Some comments in threads floating around about the SMG68 got me thinking about what the game was like in those early days, well before my time (Some of it before my birth, honestly) when we were transitioning from pumps as the main style to semis.
I know that there's a long-running debate as to whether the SMG60 or Camille was the first semi-auto paintball gun (As far as I can tell, Camille may have existed first but the SMG60 was for sale before anything derived from Palmer's autococking Sheridan designs), but looking back I can see there were tons of oddball designs that popped up before the first blowbacks and autococking Sheridans kinda solidified their places on the market. Was it a fairly chaotic time with respect to what people were using? Did the transition happen fairly quickly or was it a more drawn-out process? What designs popped up during that time do people wish had gained more traction? Essentially, what was it like to play while the whole sport was going through such a big technical upheaval?
I know that there's a long-running debate as to whether the SMG60 or Camille was the first semi-auto paintball gun (As far as I can tell, Camille may have existed first but the SMG60 was for sale before anything derived from Palmer's autococking Sheridan designs), but looking back I can see there were tons of oddball designs that popped up before the first blowbacks and autococking Sheridans kinda solidified their places on the market. Was it a fairly chaotic time with respect to what people were using? Did the transition happen fairly quickly or was it a more drawn-out process? What designs popped up during that time do people wish had gained more traction? Essentially, what was it like to play while the whole sport was going through such a big technical upheaval?
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