

Somehow it still manages to be a decent trace rifle after all these years and still a faithful rifle. Originally a pre-order for Destiny 2, Coldheart has been around for a very long time.

“The latest Omolon engineering leverages liquid fuel as coolant to keep weapon systems at biting subzero temperatures.” Unless they release those to the vault to be bought with exotic ciphers or added to the Xur/Engram rotation, they will remain off the list for now (Sorry Ager's Scepter!).

Not included are rifles that can only be received from past seasonal quests, which are no longer available to get. So, how do you tell which ones are worth it? Below is a handy guide that will not only help you choose which trace rifle to try but also where to find it. So not only can they be expensive ammo-wise, but they may also take up your singular exotic slot. There are not many trace rifles that currently exist in the game, and all but one are exotic. They are not a weapon to ‘spray and pray’ with for sure. Trace rifles then must be used smartly to be the most effective. The downside to such massive damage is that trace rifles are notorious ammo hogs, and unwisely using your rifle will leave you without ammo very quickly. Not only does this work on singular targets, but some rifles allow you to damage multiple targets at once as you sweep them across the room. Instead, it fires a continuous beam of energy that will keep doing damage as long as it’s in contact with its target. Trace rifles, unlike most guns in the game, don't use singular shots of energy or bullets. It is an obvious SciFi weapon that looks cool and packs a massive amount of damage. From common real-world weapons such as shotguns up to more exotic ones such as swords - Trace rifles may be one of the most exotic weapons one can have in their arsenal. Destiny 2 is known for having a wide array of weapons for players to wreak destruction with.
