Firststrike is not much different from the Sniperball of the early 90s. The main difference is that when sniperball came out, woodsball and milsim was "uncool". Nobody wanted to support it (ie no mags). But by the mid 00's, milsim was retro again, and companies actually started supporting the idea, and its completely usable now.
But when I think of technilogical advances, I think of things that literally changed the way we play the game.
Like in the 80s, direct feed, and c/a literally changed how we played.
Likewise, in the early 90s, guns got smaller, lighter, and faster. Powered hoppers, nitrogen, etc, made it so you could fire non-stop for an entire game.
Since then, I have not seen any real advances, beyond incremental improvements. The game we played in the early 90s is pretty much the same game we play today. I know the "electro revolution" came, but did not change the game, or how we played. It mostly just added new parts to fail.
Really, the main difference between 2021 and 1994, is guns have become cheaper to make and sell. To put that in context, in 1994, an "entry level" setup would be about $300, close to $550 with inflation. A "high end" gun in 1994 might be $1000 with all the options, which is about $1800 with inflation. Most fields charged $120 a case in 1994, about $200 in todays money.
I know I'm just sounding like a cranky old man... but I am a cranky old man
But when I think of technilogical advances, I think of things that literally changed the way we play the game.
Like in the 80s, direct feed, and c/a literally changed how we played.
Likewise, in the early 90s, guns got smaller, lighter, and faster. Powered hoppers, nitrogen, etc, made it so you could fire non-stop for an entire game.
Since then, I have not seen any real advances, beyond incremental improvements. The game we played in the early 90s is pretty much the same game we play today. I know the "electro revolution" came, but did not change the game, or how we played. It mostly just added new parts to fail.
Really, the main difference between 2021 and 1994, is guns have become cheaper to make and sell. To put that in context, in 1994, an "entry level" setup would be about $300, close to $550 with inflation. A "high end" gun in 1994 might be $1000 with all the options, which is about $1800 with inflation. Most fields charged $120 a case in 1994, about $200 in todays money.
I know I'm just sounding like a cranky old man... but I am a cranky old man
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