I found the Adventure Force version at a Walmart Canada. The US version, marketed as the Pulse or Kickback, has been seen in the toy sections of places like Burlington Coat Factory.
Simple on the Inside
In addition, the slide is spring-loaded. A lever underneath the plunger rod is moved by the trigger. This moves the slide backwards, until the lever moves out of the way, letting the slide move back. Letting go of the trigger resets everything once a final spring-loaded tab moves out of the way.
There’s not much more to write about. It is a rather small blaster, including the grip. It’s obviously geared toward younger users, but I found myself playing with it for hours after purchase, as if it was a stress ball. The shell is solidly built, as is the trend for recent Xshot blasters.
Performance
The Recoil has excellent stats for a single shot blaster. The included darts (lighter than most) hit 77fps on firing. More importantly, Nerf Elite darts were averaging 73fps, showing little performance loss due to dart type. For $5CAD, those are quite excellent results.
Last Thoughts
The Xshot Recoil is a great blaster for a great price. Even if you don’t have darts to fire, it’s far more entertaining than it has any right to be. Gimmick blasters aren’t usually valued greatly, but when the gimmick is an extra on top of a good blaster, it’s well appreciated.