Included in the rule book are ten silhouettes of various targets from men and women to horses and cats.
The player then uses the location value on the plastic overlay sheet to determine exactly what part of the body the missile, weapon or bullet hit.
Some of those who chose to stay in Columbia, including Jeff Barber, founded Biohazard Games.
[4] In Issue 231 of Dragon (July 1996), Rick Swan called Killer Crosshairs "the Oddball of the Month", but then admitted that it was "quick, accurate, and disturbingly realistic."
Although Swan nitpicked that the system did not make any adjustments for moving targets, he concluded by recommending it, saying, "If you’re a marksman who absolutely, positively has to know if you skewered that pussy cat's paw or just nicked its whiskers, this is a must.