A $5,000 Gun? Meet the Laugo Alien

February 1, 2020 Topic: Technology Blog Brand: The Buzz Tags: GunsPistolsHandgunsWeaponsDefense

A $5,000 Gun? Meet the Laugo Alien

One of the more notable pistols to come out in recent years, the Laugo Alien incorporates a variety of rare pistol features into a single, sleek package.

The Laugo Alien is one of the more notable pistols to come out in recent years. Designed to give the shooter a maximum mechanical advantage when shooting, the Alien incorporates a variety of rare pistol features into a single, sleek package. However, the cost of all of that is an extremely high price tag: the Alien is estimated to cost around $5,000.

But are the mechanical features worth it? Does the Alien stand a chance at being successful?

Everything about the Alien seems to be aimed at making the pistol shoot flat, fast, and with low recoil. The barrel is placed on the lower half of the pistol’s long end to absolutely minimize the bore axis. This is atypical, most pistols, including Glocks, Sig Sauers, and H&Ks place the barrel on the top half of the slide, with the recoil spring underneath the barrel. On the Alien, the recoil spring is above the barrel. The barrel is also fixed to the frame; the Alien relies on a gas-delayed blowback system similar to the H&K P7 to reduce the velocity at which the slide travels rearward. The fixed barrel allows it to be “free floated” in the frame for better accuracy.

The Alien’s “slide” itself is also reduced significantly in mass. Unlike most pistols, the slide only encompasses the sides and rear of the pistol. This allows the top to remain static during the firing cycle, making tracking the sights during a shot. The reduced slide profile also reduces reciprocating mass, making the recoil impulse smaller and smoother. The fixed upper frame also has benefits for red dots, which undergo far less stress on the Alien than on other pistols. The partial slide design is reminiscent of the Wolf Ultramatic SV, another similar pistol with fixed sights and a limited roller-locked reciprocating slide.

The rest of the pistol is fairly standard. The frame is shaped similar to other modern raceguns, with a similar grip angle, large undercut behind the trigger guard, and a readily reachable thumb mag release and slide catch. The pistol is striker fired, likely due to the less mechanical complexity required to make a striker fired pistol with an ultra-low bore axis. Safety is maintained via the use of internal safeties and a Glock-style trigger safety.

By most accounts, the Alien is successful at what it set out to do. Reports from shooters indicate that it does shoot very flat, with very little recoil. But it does suffer some drawbacks from its advanced systems. As with the H&K P7, the gas delayed blowback system leads the frame to heat up rather quickly during extended courses of fire, sometimes causing the shooter to need to alter their grip on the pistol. The cost is also a big factor. The Wolf Ultramatic SV, perhaps one of the most comparable pistols to the Laugo Alien, cost a similar amount on its release in the United States, and it failed. However, the Wolf had reliability issues. If the Alien can overcome its price tag and quirks to sell well, it could be one of the most innovative pistols on the market. But until then, it runs the risk of fading into obscurity like many other “different” pistols before it.

Charlie Gao studied political and computer science at Grinnell College and is a frequent commentator on defense and national security issues.

Image: Creative Commons