One of the most overlooked facets of the First World War was the early surge of innovation in firearms — long before automatic rifles became standard in later conflicts. While bolt-action rifles dominated the trenches, both the German Empire and the Austro-Hungarian Empire pursued cutting-edge designs in semi-automatic technology. Many of these rifles never reached mass production, but in Trench 1915, they’re given a second chance — not as fantasy, but as a historically grounded tribute to overlooked ingenuity.
This isn’t a WW2 reskin or some alternate retelling disguised in WWI aesthetics. That’s a claim only an uneducated fool would make. This is a deep dive into real history, real weapons, and the overlooked path not taken.
German Empire – Military Trials & Experimental Rifles
Mauser C98 Selbstlader – Smooth cycling, but sensitive to mud and trench debris.
Mauser M98 Self-Loading Variant – A reinforced version of the standard-issue M98.
Mauser M1902 Selbstlader – A balance of precision and modern design.
Mauser M1913 “Ladera” Rifle – A semi-auto anti-fortification weapon.
Mauser M1906/08 Selbstlader – Pre-war semi-auto platform in limited trials.
Mauser Selbstlader M1916 Rifle & Carbine – Magazine-fed, closer to deployment than most think.
Luger M1906 Rifle – A refined semi-auto system with high accuracy, but high cost.
Borchardt Rifle – Precise, ahead of its time, but mechanically too ambitious for the trenches.
Austro-Hungarian Empire – Mannlicher’s Ambitious Lineup
Mannlicher M1885, M1891, and M1893 – Early semi-automatic rifle experiments, ahead of their time.
Mannlicher M1895 & M1900 – Showed mechanical promise but weren’t adopted.
Mannlicher M1905 Rifle – Finalized by German Hellfeld after Mannlicher's death.
Mannlicher-Styr M1911 carbine Rifle – Civilian prototypes with military applications.
Semi-Automatic Modified M1888/90 – Rarely discussed conversion rifle.
Frommer M1908 Automatic Rifle (Hungarian) – A bridge between automatic rifles and LMGs.
And this is just the beginning.
There are far more weapons still to explore — not only from the Central Powers but also from the Triple Entente and even neutral nations experimenting with cutting-edge technology. Trench 1915 is built on this foundation — not just battles and brotherhood, but the machinery and vision that drove early 20th-century warfare.
Some of these rifles see action in the series — as they deserve to. In the Trench universe, they’re not forgotten relics but frontline tools in a global conflict fought in the shadows and trenches alike.
And yes, I know full well that many of these prototypes had faults. Some jammed. Others were too complex for manufacturing, expensive, or too fragile for trench life. But this is historical fiction — and I use creative freedom with respect to the era, not to replace it. A lot of people tend to forget that.
Stay tuned — future blog posts will break down more obscure weapons, prototypes, and battlefield technologies that helped give this series its identity and gave World War I the second glance it never got in popular media.
Published on May 15, 2025 16:07