

Pickelhaube (Spiked helmet): Small damage resistance. EDIT: We'll see what happens with these : ) Gives protection in hazardous areas (i.e. Decreases infection rate from melee hits from zombies. Gas masks (3 Versions: Civilian, Ranger, Military): Decreases infection rate from food or drink items (~15% or 20%).

More bandana styles (Plain, Flags, Patterns, Skull design): Cosmetic. Epaulets (Gold, Silver): Use mask slot. Christmas sweaters (Tree, Reindeer, etc.): Cosmetic Goggles (motorcycle, safety, welding, skiing, etc.): Cosmetic. Gives 20% infection resistance from enemy hits. Unique WWI Trenchcoat: Gives both increased storage and damage reduction over the base trenchcoat, but not as much as either upgraded coat. Upgradeable (+Armor / +Storage slots) (Only 1 upgrade can be added). Trenchcoats (Tan/khaki, Black, Olive drab ): Vest slot. Trenchcoats that give extra storage slots and come in different colors (main colors of black, tan, and military olive drab), but slow you down when running. They would take up the mask slot (and maybe the eyes as well?), and provide 10-20% passive resistance to infection. I gave it some thought, and maybe the solution would be a gas mask:Ĭivilian, Ranger and Military grades Painter's Respirator, Russian GP5, and the M40, respectively. So earlier I was thinking about the infection meter and how nice it would be if there were an item that would reduce the amount of infection taken. I'd be happy to put a link to your mod here and add your name to the credits! “It’s an example of a product intended for one purpose ending up with a practical application for a second use,” Casey says.Feel free to make mods using ideas from this list, but please give credit and leave a comment here. The company initially struggled to get drug and departments stores to stock the product and magazines refused to accept advertising until the Ladies Home Journal finally agreed. Red Cross nurses, however, found another use for the cotton substitute as makeshift sanitary pads.Īfter the war’s conclusion, Kimberly-Clark repurchased Cellucotton surplus from the military and, in 1920, launched its first commercial product-Kotex (short for “cotton texture”) sanitary pads-made from 40 plies of Cellucotton hand-wrapped in fine gauze. With cotton in short supply during World War I, the company trademarked the creped wadding as Cellucotton and sold it to the American military for surgical dressing. Sanitary Padsĭuring a European tour in 1914, Kimberly-Clark executives discovered a material made from processed wood pulp that was five times more absorbent than cotton and cost half as much to produce.
