Sawed-Off Shotgun



""All right, you primitive screwheads, listen up! You see this? This... is my BOOMSTICK! The 12-gauge double-barreled Remington. S-Mart's top of the line. You can find this in the sporting goods department. That's right, this sweet baby was made in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Retails for about $109.95. It's got a walnut stock, cobalt blue steel, and a hair trigger. That's right. Shop smart. Shop S-Mart. YOU GOT THAT?!""

- Ash, Army of Darkness

If you're a Badass Longcoat, and you want your firearm to represent how Badass you are, there's only one choice for you - the Hillbilly Dueling Pistol, AKA the sawed-off shotgun. It is a standard weapon for anyone in the middle of a Zombie Apocalypse. In the hands of a suitable badass, it can take out anyone in a single blast. The sound of chambering a round in a pump-action sawed-off is like a Catch Phrase showing how awesome you are—for extra badassitude, you hold it by the slide and sort of wave it in the air, allowing the weapon's own weight to do the chambering (this is a great way to ruin your shotgun in real life, FYI). And if you have a sawed-off double barrel shotgun with dual triggers, you have the option of either unloading one barrel at a time at an opponent, or "giving 'em both barrels," as it were (also an excellent way to destroy it).

In popular media, the sawed-off shotgun combines the power of a shotgun with the profile of a large handgun. It's so easy to make - all you need is a regular shotgun and a hacksaw, it seems. Its popularity easily eclipses all guns aside from the most famous, like the Desert Eagle.

In real life, sawed-off shotguns aren't very practical. Contrary to popular belief, shortening the barrel of a shotgun has little effect on the spread of the shot, unless the barrel is made very short. The main effect of shortening is a reduction in velocity, and consequently, the power and range of the weapon.

Some law enforcement agencies use compact shotguns for breaching—that is, shooting hinges and locks off doors for expedient entry. There's even a "master key" attachment, which allows a shotgun to be mounted underneath the barrel of an AR-15, like an M203 Grenade Launcher. A sawed-off shotgun is also more easily concealed than the full-sized variety, so they are often used by criminals, especially in countries where normal handguns may be difficult to procure.

This trope is prominent in British shows, where the sawn off shotgun remains the weapon of choice for the London Gangster, or the villains in any police procedural, particularly if it involves an Armed Blag. This is mainly due to the difficulty of obtaining handguns in the UK, while shotguns are still legally available. Incidentally, British English prefers "sawn-off" (the past participle) and American English "sawed-off" (the past preterite, sounds like something else to British ears - though it still works pretty well, considering the context), which is why the terms are used interchangeably here.

Anime and Manga

 * In Umineko no Naku Koro ni, Westernophile Kinzo has several sawed-off Winchester rifles (also known as a Mare's Leg) in his room. After the story gets going, the adults tend to start using them; Natsuhi in the first arc, Rosa in the second arc, and nearly everyone in the third.
 * Similar to the previous example, in the Devilman manga, badass Ryo Asuka uses a sawed-off rifle to great effect, first scaring some bullies and later injuring Sirene.
 * Beelzemon from Digimon Tamers wields two double-barreled versions before going Blast Mode.
 * One of  is seen with one in the manga Battle Royale.

Comic Books

 * In the Batman comics, Detective (later Sheriff) Steve 'Shotgun' Smith carries one of these as his standard weapon.
 * This was the weapon of choice for the Sineater, of 1980's Spider-Man.

Fan Works

 * A notorious David Gonterman fanfic features the hero Davey Crockett shooting Lord Zedd's throne with a sawn-off shotgun. Davey is on Earth at the time, and the throne is on the moon. And the throne is completely destroyed by the shot. And Lord Zedd is unharmed despite having been sitting in the throne at the time.

Film

 * Mad Max used one as his main weapon.
 * For that matter, he has it placed as his sidearm in the movie, akin to a police officer's pistol.
 * Several Arnold Schwarzenegger movies, most notably Terminator II, in which he fires and cocks a lever-action shotgun single-handed while riding a motorcycle. Of course, he is a terminator.
 * Slight variation in Terminator II as he appears to be using slugs rather than the more commonly seen shot. Additionally, the gun is a 10 gauge, rather than the more popular 12 gauge. The larger slug, with the lack of a spread effect, effectively turns a shot gun into a BFG.
 * Also, the loop of the lever-action shotgun is enlarged, enabling the Terminator to use the loop and the shortened barrel to flip the shotgun, reloading the lever-action. If one can avoid whacking themselves with the barrel, one can effectively use it one handed.
 * Kyle Reese saws off the stock of his shotgun for concealment purposes in the first movie, finishing with a nice Dramatic Gun Cock.
 * Antonio Banderas holds one on the cover to the movie Desperado, and he uses the weapon in the first major bar shootout before switching to two blazing Ruger semiautomatics for the remainder of the movie. You just know it'd be a bad move to mess with him.
 * The sawed-off also makes an appearance in Once Upon a Time In Mexico, where it has become the Mariachi's Weapon of Choice.
 * Ash from the Evil Dead series uses a sawed-off shotgun that not only never runs out of shells, but can also blow a sword in half. The quote above, delivered after blowing the sword in half, pretty much says it all.
 * Interestingly enough, Ash's shotgun seems to get upgraded every film, all this despite the fact that it's ostensibly the same weapon. In Evil Dead, it was a single-barreled, non-sawed-off single-shot. In Evil Dead 2, he sawed it off down to the foregrip, and it became double-barreled. In Army of Darkness, it remained a side-by-side, but somehow grew back about eight inches on the barrels. In the follow-on video game, it effectively functions as a semi-automatic, despite still being a double-barrel.
 * The title character in the "Jewsploitation" film The Hebrew Hammer pulls a pair out of his coat in order to blow away a bar full of skinheads.
 * In the movie Sweeney 2 (a spin-off of the popular British TV cop show) the criminals use gold-plated Purdy shotguns stolen from a rock star. There's a notable opening scene where the blagger sticks his sawn-off in a bank manager's face and asks him to imagine the kind of man who'd ruin such a classic weapon by sawing the barrels off. "So just imagine what he'd do to you!"
 * Reggie Bannister's signature weapon from Phantasm II onwards is a sawn off double barrelled shotgun tied to another one, creating a quad barrelled shotgun.
 * Used in the British gangster movie The Long Good Friday, though only the barrels are cut down, not the stock.
 * Vietnam veteran Llewelyn Moss' first step after finding out his grab-the-drug-money-and-run plan in No Country for Old Men may not go strictly according to plan is to buy a shotgun and hack off the barrel so it fits in his duffel bag. Very fitting with the grim realist nature of the movie.
 * In the climax of The Punisher with Thomas Jane, the titular character draws his Hillbilly Dueling Pistol after being shot several times in the chest (he had body armor on, natch). After unloading both shells into a mobster's face, he does the smart thing and throws it away (he, of course, had several other weapons on him).
 * The Joker in The Dark Knight acquires a sawed-off shotgun from a Badass Bystander at the beginning of the film and uses it several more times throughout the film, once killing a police officer with a point-blank shot and again when trying to penetrate the armor of a police transport. The most notable instance is when he fires it into the ceiling to disrupt a party, announcing his and his men's entrance. He then proceeds to wave it around like a toy in the face of several of the party-goers, who appropriately recoil with a lot of fear.
 * Except for one old man, who defiantly states that he will "not be intimidated by thugs".
 * The official reason the Big Bad of the Steven Seagal movie The Patriot is arrested is for sawing the barrel off of a shotgun. This was because the authorities didn't have the evidence needed to arrest him for the criminal actions of his 'militia group', and didn't know that he had stolen a biochemical weapon and was planning to use it, but did have concrete evidence that he had made an illegal modification to a firearm.

Literature

 * In The Dresden Files novel Death Masks, Karrin Murphy wields a sawed-off shotgun against the vampires and their Renfields.
 * Not to mention, Harry has a sawed-off shotgun in the backseat of the Blue Beetle.
 * The Sherlock Holmes adventure The Valley of Fear featured a man who tried to kill the supposed murder victim with a sawed-off shotgun. Unfortunately for him, the victim fought back, and he ended up getting shot in the face at point-blank range as they struggled over the gun. ...except Sherlock Holmes, of course.
 * In the novel version of Battle Royale, Shogo Kawada uses a sawed-off M31 Remington shotgun. In the movie, it was changed to a Franchi SPAS-12 shotgun, which was designed with a shorter barrel than most guns.
 * In The Tomorrow Series, a lot of tension in one scene where the group gets surprised by enemy soldiers comes not from the risk of them dying, but from the fact that the enemy soldiers are shot down almost immediately by a sawed-off shotgun that no one knew Homer was carrying.
 * Able Team #7: Justice By Fire. Intrepid Reporter Floyd Jefferson buys a friend's shotgun and saws off the barrel when he's targeted by a Salvadorean death squad. Rather than insist he hand it over, a team member shows him the Unlocked Carry (chamber empty, safety off, action partly closed) so he doesn't accidentally blow a kid's legs off.
 * In Andrew Vachss's Burke books, the Prof favours one of these.

Live-Action TV

 * In The Wire, Omar Little uses a double-barreled sawed off shotgun.
 * Garth Marenghi's Darkplace: Thornton Reed carries one with him always. It's a wonder the hospital doesn't look like Swiss cheese.
 * The Winchesters in Supernatural use sawn-off shotguns loaded with rock salt to fight ghosts.
 * On Lost, Caesar finds a sawed-off shotgun at the Hydra and takes it. But when he tries to use it,.
 * Zoe's Weapon of Choice in Firefly is a sawed-off Winchester rifle called a "Mare's Leg."
 * This wepaon is based on the similar one (also called a "Mare's Leg") wielded by Josh Randall in Wanted: Dead or Alive.
 * The X-Files. In "Piper Maru" Agent Mulder makes inquiries at a salvage company, unaware that it's a Front Organisation for a French Secret Service operation. The audience sees the secretary has her hand on a double-barrelled shotgun attached to the underside of her desk, but fortunately she doesn't use it.
 * This is the Mafia's mid-range weapon in the "Yakuza vs. Mafia" episode of Deadliest Warrior.
 * The Weapon of Choice for Bounty Hunter Jesse Colton in MacGyver.

Tabletop Games

 * Incredibly common in tabletop roleplaying games.
 * In the first and second editions of White Wolf's Old World of Darkness games, the only difference between a sawed-off and a regular shotgun was that the former was easier to conceal.
 * Shadowrun has the Remington Roomsweeper, a shotgun that comes pre-sawed-off and features an adjustable "choke" that allows it to substitute quite handily for a full-length shotgun (though with reduced range). It's probably the second most common weapon amongst Shadowrunners, right behind the Ares Predator handgun.
 * One supplement for the game even included a weapon that was basically a pistol chambered for shotgun shells. Even the book commented on how brutal that'd be on the user's wrist. Then again, a somewhat similar weapon also exists in real life, even though it's only chambered for .410 gauge/.45 Long Colt and isn't nearly as hard on the shooter as a heavier gauge might be.
 * Averted in D20 Modern, however, as the lead equipment designer for that game has admitted a personal distaste for this trope. Shotguns are markedly inferior to assault rifles or submachineguns, and sawed-off models hold no particular advantage.
 * Also curiously averted in Warhammer 40,000...and this is a setting in which the Rule of Cool is physics. Rules-wise, the shotgun is basically a lasgun with a shorter range but the ability to be fired when rushing into melee. It's decidedly inferior to most other weapons. Of course, considering that "most other weapons" in this setting includes multiple-shot RPG launchers, anti-tank microwave cannons, and single-shot railguns capable of sending a shot all the way through a tank, this isn't really surprising.
 * In the related Necromunda game however, the shotgun is many a ganger's trusty weapon. Not only is it more powerful than the rest of the store-bought weapons (balanced by the shorter range); but when firing slugs the target is pushed back a bit. Necromunda features lots of thin catwalks spanning between high buildings. Do the math.
 * Space Marines in 5th Edition have access to shotguns equipped with man-stopper rounds, upgrading their strength to that of a bolter and making them slightly more useful.
 * In GURPS sawed off shotguns are just slightly lighter and easier to use in close combat. The stock can also be sawed off but that just makes it hard to fire.

Toys

 * The NERF N-Strike Barrel Break IX-2 is a reverse-plunger'd double-barreled breech-action short-barreled shotgun of a dart blaster. It even has a Tactical Rail-mounted dart rack to hold more ammo! Some modders merely shorten the barrel a little more, while others [go [[Serial Escalation|farther and minimize it extensively].
 * Their competitor, Buzzbee, also has a Double Shot blaster, which is a slimmer double-barreled shotty with individual "shells" that you load the darts into before loading them up. While it is not sawn-off in its stock form, many modders will indeed saw off the barrels so they don't slow down the darts. (Due to how plunger-driven dart blasters work, too long a barrel in some kinds of blasters will actually reduce their range and power!)

Video Games

 * Even if he's prematurely aged into an old man, Solid Snake is capable of shooting a sawed-off one-handed.
 * Played more realistically in Snake Eater, where the shotguns were shortened specifically for use in the jungle environments in which the game takes place.
 * Played straight and subverted in Peace Walker, the double barrel starts off as a normal shotgun and gets the barrel shortened and the stock removed through research. However, the M37 starts as a sawed-off; reasearch actually ADDS a longer barrel and a stock.
 * Rufus Shinra's weapon of choice. In the game, fired single-handed. In the film, fired single-handed, while falling from a building.
 * That was a pistol that second time.
 * STALKER: Shadow of Chernobyl has several shotguns, but you only get the sawn-off for about the first third of the game. It starts well as a decent short-range weapon and it's your best defense against wild animals, but the fact that it's handled realistically - no lightning-fast reloads with both shells in one hand, no flip-up closing of the breech and both hammers have to be manually cocked - makes it a pain to use on anything requiring more than two shots to go down. Since such enemies come around pretty early, especially in an unmodded game, it's easy to come to hate the sawed-off as you slowly reload it, getting shot full of holes in the meantime.
 * You Are Empty suffers from a similar problem: the sawn-off is damn useful - for the first enemy or two. Then, the slow reload causes everybody who hasn't croaked from the first two shots to demonstrate their extreme displeasure about the player's presence by severely increasing the amount of lead in his bloodstream. The game, however, has no other shotguns, so most players prefer to use the more universal machine gun or nailgun.
 * Blood has an unusually accurate example as one of the available weapons. Blood II: The Chosen nerfs it with slower firing and reload speeds, and worse accuracy. Even so, it has a greater damage-per-shot rate than the Auto Shotgun introduced in The Nightmare Levels.
 * Alliance of Valiant Arms has the Winchester M1887S which has a sawed-off barrel and stock. The weapon is a clear Shout-Out to the one used in Terminator 2: Judgement Day; the player-character even flip-cocks it between shots.
 * Shadow Warrior has the Riot Gun, a weapon that looks like a cross between a rotary chaingun and a shotgun, but behaves just like your average shotgun in primary mode, with the four barrels rotating every shot but not actually granting a much higher rate of fire than a normal shotgun. And then there's the alternate firing mode, which allows all four barrels to be fired in succession. Much like Blood above, despite the barrels being rather short, the gun is very accurate.
 * These sort of appear in Marathon 2 and Infinity. Sort of, because "Sawed-off" indicates that they were once full-size shotguns, and these seem to have been originally manufactured at this size. And they can be used Guns Akimbo in a fashion akin to the Terminator 2 example above. It even lampshades the "flip it around to reload" maneuver.
 * Oddly, for a game that's largely an enormous mass of action movie tropes and Badass, Max Payne handles its sawed-off shotgun comparatively realistically. You can't fire both barrels at once, it only holds two shots, and although devastating at extreme close range, it's much less useful than your standard pump-action at longer ranges—the last isn't realistic, but it's unrealistic in a heavily Reality Is Unrealistic way, rather than an over-the-top action movie way. The primary mistake is that he uses it one-handed.
 * The primary advantage of the sawed-off shotgun is that, by abusing the game mechanics, you can shoot-dodge into a group of enemies, blast one or two, then immediately shoot-dodge again to reload immediately. Max Payne 2 "fixes" this by still requiring a reload animation, but you can still reload incredibly quickly by doing the fancy-looking bullet time reloads.
 * The True Matrix Mod adds Sawed Off Shotgun Akimbo as a weapon option once you pick a second SOS. It basically doubles the firepower of a normal one, making it a four-shot weapon.
 * In Team Fortress 2, a semiauto Sawed-Off Shotgun is the Scout class' weapon of choice: Scouts being the fastest and most vulnerable class in the game, Scout players are expected to get close to their enemies, fire, and make a hasty retreat before the target gets a chance to retaliate - provided that he survives.
 * The unlockable "Force-a-Nature" shotgun is a sawed-off par excellence - double-barrelled, cut down to just past the foregrip, and capable of unloading both barrels in a fraction of a second. The tradeoff is that you only get two shots before having to reload.
 * The more recently released Soda Popper is sawed off even farther than that; its barely longer than the soda can that replaced its foregrip.
 * Also, the Engineer, Soldier, Heavy and Pyro classes have shotguns that are slightly sawed off, much like the picture on top of this page.
 * Doom 2 has the super shotgun, which is a sawed-off shotgun with a big punch. It can deal even more damage than a rocket and deals the damage of three regular shotgun shells while only consuming two, but is much less precise.
 * The Grand Theft Auto series often includes a sawed-off shotgun, with the advantage of greater spread and no real reduction in power versus the basic shotgun. In Grand Theft Auto San Andreas, not only can sawed-off shotguns be wielded like pistols, but CJ can use two at once with enough practice. Best not to think about how he reloads.
 * In Grand Theft Auto IV "The Lost and Damned", your character can use a double-barreled sawed-off one-handed while riding a motorcycle.
 * The sawed off shotgun in Fallout 3 is quite weaker than any other shotgun in the game. Its also highly inaccurate, but as its very very short, that may be why. The spread is all over the place. Making it worthless except for large enemies, or being within kissing distance.
 * It is, however, relatively easy to get the unique sawed-off, The Kneecapper, which, while suffering the same accuracy issues as other sawed-off shotguns, has over double the firepower and is uniquely suited for Small Guns-focused characters who are interested in cleaning out ghoul-infested tunnels, close-range ambushes, and/or ammo conservation.
 * When a super-mutant DOES get in your face, however, it's much more convenient than the long-barrel variety for blowing THEIRS clean off.
 * Agreed, and if you can get close enough for a sneak attack it will ruin their day rather thoroughly. Additionally, in New Vegas, it's a holdout weapon, which you can sneak into most casinos, just in case you really need to kill dudes in there.
 * Played straight in Fallout 1 and 2 as well. The first game even gives you a sawed-off rifle as a quest reward, although the sawing is just one of the modifications - the result is to all effects a revolver firing .223 cartridges, and is the most powerful small arm in the game, even more than the Desert Eagle. (Amusingly, it also appears completely unchanged in the sequel as a Random Drop from raiders - meaning that you can accumulate several of these "One-of-a-kind weapon(s), obviously made with care and skill.") The sequel also starts recruitable character  off with a sawed-off double barrel shotgun. Played straight in that it somehow deals more damage than a regular shotgun, though the range is reduced.
 * Dante of Devil May Cry has used, along with his trademark guns Ebony and Ivory, a double barreled sawed-off shotgun in every game, finally given the name Coyote-A in 4. And because he's a badass, Dante can reload it with one hand does not reload it at all, AND it's a break action shotgun.
 * If you upgrade your Gunslinger style enough, he can also use his shotgun like a friggin' nunchaku!
 * HOW DOES THAT EVEN KIND OF MAKE SENSE?
 * Dante also has another shotgun-centered move, wherein he charges at an enemy and rams his sawn-off into them like a spear, before pulling the trigger, blasting them away. 'Tis great fun.
 * Oda Nobunaga in Sengoku Basara uses one in conjunction with a longsword as part of a Sword and Gun combo.
 * Deus Ex featured a sawed-off shotgun, which fired slowly but was slightly more powerful and took up less inventory space than the automatic shotgun. The way the game handled weapon skills also allowed you to completely avoid the "shorter barrels = shorter range" effect; indeed, if you got to Master level, all the pellets would hit in the same spot - making the sawed-off shotgun the ultimate precision rifle from hell.
 * A similar weapon appears in the prequel Deus Ex Human Revolution as well, as a pre-order bonus. It has excellent stopping power against most enemies, but its reach is predictably ridiculous and only has two shots. The weapon skills finally making sense, it's also impossible to use it in a precise way. Its greatest advantage is how little space it takes in the inventory compared to every other non-handgun.
 * A sawed-off double-barreled shotgun makes a rather surprising appearance in Call of Duty: World At War, as a one-time pickup in campaign mode (found in an abandoned insane asylum of all places) and as a variation of the standard double-barreled shotgun in multiplayer.
 * The same shotgun returned in Modern Warfare 2, with the added bonus of allowing the player to carry two at once (that is, of course, if accuracy doesn't concern you much...).
 * Modern Warfare 2 also sports a sawed-off lever action shotgun, complete with flip-to-reload if you dual wield. For the longest time, these sawed-off Model 1887s were horribly broken, and they're STILL a surefire sign of an unrepentant puppy rapist. There's also the KAC "Masterkey" shotgun (see Real Life), which can be unlocked to attach to your assault rifles. Not that anyone ever uses the Masterkey.
 * Resident Evil 5 has the Hydra, a three barreled sawed-off break action shotgun. Little magazine and long reload time, yes, but also the power to shred anything in front of it. Characters hold it with one extended arm (except Sheva, who holds it with both hands), though it's understandable considering the sheer bulk of Chris and the Super Strength of Wesker.
 * Played completely straight in the ridiculously goofy and full of More Dakka Time Splitters series. Strangely, only the double-barreled sawed-off variant may be used akimbo in the series. And it reloads the same as any other bullet weapon, dropping of the screen then coming right back as if you merely had to exchange shell clips. It is far superior to the automatic merely for this reason. Of course, the game itself is full of silly tropes taken to their extremes.
 * wields one of these in Saya no Uta. It's played realistically, though, and the character has trouble with the weapon due to insufficient knowledge of how to care for the shells properly.
 * Played dead straight with the damage upgrade to BioShock (series) 2's shotgun; the game literally says sawing off the barrel makes it deal more damage. Precisely why the developers think long-barreled shotguns actually exist is anyone's guess.
 * In BloodRayne, a sawed-off shotgun is used in the Louisiana levels. Interestingly, for a Dhampir who is super humanly strong and can duel wield assault rifles, she fires the sawed-off realistically.
 * Red Dead Redemption features the sawed-off shotgun as the first shotgun type weapon you can get. It has pretty horrible range, but against marauding ninja kitties, there's no better weapon. Well, until you get the coachgun (aka the non-sawed-off shotgun).
 * The Gears of War series has always involved heavy abuse of its shotgun, and now the trailer for the upcoming third game has revealed a new sawed-off, double-barreled variety.
 * Played straight. The sawn-off is obscenely powerful but has an insane spread and abysmal range and a long reload, even when active reloading. It's effectively a melee weapon.
 * Mafia, a game heavily inspired by gangster films, features this weapon prominently. Especially in the mission where you are given the lupara to take out the traitorous informant.
 * The Near-Sighted Assassin from Ghost Trick uses one. Lynne even comments on how he's probably just trying to enforce the Rule of Cool by doing so.
 * Gallows, the Big Guy (well, even if he looks like one, in fact he's more a Black Magician Amerindian) from Wild ARMs 3 uses one, though he's the worst attacker of the party, the weapon itself is the weakest ARM of the game (stats-wise, his ARM is just awful), and his aim is terrible. On the other hand, when he manages to land a critical hit, prepare yourself For Massive Damage.
 * Jagged Alliance 2 features the pump-action Serbu Super-Shorty, which comes factory-manufactured as a super-sized handgun. The description invokes the trope by noting that it saves time-consuming hacksaw work. They are usually regarded as Awesome but Impractical as backup weapons since smaller, lighter handguns like the FN Five-SeveN are much faster to draw and fire, and most players instead load them with a clip of lockbuster rounds as an instant lockpick.
 * Payday: The Heist features the Serbu Super-Shorty as the Locomotive 12G. Compared to the game's other shotgun, it has paltry range but a very fast fire rate, and it's puny magazine size (four shells) can be upgraded by two.
 * The Twisted Metal reboot has this as a sidearm and a bigger one as a weapon pickup. The former is near useless when not used in extreme close range and can either unload both shells at once For Massive Damage or just one shell and use the other when appropriate. Did I mention that you have unlimited ammo for it? On the other, there's nothing special for the latter, except being a lot stronger obviously. Both weapons are potentially among the strongest weapons in the game.

Web Comics

 * Schlock Mercenary referenced this trope in the "Sawn-off Schlockgun" arc, with Schlock sawing-down two multi-cannons and being told that they were now a danger to everyone around him, since he'd removed the regulators and cooling systems.
 * When they were repaired he kept the look for sheer intimidation value, since just holding them made it obvious he was a maniac.

Web Original

 * A sawed off shotgun appears in version three of Survival of the Fittest.
 * Bruno, from the completed short-story serial Vatsy and Bruno, wields a double-barreled variety of this.

Western Animation
"Our residents! [BOOM] Are trying! [BOOM] To nap! [BOOM]"
 * The Simpsons has a few instances where a character weilds a sawed-off shotgun.
 * In the episode where Mr. Burns is trying to kill Grandpa to get the Hellfish Bonanza, an assassin bursts into the retirement home spraying machine gun bullets everywhere. A nurse retaliates with this weapon.


 * When Mr. Burns takes on Bart as his heir, Homer tries to get him back. In a deleted scene, shown on a clip show special, instead of releasing the hounds (or the bees, or the hounds with bees in their mouths so when the bark they shoot bees at you) Burns chooses to release the Robotic Richard Simmons. It chases off Homer, but continues to antagonize Mr. Burns. Smithers attempts to take it out with a sawed-off shotgun blast to the face, but it reforms a la Terminator T-1000.

Real Life

 * Sawed-off shotguns were used extensively in trench warfare during the first World War by the United States.
 * Aye, and much like the Australian example below, they were considered by the opposition to be illegal. The Germans, who deployed gas weapons and flamethrowers, considered shotguns to be too much.
 * In the United States, a sawed off shotgun is illegal. Each state has their own laws which regulate the minimum barrel length of a rifle or a shotgun. Of course, law enforcement and the military are exempt from this.
 * At the Federal level, the National Firearms Act of 1934 requires registration (and a $200 tax stamp, which was punitive then and perfunctory now) for machine guns, short-barreled rifles, and short-barreled shotguns. The minimum legal length of an unregistered short-barreled shotgun is 18 inches.
 * United States federal law classifies a shotgun with a barrel length shorter than 18 inches AND/OR an overall length of less than 26 inches is an AOW (Any Other Weapon), which has to be registered with BATFE. Rifles with a barrel length shorter than 16 inches AND/OR an overall length less than 26 inches fall into the same category. Short barreled rifles and shotguns aren't illegal according to federal laws (states have their own regulations), they're just heavily regulated. Shotguns built by firearms manufacturers as a short barreled shotgun only have a tax stamp of $5, but making one from a normal shotgun carries the full $200 price tag.
 * The US Supreme Court ruled this law was legal in 1939. Of course only the prosecution showed up as the defendant was too poor to show up, and was dead before the ruling came down. Also, the ruling was based upon faulty information.
 * A sawed-off shotgun was the weapon of choice of Clyde Barrow. It hung from a strap around his shoulder so that he could easily conceal it under his coat, and quickly raise it up into a firing position.
 * Another favorite of the Barrow gang was a cut-down BAR. Not quite the same, but it's an automatic rifle with a shortened stock and barrel. Quite possibly more badass.
 * Both Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold carried sawed-off shotguns during the Columbine High School massacre.
 * This isn't always a modification, the Ithaca Auto & Burglar (1922) was a known as a "factory-built sawed-off shotgun" and aimed at police forces. Er...make that sold to police forces.
 * Ditto for breaching shotguns, which often have a shorter barrel for ease of wielding and are made for destroying door locks, usually by using powdered lead rather than shot.
 * Speaking of breaching shotguns, honorable mention must go to the Knight's Armament Company "Masterkey" shotgun, which is a 4-shot pump-action breacher shotgun cut down even further - so that it can be mounted underneath the barrel of an M16 or M4 assault rifle, just like an M203 grenade launcher.
 * There's also the M26 Modular Accesory Shotgun System (MASS), which is considerably lighter, has the advantage of using box magazines, and is allegedly more comfortable to handle thanks to a bolt-action operation. And unlike the Masterkey, is actually starting to see some use in the US Army.
 * In Sicily, the sawed-off shotgun is called a lupara ("for the wolf"—it was originally a hunting weapon), and is infamous for its use in vendettas and by The Mafia. They feature heavily in Mario Puzo's The Godfather.
 * Taken directly from The Other Wiki: "During the trench warfare of the Gallipoli Campaign, Major Stephen Midgley of the Australian 5th Light Horse Regiment was widely known to use a sawn-off double barrelled shotgun while leading his troops, the weapon's effectiveness resulting in Turkish officers complaining that it was not a 'weapon of war' under international law after Midgley took one Turkish soldier's head "clean off his shoulders". Midgley was ordered by an Australian general to cease using his shotgun and switch to a conventional rifle and bayonet, to wit the Major was "bitterly peeved"." Don't fuck with Australia.
 * Thanks to the highly vegetated jungle environment during the Vietnam War, pretty much everything from shotguns to grenade launchers have had their barrel sawed off at some point to ease maneuvers. Special mention goes to the "Bitch Gun", a weapon used by the SASR, which is basically an SLR (that's a FAL for those uninformed) with everything in front of the gas block sawed off and the bipod detached to make room for an under-barrel XM148 grenade launcher.