Taurus Built an MP5 Clone for $700 and It's Embarrassing $2,000 PCCs
Roller-delayed, 32-round mag, Brazilian-made—and anti-gun legislators in three states already hate it.
That's not a typo. Seven hundred dollars.
The Taurus RPC runs the same roller-delayed blowback system that made the MP5 the gold standard for military and law enforcement worldwide. The mechanism slows the bolt carrier during extraction, guts felt recoil, and makes this gun shoot dramatically softer than every standard blowback PCC at this price point—or anywhere near it.
Reviewer Michael Irwin Collins at The Truth About Guns ran it hard and came back with a clean verdict: reliable, accurate, and punches well above its price tag. In a PCC market drowning in blowback guns that punish your wrists on every string, the roller-delayed action is a genuine differentiator—not a sticker on the box.
**Thirty-two rounds on a $700 gun.** Let that land.
That magazine capacity alone is enough to send anti-gun legislators in Virginia, California, and New York into full meltdown. Which, honestly, is reason enough to put the RPC on your short list before someone tries to legislate it into a paperweight.
Want the roller-delayed experience without the RPC? Budget accordingly: a B&T, a Zenith, or a genuine HK SP5 runs $1,500 to $3,000—same operating principle, dramatically heavier price tag. The Taurus closes that gap completely and puts a serious, fast-shooting, high-capacity 9mm carbine in the hands of gun owners who don't pull a defense-contractor salary.
Now—about that Taurus reputation. The gun-counter jokes used to write themselves. The company has spent the last several years systematically destroying that narrative, one well-built firearm at a time. The RPC continues that trend. Less felt recoil means faster follow-up shots and tighter groups, and Collins's range report backs that up in real numbers.
**The PCC market just got disrupted. Brazil did it. And the gun-grabbers are furious.**
If you've been sitting on the sidelines waiting for a roller-delayed carbine that doesn't require a second mortgage, the wait is over. Read the full review at The Truth About Guns—then watch how fast anti-gun state legislatures try to make this one disappear.
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