One of the main things i try to impart on the renters on my team is to not waste paint. Without fail, the first thing they seem to want to do when the refs give the ok to take off barrel covers before the game starts is to shoot 10-20 or more times into a tree. Games can last up to 15 minutes & they’ve got 200 rounds (if they remembered to top off their hoppers after the last game). I have seen on more than one occasion a renter who i was pretty sure purposely emptied their hopper as fast as they could so they’d have an excuse to call themselves out. Which brings me to another thing i try to do which is calm their nerves before games, especially those that are visibly nervous. I try to convince them that it won’t be 1/10th as bad as it is in their mind. Maybe i should start showing them a couple of scars i have from particularly nasty hits & let them know that those are definitely the exceptions & most likely won’t happen to them. 🤣
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Helping Novice Players Have a Good First Day: A Mental Exercise
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Originally posted by homerj View PostMaybe i should start showing them a couple of scars i have from particularly nasty hits & let them know that those are definitely the exceptions & most likely won’t happen to them. 🤣
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I have actually reffed newbies and done this exact thing.
You're going to get shot. It will hurt a little. You will forget it in a moment.
Put your nose on the rear end of your marker and keep it there. This way you can always shoot what you are looking at.
Use both sides of your cover. Minimize coming over the top. If you keep one foot on the ground when kneeling you can move faster than when you have 2 knees on the ground.
You need to get closer than you think. I recommend 60 feet.
Communication and motion will beat shooting and shooting and shooting.
2 tricks;
Pair each new player with a field regular for a couple of games. You build good field culture this way, and the newbies will have some coaching.
If the groups are small enough and the players are green enough have the refs play with the group rather than just ref. The refs don't necessarily need a marker to do this, as the job isn't to shoot, but to coach.
We need these new players to return and play again. Treating them like they are a priority helps.
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Originally posted by Jonnydread View Post
3 - Don't be scared to make a move. The worst case scenario is you get shot and have to respawn. The best case scenario you pull off a great move and win the game for your
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I tell the new guys to stay farther back from their bunkers. I know they're not going to be far enough up field at first to worry about getting pinched, and it's so much easier to have fun when you're watching the game, instead of staring at plywood.Feedback
www.PhrameworkDesigns.com < Nelspot sears and triggers back in stock! Also Sterling feeds, Empire feedneck adapters, and some upcoming projects.
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Most of the games I host every month during good weather include at least 1 new player. We go through the safety talk and equipment orientation, then some strategy and how to have fun
1) You’ll get hit, it’s inevitable. It’s like bumping your arm on the corner of a table: it hurts for a few seconds, and then you don’t notice it unless you poke the bruise. (This helps give them a reference for how much it will and won’t hurt)
2) Communicate with your team. The other team will know where you are the moment you pull the trigger, so you might as well scare the other players by giving out their locations.
3) Don’t bunch up, for both defensive and offensive strategies. If you’re in one place, you’re just a bunch of marks in one spot and you can’t get multiple angles on other players.
4) Keep moving up, and try to flank your adversary. It won’t hurt much if you get hit, and you’ll get a better chance to experience shooting someone else.
5) Playing paintball is essentially like surfing the Internet: just point and click. Try to have fun and don’t overthink it too much.
6) Between rounds, give high fives to the people who shot you out and talk about the experience. Ask other players how you could have done it differently to get a better outcome. (Last month I had a kid who said he couldn’t ever hit his targets, so I did some basic training on how to adjust where you’re pointing the marker slightly based off of where your previous shot went. It seems so simple to experienced players, but it was gold for him. He tagged someone out the next round and was on cloud 9, finally in love with the game.)Originally posted by Chuck E Ducky:
“You don’t need a safety keep your booger hook on the bang switch.“
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