Hey folks, sorry for the rant, but I figured MCB is about the last place on the internet that has a chance of understanding what I'm about to type. Here we are, new board and only a year and half later do I figure out that it is a new board and I need to recreate my account. But good news, I can finally fix my foreign language grammar faux pas and now my name reads (I hope) "iron rabbit" as opposed to "rabbit iron" (or as everyone in KC called me "soggy test tube").
Anyway, it's been about 6 years since I've played paintball due to a number of factors, but where I see a lot of folks at this point announce "I'm back!" and ask when the next local get together is, I'm just here to sell off the collection. The sad part is, having not paid any attention to paintball since that last game, the sport as a whole has really made some moves in the right direction. Not to say everything is peaches and cream, but in the past week or so, I've seen some heartening stuff. Which is why this is in Dead Zone and not General Chat, because it's about paintball and the industry and culture around it.
I still see the "youths" in the BST forums looking for the latest hyper-shooter-blastem-flatter markers and hoppers, because buying rate of fire is always easier than actually acquiring skill. However, I see some of the top end companies are offering mechanical markers that are basically just their electro drive train with a mechanical multi-way valve in place of the solenoid. Yes, I remember when the Enmey came out, but wasn't too long after that I stopped participating and never really got to try an Enmey. This to me is interesting, because Tippmann has apparently changed hands and lost a bit of their famed reliability, and a lot of newer players and woodsballers are turning to markers like the Emek for their first gun instead of Model 98s or stacked tube blowbacks (sorry Spyder and Azodin). Plus these same manufacturers are also offering grip frames to turn their high end electros into mechanicals. I see they've got a mechanical-only tournament series, not as big as the NXL, but still out there and getting talked about. Whatever has brought on this mechanical resurgence, keep it going. I almost want to get back into the sport, but no, not happening.
Speaking of Tippmann changing hands, they've fully embraced the milsim look, haven't they? I admit there was a short period of time in the late '90s before I was fully into having my own gear and playing regularly that I thought what I wanted was a marker that looked like a real firearm, but then I got in and realized, like many of us, that paintball is its own thing and markers don't need to look like real guns. I guess I'm glad the Tippmann name is still around, but as a long time owner (still have my first marker, a Model 98 Custom from when they first came out) wish it didn't have to be this way. I do find it funny that, at the end of my time in paintball, Tippmann had come out with the Crossover - an electro that, with a flip of a switch, operated as a mechanical, so us woodsballers could have something that operated at whatever level of performance we needed. Which of course died, because it said Tippmann on the side of it so the tourney kids wouldn't touch it and us old fuddy duddies didn't think we needed it, or thought it was too expensive. And now Planet Eclipse (plus others) is offering grip frames to turn their top end electros into mechanicals. Huh. Maybe if a few more of us had bought the Crossover, Tippmann would still probably have been bought out/sold off, because that's where they were heading anyway. Still, I do find it odd.
Is anyone's local field (or personal field, if you run one) using Emeks with PALs as their field rental marker? Or even as an option with a bump in rental price? It looks like folks are getting the same reliability and rate of fire with that combo as I used to get with my M98C and a 12v Revvy (plus Turbo board and upgraded paddles), and they're pretty affordable. Oh, and they're offering the PAL in basic black, red, or blue. Why not offer it as field rental, and issue half in red and half in blue so everyone knows what team they're on? Makes me want to open a field (want to, but haven't won the lottery yet; as the old joke starts, how do you make a small fortune in paintball?) and offer the Emek/PAL combo as an upgrade, and something else as the base rental, with all the hoppers color coded to what side they are on, field paint only, and except for once a month when anything goes, you can have one battery, in the marker or in the hopper, but not both if you bring your own equipment.
Another segway, speaking of fields downgunning to protect their renters, who else's field is restricting "firepower" on their rental fields? I've read that Jaegers (in Kansas City, probably the field I've played at more than any other) has done this on their main, indoor rental field, which I long ago stopped bringing out my own electros to play on, preferring instead either the venerable Tippy or a pump. But I think this is a fantastic idea - the renters are the future of the sport, and if they get bonus balled by some wannabe with too much money (theirs or mommy's, it's the same either way), they generally won't come back. Plus the rest of us need more of a challenge playing against renters, and work on our other skills more.
I don't know if this is a good thing or a bad one, but I saw that Oklahoma D-Day's last game was this year. The park's still open, just not running the D-Day game again, as I understand it. Is this because of COVID? Dwayne got tired of doing it every year and wants to do something different? Is the sport as a whole moving away from the huge games and trying smaller but more frequent events? What's the tourney scene like these days? I see NXL is still going and just had the World Cup, any other national/international competitors, or just regional series?
What do you folks think? Will these trends continue, or will the next generation of markers go back to the rate of fire arms race we saw not all that long ago? And yes, I'm getting all my gear together and back into working order to put in the BST forums here and elsewhere. I am hanging onto a few pieces to make myself a memorial wall display, but other than that, it's all going.
Anyway, it's been about 6 years since I've played paintball due to a number of factors, but where I see a lot of folks at this point announce "I'm back!" and ask when the next local get together is, I'm just here to sell off the collection. The sad part is, having not paid any attention to paintball since that last game, the sport as a whole has really made some moves in the right direction. Not to say everything is peaches and cream, but in the past week or so, I've seen some heartening stuff. Which is why this is in Dead Zone and not General Chat, because it's about paintball and the industry and culture around it.
I still see the "youths" in the BST forums looking for the latest hyper-shooter-blastem-flatter markers and hoppers, because buying rate of fire is always easier than actually acquiring skill. However, I see some of the top end companies are offering mechanical markers that are basically just their electro drive train with a mechanical multi-way valve in place of the solenoid. Yes, I remember when the Enmey came out, but wasn't too long after that I stopped participating and never really got to try an Enmey. This to me is interesting, because Tippmann has apparently changed hands and lost a bit of their famed reliability, and a lot of newer players and woodsballers are turning to markers like the Emek for their first gun instead of Model 98s or stacked tube blowbacks (sorry Spyder and Azodin). Plus these same manufacturers are also offering grip frames to turn their high end electros into mechanicals. I see they've got a mechanical-only tournament series, not as big as the NXL, but still out there and getting talked about. Whatever has brought on this mechanical resurgence, keep it going. I almost want to get back into the sport, but no, not happening.
Speaking of Tippmann changing hands, they've fully embraced the milsim look, haven't they? I admit there was a short period of time in the late '90s before I was fully into having my own gear and playing regularly that I thought what I wanted was a marker that looked like a real firearm, but then I got in and realized, like many of us, that paintball is its own thing and markers don't need to look like real guns. I guess I'm glad the Tippmann name is still around, but as a long time owner (still have my first marker, a Model 98 Custom from when they first came out) wish it didn't have to be this way. I do find it funny that, at the end of my time in paintball, Tippmann had come out with the Crossover - an electro that, with a flip of a switch, operated as a mechanical, so us woodsballers could have something that operated at whatever level of performance we needed. Which of course died, because it said Tippmann on the side of it so the tourney kids wouldn't touch it and us old fuddy duddies didn't think we needed it, or thought it was too expensive. And now Planet Eclipse (plus others) is offering grip frames to turn their top end electros into mechanicals. Huh. Maybe if a few more of us had bought the Crossover, Tippmann would still probably have been bought out/sold off, because that's where they were heading anyway. Still, I do find it odd.
Is anyone's local field (or personal field, if you run one) using Emeks with PALs as their field rental marker? Or even as an option with a bump in rental price? It looks like folks are getting the same reliability and rate of fire with that combo as I used to get with my M98C and a 12v Revvy (plus Turbo board and upgraded paddles), and they're pretty affordable. Oh, and they're offering the PAL in basic black, red, or blue. Why not offer it as field rental, and issue half in red and half in blue so everyone knows what team they're on? Makes me want to open a field (want to, but haven't won the lottery yet; as the old joke starts, how do you make a small fortune in paintball?) and offer the Emek/PAL combo as an upgrade, and something else as the base rental, with all the hoppers color coded to what side they are on, field paint only, and except for once a month when anything goes, you can have one battery, in the marker or in the hopper, but not both if you bring your own equipment.
Another segway, speaking of fields downgunning to protect their renters, who else's field is restricting "firepower" on their rental fields? I've read that Jaegers (in Kansas City, probably the field I've played at more than any other) has done this on their main, indoor rental field, which I long ago stopped bringing out my own electros to play on, preferring instead either the venerable Tippy or a pump. But I think this is a fantastic idea - the renters are the future of the sport, and if they get bonus balled by some wannabe with too much money (theirs or mommy's, it's the same either way), they generally won't come back. Plus the rest of us need more of a challenge playing against renters, and work on our other skills more.
I don't know if this is a good thing or a bad one, but I saw that Oklahoma D-Day's last game was this year. The park's still open, just not running the D-Day game again, as I understand it. Is this because of COVID? Dwayne got tired of doing it every year and wants to do something different? Is the sport as a whole moving away from the huge games and trying smaller but more frequent events? What's the tourney scene like these days? I see NXL is still going and just had the World Cup, any other national/international competitors, or just regional series?
What do you folks think? Will these trends continue, or will the next generation of markers go back to the rate of fire arms race we saw not all that long ago? And yes, I'm getting all my gear together and back into working order to put in the BST forums here and elsewhere. I am hanging onto a few pieces to make myself a memorial wall display, but other than that, it's all going.
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