Appart from kevin qmto, BW superman, bacci paintball and ChuckLove I dont really watch paintball video on a regular basis
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That gun is also absurdly tall.
I love it.
Doc.Doc's Machine & Airsmith Services: Creating the Strange and Wonderful since 1998!
The Whiteboard: Daily, occasionally paintball-related webcomic mayhem!
Paintball in the Movies!
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Influencers as in Social Media defined, who cares.
Real paintball influencers are people who really brought innovation to the sport in some way (historically) like Jack Wood, Simon Stevens, Tom Kaye, Bud Orr, Jim Lively, Ollie Lang, Dave Youngblood, Glenn Palmer, Wayne Dollack ...etc. Current influencers Jack Wood, Simon Stevens, really don't know beyond these two right now because I spend more time playing then worrying about "growing the sport" or "caring about social media fame". The sport overall seems fairly stagnate right now with little evolution in technology, game mechanics or venues. Not many players or innovators are standing out to me right now.Last edited by Grendel; 11-13-2022, 07:00 PM.
"When you are asked if you can do a job, tell 'em, 'Certainly I can!' Then get busy and find out how to do it." - Theodore Roosevelt
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JIm really was the first to put together on a national level paintball tournaments with standardization of rules across many tournaments across North America "the Masters" . Basically the predecessor of the various tournament organizations of 2K through now. There is a chance we are also speaking of two different Jim Livelys paintball had one and music had another.
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we tried to influence the path of paintball culture. it was deliberate. a push for real facts and figures to guide things rather than marketing hype and companies products.
all it did was build us an enemy list. everyone has a holy grail, no matter how much they don't think they do, everyone does ... and you will find it if you test everything. i know, i repeatedly found mine. the threats of lawsuits, insane rantings of well established personalities, there are still people in paintball who hate us.
it was a wild time. but TBH, the paintball well is not that deep scientifically speaking. and i reached a point with it where i was like "do we keep going and look at these increasingly meaningless things?" and i was a child of the internet, and knew that the death of a good content creator was when they stopped having something meaningful to say and keep going anyway. we didn't really have anything meaningful to say anymore.
WDP Angel LED Trouble Shooting Manual: Gun is inaccurate: buy better paint
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everyone has a holy thing that shouldn't be questioned. everyone.
probably has something to do with men rationalizing emotions. men in particular have issues with just saying "hey i like this" and instead rationalize there preferences into "hey i like this, therefore it is the best" and then they can short circuit their emotion into "i have this because its the best"
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I played paintball for years before I had internet, decades before I heard the term "social influencer".
So, if my paintball experience pre-dates the term of "influencer" ~ Who influenced me?
I will tell you; it was not some big, famous name. As a noob, I didn't know those names. They wouldn't have meant anything.
It was the local players who got me hooked. Just guys playing outlaw flag games in the woods.
That friendship, that camaraderie between players is what still keeps me going some 30+ years later.
When I had the chance, I would travel and meet those folks whose names were in the magazines (They weren't coming to see me, that's for sure.)
Names like Bud Orr, Jim Ioulo, Jerry Braun, Glenn Palmer, Dan Colby, Bob Gurnsey, Rob "Tiger" Rubin, Fred Moulton (Sgt Splatter), James "Mad-dog" Morgan, Tom Kaye, Bill & Adam Gardner...
The list of names of people I've met over the last 3-4 decades could go on, and yes, I was influenced by many of them. Basically, in awe of them as pioneers of the game.
Once I got over the whole hero worship thing, I realized I was more influenced by the players around me than the pictures on the cover of a magazine.
It was and still is YOU guys. All of you & me out on the field. The fun we have out there, on the field, is what influences me.
Not being "influenced" sitting in a chair watching a video screen is what maintains my own drive to continue getting out there and attempting to influence others
(in my own small way).
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I'm a millennial, an early millennial born in the 80's, but a millennial nonetheless; and I have no real idea what "influencer" even means. I love YouTube, and I'm on Reddit and Facebook, but I don't have a TikTok, or Twitter, or anything else.
So, I guess the guys that influenced me were Tom Kaye (I was an early Automag cultist, not even gonna lie), Rob "Tyger" Rubin (though he's lept off a psychotic cliff these days, his early WebDog videos were very important to my development as a player), the boys at WDP (because who wasn't envious of the almighty Angel?). And more recently, Hidden Hedgehog and NightmarePB (they're literally the only reason I ever gave magfed a chance, and it's wonderful), PBRML, and the boys at Nova/War Machine (I've never been so excited over a modern mech release).
​​​​
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'86er here. I hate the term influencer. I mean, the point is to directly influence me? Nah, screw that. I'll do the research myself & not be a sheep. I've done work for a proshop before & know what the score is, lol. There's a couple channels on Youtube I watch on occasion (PBRML, Punishers Paintball) but I watch them mainly for basic info on new products.
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I think being an "influencer" means you get attention of people, and then can sell them things that a company pays you to sell. It's marketing yourself in order to sell goods.
There's no issue with that, but it's so easy today to make this happen that anyone thinks they can do it. well, that and they seem to market towards children or young adults... kinda seems like a shady way to do business.
Mostly what we're discussing here in this thread are actual creators. They're selling things for their own business, not for a 3rd party.
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So I modified the original post to include some of the MCB members that post here regularly that have a youtube channel that way we could find them easy and hopefully help to grow them a little.
I am posting here the youtube channels that I have seen posted here as well as a couple that i watch if i missed some let me know, and i will add them. I did not include lonewolf or ans since they are mainly selling things. If someone i listed here is a MCB member and i messed up and need to move them to the original post I will do that.
DocFire Paintball
WillBallForSoup
ZDSPB
Punishers Paintball
Nova Paintball
PBRML
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I don't do youtube stuff, but do write ups. Ravi Chopra was someone I looked up to growing up, and is now a friend, and I'v done write ups/interview/recaps/reviews based on long form writing. It's my own style, but I try to be honest and look at the substance, and not selling points that we're handed. Anyway, www.hp-wt.com for anyone interested. Should have more coming in reviews of Simon's insert system, the Spire 5, and a couple of other things soon.
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The mention of magazine covers struck a minor chord for me. Being in Alaska, and backwater Alaska at that, I was of course nowhere near the cutting edge of paintball. And in those dim, dark, pre-internet days, the only resource I had was the magazines.
I was lucky in that, for that brief, shining moment, there were several active magazines, and the local newsstands actually carried them. APG, of course, Paintball Games International, Paintball Sports International, even Paintball Player's Bible, which eventually morphed into Paintball 2Xtremes. With work and luck, I was also able to get some Paintcheck magazines, that short lived RAGazine, SPLAT magazine, a brief subscription ot Paintball News etc.
So yeah, you can very much say the magazines were a heavy early influence on me.
And the main driver there, were the custom guns. Those were the ones that really cranked my handle- but, none of the magazines ever did actual articles on customs. All you'd get were a posed cover photo, and occasionally a shot or two from a tourney or big game inside. (In black-and-white of course.)
When I got online, back in the day when the entirety of the world's supply of online paintball was WARPIG and maybe a couple of Geocities pages, some of the earliest custom markers I saw were Brad Nestle's work under Olympic. The 'Cocker formerly known as Prince, a couple others he called (or somebody called) Spaceguns... Those, too, were a heavy influence.
Doc.Doc's Machine & Airsmith Services: Creating the Strange and Wonderful since 1998!
The Whiteboard: Daily, occasionally paintball-related webcomic mayhem!
Paintball in the Movies!
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There are a couple of paintball YouTubers who I think offer worthwhile content and haven't been mentioned so far.
Greg Montalvo, formerly of the ML Kings and now with the Latin Saints, has How to Play Paintball. True to its name, the channel has a large library of tutorials, drills, workout routines, etc. in addition to the usual event video blogs and such. His content is focused entirely on speedball, but a fair portion of what he teaches has application in the woods as well. Greg's day job is as a middle school science teacher, so he has pretty good communication skills. He's also pretty modest and likeable. He wears his religion on his sleeve a tiny bit, but not overly so. Usually I would find that a little off putting, but I appreciate that I can watch his channel on the living room TV without worrying he might say something I'd rather not have my 4 year old repeat. Paintball would benefit from having more genuinely nice, kind personalities in the spotlight and less macho nonsense.
Steven von Peterson's SVP Paintball does some great deep dives into speedball strategy and technique, and his field layout analysis videos are fascinating. I don't even play airball, but often enjoy watching him break down a layout. It has helped me make more sense of what I'm seeing when watching the NXL online and play better on the odd occasion that I play something like hyperball. Dude obviously has a very high paintball IQ and is very engaged with his audience.
The Automag: Not as clumsy or random as an electro. An elegant marker for a more civilised age.
www.reddit.com/u/MrBarraclough
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I unknowingly got to meet Greg when he was practicing the World Cup layout with Ruthless Factory. Nice guy, good player, had a great time taking pictures on the field while he was there. Shame the team he was with was thrown together at the last moment and didn't put on a great showing.
Steven is awesome. Super friendly, very knowledgeable, and his Discord community is an excellent group of people. He had a genuine love of the sport and isn't afraid to give his opinion. I like the way he approaches the divisional conversation.
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Just realized that after playing two events with the Latin Satins he played World Cup with a divisional team. Wonder what the story was there. I got the impression that he was brought onto the Saints as a kind of on-field coach/trainer to help the existing players develop. He announced back in the spring when he was still with the Kings that this was going to be his last competitive season. After years of grinding and struggling to establish the Kings as a serious pro team, I hated to see him end his career outside of the pro field at cup.
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I like this guy's channel PewPewMike . I can't remember how I found it, maybe it just showed up in my feed.
Either he has a massive old school collection, or he is a paintball tech that posts vids when cool stuff is in his shop
His vids are short and sweet
is he on MCB?
'96 RF Mini Cocker, '95 RF Autococker, 68-Automag Classic, Banzai Splash Minimag, Gen-E Matrix, Shoebox Shocker 4x4, Montneel Z-1, Tippmann Pro-Carbine, Tippmann Mini-Lite, Tippmann Model-98, Tippmann 68-Special, Spyder .50 cal Opus/Opus-A , Tippmann .50 Cal Cronus , Gog Enmey .50 cal , Tippmann Vert ASA 68-Carbine, Bob Long Millennium, ICD Grey Green Marble Splash Alleycat Deluxe (runs liquid co2) , Halfblock 2K4 Prostock Autococker , 2K RF Sniper II
Meleager7 Feedback: https://www.mcarterbrown.com/forum/b...ager7-feedback
Mel Eager Productions, Paintball Videos: https://www.youtube.com/@meleagerproductions9082
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Originally posted by Siress View PostFound this while doing the research. Pretty cool to find these relics.
Popular Paintball Channels.xlsx
Password is the name of the God of Old School paintball, and all things brass. Velcor
I've never heard of ~75% of these channels.
edit: Top 10 for those that don't bother viewing or contributing
Does my fellow Canadian Nightmare really not need a day job!??'96 RF Mini Cocker, '95 RF Autococker, 68-Automag Classic, Banzai Splash Minimag, Gen-E Matrix, Shoebox Shocker 4x4, Montneel Z-1, Tippmann Pro-Carbine, Tippmann Mini-Lite, Tippmann Model-98, Tippmann 68-Special, Spyder .50 cal Opus/Opus-A , Tippmann .50 Cal Cronus , Gog Enmey .50 cal , Tippmann Vert ASA 68-Carbine, Bob Long Millennium, ICD Grey Green Marble Splash Alleycat Deluxe (runs liquid co2) , Halfblock 2K4 Prostock Autococker , 2K RF Sniper II
Meleager7 Feedback: https://www.mcarterbrown.com/forum/b...ager7-feedback
Mel Eager Productions, Paintball Videos: https://www.youtube.com/@meleagerproductions9082
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Here is my Definitely-Not-A-Paintball-Influencer cheesy little paintball channel
I've been using it mostly to share some footage of recent Ontario, Canada MCB meetups ,and to also do some marker demos of stuff I was selling...
I have lots more footage, if I can get around to building or buying a better computerLast edited by Meleager7; 11-19-2022, 06:05 PM.'96 RF Mini Cocker, '95 RF Autococker, 68-Automag Classic, Banzai Splash Minimag, Gen-E Matrix, Shoebox Shocker 4x4, Montneel Z-1, Tippmann Pro-Carbine, Tippmann Mini-Lite, Tippmann Model-98, Tippmann 68-Special, Spyder .50 cal Opus/Opus-A , Tippmann .50 Cal Cronus , Gog Enmey .50 cal , Tippmann Vert ASA 68-Carbine, Bob Long Millennium, ICD Grey Green Marble Splash Alleycat Deluxe (runs liquid co2) , Halfblock 2K4 Prostock Autococker , 2K RF Sniper II
Meleager7 Feedback: https://www.mcarterbrown.com/forum/b...ager7-feedback
Mel Eager Productions, Paintball Videos: https://www.youtube.com/@meleagerproductions9082
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