Depraved militants fighting for the ISIS in Iraq are attaching high-definition cameras to the barrels of their guns in order to film barbaric executions in gruesome detail.
The shocking pictures were captured by the terror group's Tigris River branch, who are currently engaged in fierce battles with up to 30,000 Iraqi Army soldiers and Shia militia roughly 70 miles north of the ISIS-held city of Tikrit.
Still images from the video shows a group of blindfolded prisoners being forced to their knees while heavily armed militants line up behind them. The photographs then cut to the gun barrel cameras, which display in graphic detail the young men being shot to death from point blank range.
The unorthodox camera view and the use of HD equipment give the footage the appearance of a computer game and is just the latest example of ISIS attempting to portray their atrocities in a manner that could appeal to young men and women living in the West.
They show a group of men being dragged before a baying crowd of local men, who gather along a roadside and use mobile phones to film the shocking scene.
One terrorists stands behind each of the five victims, brandishing all manner of guns - from what appears to be small .9mm handguns to massive AK47 assault rifles.
"The victims are believed to be a group of local men accused of attempting to organise an anti-ISIS resistance group, although this information has not been independently verified."
At least one of these larger weapons has an HD camera attached and captures in gruesome detail the horrific moment a bullet hits one of the prisoner's head, causing blood and brains to spray into the air.
The next image is a close-up shot of the five victims lying in a pool of their own blood while bloodthirsty onlookers stand and cheer, raising their fingers in the air in a symbol of religious devotion.
It was not immediately clear where the images were taken, but this particularly ISIS group typically operate in and around the remote villages off Iraq's Highway 1, such Azwya and Al-Shirqat.
The victims are believed to be a group of local men accused of attempting to organise an anti-ISIS resistance group, although this information has not been independently verified.
The shocking use of cameras attached to gun barrels is just ISIS' latest attempt to portray life under the terror group as similar to a video game.