be used one-handed and is much faster, removing much of the skill necessary to use it to its full potential, but non-headshots are slightly weaker and it can't use fire or explosive bolts).
175* The Auto Crossbow in ''VideoGame/FellSealArbitersMark'' can hit up to four enemies with a single attack.
176* Edgar's Auto Crossbow tool in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI''. [[DiscOneNuke It's available less than an hour into the game, and remains useful for a long time.]] The Auto Crossbow has since become a Machinist ability ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIV'' and a weapon in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXV''.
177** A rapid-fire crossbow in one of [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyXII Vaan's]] [[MultiMeleeMaster (ma]][[MultiRangedMaster ny)]] BRV attacks in ''[[VideoGame/DissidiaFinalFantasy Duodecim 012]]''.
178* ''VideoGame/FistOfTheNorthStarKensRage'' gives Mamiya (and later Bat and Lin) automatic crossbows as weapons. All three of them can deal a barrage of rapid-fire shots as part of their moveset, but given the setting, these are downgraded to AnnoyingArrows individually--it usually takes the better part of its bolt magazine to kill a squad of generic {{Mook}}s that a dedicated fighter like Kenshiro or Rei could annihilate without a second thought, but these crossbows carry around ''50'' shots and can be reloaded in roughly two seconds. They also become ''much'' more lethal when used in [[LimitBreak Signature Moves]].
179* ''VideoGame/FoxNForests'': [[PlayerCharacter Rick]]'s crossbow can fire bolts one after the other in unrealistically quick precision for a crossbow.
180* ''VideoGame/{{Gauntlet}}''-clone, ''Demon Stalkers: The Raid on Doomfane'' had your heroes rip into the forces of evil with rapid-fire crossbows.
181* ''Gemstone Warrior'' and its sequel ''Gemstone Healer'' from SSI had its hero fight his way through demons to the magical Gemstone with a rapid-fire crossbow that was weak but had a large ammo supply and fireballs which OneHitKill but your ammo supply was very limited.
182* Imani from ''VideoGame/{{Gigantic}}'' uses a giant crossbow which can fire rapid bursts of bolts.
183* In ''Videogame/HalfLife'', the player can use a five-round crossbow that fires almost as quickly as a shotgun. Swapping out the crossbow's magazine is painfully slow, unfortunately.
184** The crossbow in ''Videogame/HalfLife2'' is no longer fed via magazines, and you can only carry twelve shots, but becomes the most damaging non-explosive weapon in the game. While it's no longer magazine-fed, it still has some automatic parts, allowing it to rearm itself while the user reaches for a new projectile.
185* The Princess from the "Princess 30" game in ''VideoGame/HalfMinuteHero'' inherits a crossbow from her dying father (the King), and it can shoot hundreds of arrows per ''second''.
186* Kai's primary weapon from ''VideoGame/HeavenlySword'' is a repeating crossbow that shoots bolts whose flight path the player can control.
187* The Ethereal Crossbow from ''VideoGame/{{Heretic}}'' fires faster than a round per second. With a Tome of Power active, it fires even faster. Justified in that [[AWizardDidIt it's magical.]]
188* Similarly, the Assassin class in ''VideoGame/{{Hexen}} II'' has a magical crossbow that gets its ammo from the player's blue mana pool.
189* ''VideoGame/HorizonForbiddenWest'': One of the new weapon classes in the game is the Boltblaster, an enormous contraption nearly as big as Aloy that consists of multiple crossbows set together. It fires a burst of bolts and has to be manually reloaded once it depletes its clip. With the right weapon technique, you can fire sixty bolts in a single volley.
190* ''VideoGame/HypeTheTimeQuest'' has some quick crossbows, one of which could rapid fire three arrows.
191* ''VideoGame/JoeDeversLoneWolf'' Leandra's crossbow. It's also her invention.
192* In the ''Franchise/KingdomHearts'' series, the character Xigbar [[GunsAkimbo dual wields]] an EnergyBow variant of the concept: Arrowguns, crossbows that shoot magical spatial darts and can combine to form a sniper rifle, the Arrowguns from ''VideoGame/KingdomHeartsBirthBySleep'' are even shaped like crossbows.
193* In ''VideoGame/KingdomOfLoathing'', most of the 1-handed Crossbows [[http://kol.coldfront.net/thekolwiki/index.php/Clockwork_crossbow describe themselves as automatic]]. All the other crossbows are typically two-handed. It also has a GatlingGood version called the Repeating Crossbow, which is advertised as "Firing up to ONE ROUND PER SECOND! Devastating!"
194* Zael's crossbow in ''VideoGame/TheLastStory'' has an infinite magazine and can keep on shooting one-handed until he runs out of ammo.
195* In ''VideoGame/LeagueOfLegends''. Twitch has an extremely high base attack speed and usually gets items to increase it, so that he fires crossbow bolts at a rate greater than one a second.
196* ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'':
197** The official light gun attachment for the Nintendo Wii, known as the Wii Zapper, comes packaged with ''VideoGame/LinksCrossbowTraining'', a GaidenGame for ''[[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTwilightPrincess Twilight Princess]]''. Link's Crossbow never needs to be reloaded, and can be charged to fire Bomb Arrows; hitting the right target for a powerup will turn it into ''fully''-automatic crossbow for 100 bolts.
198** ''VideoGame/HyruleWarriors'' would later introduce Linkle, a young girl who ''thinks'' she's the legendary hero but is really just [[RightManInTheWrongPlace a heroine in her own right]]. To accentuate this, her primary weapon loadout is a pair of crossbows that take a lot of hints from the aforementioned ''Crossbow Training'', complete with temporary full-auto in her strong attack.
199* Queen Mercedes in ''VideoGame/MapleStory'' [[DualWielding dual-wields]] a pair of 'bowguns', which can be best described as this trope with a dash of GatlingGood. In her case, she never has to reload because her arrows are made of magic. Given her rate of fire, conventional ammunition would probably be impossible to reload quick enough unless it was belt-fed. There's also the Wild Hunter class who is from a very Steampunk inspired faction and thus can use mechanisms to fire their crossbow at a rate comparable to Mercedes, without magic.
200* The Crossbow in ''VideoGame/{{Medievil}}'' actually has rapid fire listed as one of its abilities by its original owner. Justified since every weapon you get in the Hall of Heroes is at least somewhat magical in nature.
201* Invoked with the Helsing in ''Videogame/Metro2033'' and the [[Videogame/MetroLastLight sequel]], a 6-shot pneumatic rifle that fires crossbow bolts at lethal speed, which is reloaded like a revolver, and pumped-up to pressure by hand. Killing a mutant with it [[ShoutOut grants the "Van Helsing" achievement]].
202* ''Videogame/MetroExodus'' has the Hellsing crossbow, which can be modified to be a rapid-fire gas-powered Automatic Crossbow.
203* ''VideoGame/{{Minecraft}}'', for most of the pre-release period, took this even further by having a fully-automatic ''longbow''. If you had enough arrows stored up, you could just point at a horde of enemies, hold down the right mouse button, and mow them down like you're wielding an assault rifle. And as an added bonus, missed shots didn't waste arrows because they could (and still can) be gathered up and reused later. Beta 1.8 finally retooled the bow to behave more like a traditional video game longbow (i.e. hold the button in to pull back slowly, release to... well, release; damage and accuracy increases based on how far back the bowstring was drawn) but also do more damage if used properly. Some Minecraft griefing clients not only restore the fully automatic nature of the bow but can make it fire ''even faster''.
204** Crossbows in the game normally take 1.25 seconds to reload. However, a crossbow with a Quick Charge V enchantment reloads instantly, being effectively this trope. That enchantment, however, is only available through the console, the maximal enchantment available without cheating is Quick Charge III, reducing the loading time to 0.5 seconds which is borderline this trope.
205* ''VideoGame/MinecraftDungeons'':
206** The rapid crossbow has a low damage output, but makes up for it by having high speed, a large ammo supply and can be shot repeatedly if the ranged attack button is held down. Its unique variants also count as they have the same stats, with the auto crossbow in particular being the closest the game can get to a machine gun (that can chew up ammo very quickly) because it naturally has an enchantment that allows you to shoot faster with each consecutive shot.
207** Piglin hunters downplay this. Despite using the same crossbows as pillagers, piglin hunters shoot noticeably faster than them, but they only fire in short bursts and their arrows are weaker than arrows fired by pillagers.
208* The Bowguns in the ''VideoGame/MonsterHunter'' series are functionally guns except that they have a self-drawing bow mechanism (the actual 'Bow' weapon type has to be drawn in a separate action before firing) and firing rate that is affected by ammo type. ''World'' introduces a special ammo known as the Wyvernheart, which basically [[GatlingGood turns your Heavy Bowgun into a minigun]] and fires repeatedly.
209* Fujin in ''VideoGame/MortalKombat11'' adds a [[XtremelyKoolLetterz krossbow]] to his arsenal. Normally it works like a normal one, firing one arrow when you use the correct move (or two if you use some of your attack gauge to amplify the move) but it plays it straight during his Fatal Blow, where he proceeds to shoot a veritable volley of arrows at the oponent's body. It can be justified as Fujin is the [[PhysicalGod God]] of [[BlowYouAway wind]].
210* In ''VideoGame/{{NetHack}}'', any sufficiently capable crossbow(wo)man turns their weapon into this. Advancing to Skilled level in Crossbow lets the user fire two arrows per turn, while Experts fire three. Gnomish Rangers get a bonus from the start, and so they can fire up to four. On the other hand, the same thing happens with both bows and even thrown weapons like knives and daggers. Considering that crossbows weigh a lot heavier than bows, lack any artefact versions, and are harder to get ammunition for in late game, pretty much the only reason you would want to use them over the alternatives is SelfImposedChallenge.
211* ''VideoGame/{{Nightfire}}'': A pump-action crossbow features once or twice. Absolutely silent and a OneHitKill no matter where its arrows end up.
212* ''VideoGame/NobodySavesTheWorld'': The Ranger form's Arrow Flurry attack rapid-fires arrows for as long as their mana pool allows.
213* ''VideoGame/Nocturne1999'', [[MonsterHunterOrganization Spookhouse]] has designed a rapid-fire crossbow for use against vampires. Spookhouse's main agent, [[EveryoneCallsHimBarkeep The Stranger]], finds it also effective against ghouls when loaded with [[AbnormalAmmo blessed bolts]].
214* In ''{{VideoGame/Nosgoth}}'' the Hunter -class is equipped with these, several variants actually - repeaters (the straightest example of the trope), multi-bow that shoots in three arrow bursts, slower but powerful siege bows... Each have a magazine from 16 to 36 arrows.
215* ''VideoGame/NuclearThrone'' has an automatic crossbow, as well as splinter guns, which are basically mini shotgun-crossbows. {{Exaggerated|Trope}} with the Heavy Auto-Crossbow, which rapid-fires bolts capable of taking down walking tanks in one hit.
216* ''VideoGame/OddworldStrangersWrath'' has the main character use an [[ArmCannon arm-mounted double-barrel crossbow]] that fires [[BeeBeeGun bees]] at a machine gun-like rate, as well as various other critters.
217* Fairy queen Mercedes from ''VideoGame/OdinSphere'' wields a magic crossbow called Tasla (later reforged into Riblam). Being a magical weapon it rapid-fires bolts of flaming energy rather than arrows and can charge up and release a powerful homing spread shot. Despite this, she still needs to reload it when she runs out of energy (the point where other characters would run out of breath) although she can absorb phozons instead to recharge it.
218* ''VideoGame/OrcsMustDie'' has a magical crossbow which can fire indefinitely, and is capable of automatic fire with the use of macros.
219* In ''VideoGame/PartyAnimals'', the two crossbows can fire arrows indefinitely without reloading.
220* ''VideoGame/PerfectDark'' has a crossbow with five bolts and a fairly fast rate of fire. The reload animation did take a while, but luckily it could be interrupted in a pinch, which left you with fewer bolts but allowed you to keep firing. It also doubled as a tranquilizer gun, and it has a useful instant kill function.
221* ''Videogame/PlanetSide 2'' features the "Hunter" quad-armed crossbow. It can silently fire up to 4 bolts (or 3 explosive bolts) from an internal magazine, though it must be pumped (like a shotgun) after each shot to cycle in a new bolt from the magazine. The crossbow is reloaded via break-action. It's particularly useful for an Infiltrator with the [[InvisibilityCloak Stalker cloaking device]], as the Hunter is one of the most powerful secondary weapons and makes almost no noise.
222* In ''VideoGame/{{Poptropica}}'', you get a crossbow on Vampire's Curse Island. You use it to scale walls by jumping off the arrows, and eventually inject the vampire-curing serum into the vampires with it.
223* The Desert Striker Crossbow from ''VideoGame/Rage2011'', is a future semi-automatic, reverse-draw crossbow that functions as a scope-less sniper weapon with varied ammo in early game.
224* In ''VideoGame/{{Rappelz}}'' the only class to use a crossbow as its primary weapon, the Shadow Hunter, can reach attack speeds high enough to fire an arrow or, with proper buffs, two every second.
225* ''Franchise/ResidentEvil''
226** ''VideoGame/ResidentEvil2'' features a crossbow, the Bowgun, that can fire in three-round bursts, and can hold 18 arrows (six shots) at a time. Somehow it fires all those bolts in semi-automatic mode.
227** ''VideoGame/ResidentEvilCodeVeronica'' features a bowgun that can hold every arrow in your inventory at once, and fires one bolt at a time semi-auto.
228** Enemies in ''VideoGame/ResidentEvil4'' and ''[[VideoGame/ResidentEvil5 5]]'' use crossbows that are sort of automatic: they can shoot two bolts in rapid succession, but need a reload after that.
229* Karil's Crossbow, the [[LostTechnology ancient sniper's equipment]] of ''VideoGame/{{Runescape}},'' is a Chinese-style repeating crossbow. Compared to its more widely available hand crossbows, it boasts a faster firing rate, on par with a [[{{Multishot}} shortbow,]] but can only fire from [[AwesomeButImpractical fully-loaded magazines,]] which are only found in the same [[ClownCarGrave burial chest you found the bow in,]] or purchased from an Eastern trader, who sells nothing else.
230* In ''Six-Guns: Gang Showdown'' from Creator/{{Gameloft}}, the game is set in a WeirdWest Arizona and Oregon, so you'll have some mundane equipment to buy from but mostly it'll be an assortment of ClockPunk mechanisms, SteamPunk contraptions, {{Magitek}} mojo and WeirdScience gizmos. As such there's a number of odd rapid-fire crossbows that'll put a revolver to shame. The deadliest of these is the Contagion Crossbow, an arm-mounted ClockPunk crossbow from [[HorsemenOfTheApocalypse Pestilence]] that will quickly fire disease-ridden bolts which are strong enough to kill most things in one hit.
231* In ''VideoGame/{{Strife}}'', the crossbow automatically loads the next shot. Despite this, the fire rate isn't faster than other FPS crossbows.
232* Lu in ''VideoGame/SuikodenV'' has an Auto Crossbow styled vaguely like a Tommy Gun, which is actually four crossbows in one.
233* ''{{Videogame/Terraria}}'' has repeating crossbows that are crafted from Cobalt, Palladium, {{Mythril}}, {{Orichalcum}}, Adamantite, Titanium, and Hallowed metal that fire automatically compared to previous bows that had to be fired with each click of the mouse. When you get access to Chlorophyte, you can craft a Chlorophyte Shotbow that [[{{MultiShot}} fires three arrows for the cost of one (or zero if you have a chance not to consume ammo)]]. There's also a Halloween themed Stake Launcher that fires wooden stakes automatically like the repeaters and, as expected, it's a OneHitKill against vampires in the Solar Eclipse event.
234* The Guardians in ''VideoGame/Uncharted2AmongThieves'' wield crossbows that can fire several bolts in quick succession. A full volley from one of these can easily kill the player. You can pick up one of these crossbows to use yourself, but [[TheComputerIsACheatingBastard they need to be reloaded after every shot when in a player's hands]].
235* In ''VideoGame/{{Unworthy}}'', the elite version of normal Crossbowmen fires their bolts in bursts of two or three. Given the [[NintendoHard difficulty of the game]], this is enough of a game-changer that they appear much later than the regular Crossbowmen (who are encountered in the very first area), and each provides you with more [[WeirdCurrency Sin]] than the early-game bosses.
236* ''VideoGame/VagrantStory'' has Ashley's crossbows function as this even though only a few of his crossbows have improved firing rate [[GameplayAndStorySegregation for their in-game descriptions]]. All his crossbows can fire as many bolts in {{Combos}} as you want provided you have the timing and are willing to accept the risk increase.
237* Badrach and Janus from ''VideoGame/ValkyrieProfile'' both use "crossbows" that seem to have more in common with guns from ''{{VideoGame/Contra}}'' than actual medieval weaponry. Badrach's in particularly is clearly a gun based on the game's art. It's likely they just gave him the crossbow weapon set so they wouldn't have to make entirely new equipment for just one character.
238* ''VideoGame/{{Warframe}}'' has the Attica, a Tenno made crossbow that fires high-damage bolts at a decent rate. A later patch doubles its firing rate and allows it to equip the [[StuffBlowingUp Thunderbolt mod]], essentially turning it into a fast-firing automatic rocket launcher. A later update introduced the Zhuge, which is more of a crit-based weapon.
239* ''VideoGame/WarhammerTheEndTimesVermintide'': Victor Saltzpyre can acquire a Repeater Crossbow in Drachenfels, which has a burst-fire mode that shoots out three bolts in rapid succession. It's a bitch to reload, but the rapid artillery is more than worth it.
240* The Sniper Crossbow in ''VideoGame/WillRock'' can shot up to 6 ArrowsOnFire in a row. The fire rate however is slightly slower than the usual Automatic Crossbow.
241* The Delta 900 Mag from ''VideoGame/TheWorldIsNotEnough'' is a pump-action crossbow. It can hold up to 5 bolts in the magazine, it has a telescopic sight attached to it and it has a pretty fast rate of fire. It takes very long to reload it however, meaning it is probably best to switch to a backup weapon when close to an empty magazine.
242* ''VideoGame/{{XIII}}'' has two scoped crossbows that act as this game's silent sniper weapons. The normal one must be reloaded after every shot, but the improved semiautomatic version holds three quarrels in what looks like an underslung tubular magazine. It shoots considerably faster[[note]]you can release all three shots well before the first one hits[[/note]] without needing longer to reload, which by the time you get it is often sorely needed to silently neutralize multiple guards before one of them can trigger an alarm. The downside is that most of said guards also wield this weapon, and the thing ''hurts''.
243[[/folder]]
244
245[[folder:Webcomics]]
246* ''Webcomic/{{Drowtales}}'' features several instances of automatic, semi-automatic, wrist-mounted, and sniper-scoped crossbow weapons. Some are entirely mechanical, others may have [[{{magitek}} magical cores]] to help the motions. Generally speaking, the Drow in the setting are both adept at {{magitek}}-anything and are excellent craftsmen.
247* In ''Webcomic/{{Goblins}}'', the pitiless Dwarf paladin Kore is equipped with ferocious multi-strung pistol crossbows each capable of firing ''eight'' bolts before needing to be reloaded. He also has the strength to insert them one-handed into their reloading mechanism, cocking all eight strings apiece by sheer arm strength.
248[[/folder]]
249
250[[folder:Web Video]]
251* WebVideo/JoergSprave has made quite a few of these, such as [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qxtHtPK2MH8&feature=related Gatling slingshot crossbow]], a fully-automatic model powered by a cordless drill, and a replica of the "machine gun bow" from ''Film/RobinHood2018''.
252* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QS4RKoRyTik&NR=1 This guy made an auto-electric crossbow.]]
253* A few other folks on Youtube have made [[ShotgunsAreJustBetter pump-action]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lR0FXZe2_64 repeating]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TAyCVTV8-lM crossbows.]]
254** The same guy in the first example above also built an auto crossbow capable of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mw6VBJ_o3AQ one-handed shooting.]]
255[[/folder]]
256
257
258[[folder:Western Animation]]
259* On ''WesternAnimation/TheSecretSaturdays'', Tsun 'Kalu wields a crossbow that fires three bolts at once.
260[[/folder]]
261
262[[folder:Real Life]]
263* An artillery version was developed by the Roman Empire (the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheiroballistra cheiroballistra]]), while some Roman auxiliaries carried bullet-firing crossbows. While some of the repeating variants were much weaker than the regular crossbows and used poison-tipped bolts, a body recovered from the site of a Roman siege in south-western Britain showed that a bolt-head typical of a Roman repeating crossbow had enough force to go right through a human body from the front and lodge in the luckless target's spine, with the point penetrating out of his back. Ref. Adam Hart-Davis, below.
264** Those make a showing in Creator/DavidDrake's ''Literature/RanksOfBronze'', used by the defenders during a siege since they had the height advantage on their walls.
265* The Polybolos described by Philo of Byzantium (but more often attributed originally to Dionysius of Alexandria) also counts.
266* Though most often associated with Zhuge Liang and bearing the name ''Zhuge nu'', the Chinese [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repeating_crossbow repeating crossbow]] actually predates him by a considerable margin, first appearing during the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warring_States_period Warring States era]]. Historically, this type of crossbow originates from the Kingdom of Chu, approximately 400 BC, but the mechanisms are similar; the user holds the crossbow grip in one hand and pumps the repeater handle with the other, which automates the drawing, loading, and firing process. Each individual bolt was actually fairly weak, but [[PoisonedWeapons poisoned bolt tips]] made even minor wounds into a medical crisis.
267[[/folder]]
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