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-   -   Anybody else play paintball? (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/250932-anybody-else-play-paintball.html)

azasadny 11-12-2005 06:33 PM

Anybody else play paintball?
 
I took my best friend and my son to play paintball today. We've been too busy to play for the past year, but before that we played quite a few times. We bought the gear and have alot of fun. The sport is especially nice on a cool fall or spring day, since you tend to run around and get heated up with all the protective clothing. Anyone else do paintball?

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1131849142.jpg

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86 911 11-12-2005 09:34 PM

I went paintballing once. It was fun, but the paint balls hurt like he!l when the hit you. I remember I got 2 bruises that lasted 2+ weeks. I don't think I want to do it again. Then again, I was wearing a short sleeve shirt and thin long pants, so that may have added to the displeasure of being shot at. It's a very exhilerating and war-like sport, which is what I liked most about it.

azasadny 11-13-2005 04:24 AM

Matt,
Yep, the paintballs can sting a bit. We dress in layers and I wear Goretex duck hunting gear and that keeps the paintballs from hurting. Outdoor paintball is more enjoyable (it's also called woodsball) than the indoor "speedball" because you're further from each other when you're playing. I would never guessed that it would be so much fun to play "capture the flag" as an adult!

Seahawk 11-13-2005 05:09 AM

I play twice a year and really enjoy it...I don't own my own gear and the range we play at does a good job of making sure the paintball guns aren't set on stun!
My son (11) and his friends, however, all own their own stuff and play at least once a month. I set up a course on my farm and the mom's and dad's rotate supervising the fun.
The neat thing is that the kids all work for their gear, paint balls and compressed air.

BRPORSCHE 11-13-2005 12:27 PM

I love paintball! The best place for it is parks that are located around some woods or heavy foliage. And the time has to be the evening so you have low sunlight. Makes for one hell of a game.

azasadny 11-13-2005 02:10 PM

I enjoy playing in a field with buildings (made out of pallets and plywood) or in the woods with trees, branches, logs... it's alot of fun but I sure am sore today!

AFC-911 11-13-2005 02:15 PM

Played a few times (all at night)...At an industrial complex and in the middle of nowhere.

I must say that playing at night makes the game even more fun because you can be very stealthy. And not only that, when things get really quiet, you start to think that you're making too much noise!

The only thing that sucks is that when someone camps out in a rooftop, it really puts you at a disadvantage!!

86 911 11-13-2005 02:27 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by BRPORSCHE
I love paintball! The best place for it is parks that are located around some woods or heavy foliage. And the time has to be the evening so you have low sunlight. Makes for one hell of a game.
Ditto!

legion 11-14-2005 05:42 AM

I play.

I used to play quite a bit, but I only made it out once this year. (Strangely, I'ved played much less since I bought a Porsche. ;))

I've gone through a lot of different equipment in the four years I've been playing. I currently have a 2003 Bushmaster BKO (heavily modified) as my primary marker and a 2004 Autococker (if you can call it that--I built it myself) as a backup. Everything runs off of compressed air--no CO2 for me.

I've got a few paintball jerseys that I wear when I play. One is flourescent blue and the other is bright red...I don't need no stinkin' camo.

The most important piece of equipment by far is the mask. If you go cheap everywhere else, spend absolute top dollar on a mask. This is the part that protects your eyes, ears, nose and mouth from projectiles traveling at 290 feet-per-second. Also, the cheaper masks tend to be much less comfortable than the high-end ones. I've got a Dye Invision mask and it doesn't feel like I'm wearing anything when it's on.

BKO

cashflyer 11-14-2005 06:14 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by azasadny
.... Outdoor paintball is more enjoyable (it's also called woodsball) than the indoor "speedball" ....
Outdoor paintball, we call paintball. Indoor paintball, we call "gay". :D

I used to play a good bit, but not in the last couple years. Surprisingly (or not) the decline in paintball coincides with me having gotten married.

I love my area of SC with plenty of wooded areas to play in. We wear lots of camo, and make stealth and tactics the primary emphasis. We never play speedball and never play indoors.

Anyway, I own an original, 1st gen Kingman Spider (with bolt mod) and also an M3 Sniper. I actually prefer the Spider over the M3, even though the M3 has electronic trigger, fire rate control, multiple modes, etc..

The spider is much lighter, fool-proof, and a better shooter. (The M3 is probably better on a speedball course where "spray-n-pray rules the day".) Unfortunately, the original Spider is NLA and I think they also discontinued the re-release - called the Spider Classic.

Co2 on both my markers.

johnco 11-14-2005 06:15 AM

we used to play long ago with the old singleshot guns, Splatmaster and Sheridan guns. it took a much better shot then to hit anyone. Those Sheridans could break the skin. lost interest when the autos came out. we would load up the dune buggies with 12-14 people and head out to the deep wooded areas. we used to play urban ambush too. sort of a driveby assasination thing until I shot my brother in the eye when he drove up to shoot me from his car. the paintball somehow curved up and then under his sunglasses. it wasn't pretty.

lendaddy 11-14-2005 06:19 AM

Custom Autococker here, way too much $ into that hobby:)

We play outdoors on 15 acres half wooded with big elevation changes. I have bulk COČ on site but Comp. air or Nitrogen are better.

legion 11-14-2005 06:25 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by cashflyer
on a speedball course where "spray-n-pray rules the day"
One of the tactics I use in speedball is that when I know I can't hit someone, but I need to keep them from firing (could be several reasons for this), I will hit the back of their bunker with rapid fire to keep them from poking out.

I prefer speedball over woodsball. I like 5 on 5 or less. Why? Because I can keep track of every player on the field and their movement. I'm an aggressive "front" player, so in woodsball I am likely to get ambushed or flanked.

azasadny 11-14-2005 06:29 AM

I agree that the mask is very important! I bought my son and I good JT masks and they protect our face, ears and eyes and they don't fog up like the cheap ones do...

cashflyer 11-14-2005 07:54 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by legion
One of the tactics I use in speedball is that when I know I can't hit someone, but I need to keep them from firing (could be several reasons for this), I will hit the back of their bunker with rapid fire to keep them from poking out.
Even in woodsball, we use "covering fire" when moving from location to location if we are in a close-fire situation. Kind of a standard tactic (the guys that made up our team were all ex-military).

Quote:

Originally posted by legion
I prefer speedball over woodsball. I like 5 on 5 or less. Why? Because I can keep track of every player on the field and their movement. I'm an aggressive "front" player, so in woodsball I am likely to get ambushed or flanked. [/B]
The reasons you like speedball are exactly the reasons we like woodsball. We play in large wooded areas with teams that are big enough to break down into 2 or 3 man squads. It forces you to be more of a strategist than an agressor. Some people don't like that it makes for long games, but you end up with great opportunities to orchestrate big war games. Set up a squad as flag defenders, send out flanking squads, send out a hunter/killer squad, send an agressor squad up the middle, set up diversionary fire, set up sniper nests, etc.

I prefer NOT knowing where every enemy is. It heightens the adrenaline of the game when you have to consider every downed log as possible enemy cover and you have to consider every sound you hear as somebody getting ready to send bursts of stinging death your way.

legion 11-14-2005 08:03 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by cashflyer
I prefer NOT knowing where every enemy is. It heightens the adrenaline of the game when you have to consider every downed log as possible enemy cover and you have to consider every sound you hear as somebody getting ready to send bursts of stinging death your way.
I can appreciate that. Sometimes I like to play woodsball too.

Speedball to me is like chess. You have a well-defined playing field with fixed, eveny-matched teams. The real strategy there is in moving from bunker to bunker, as there is usually a "critical" (from which you can mop the field) bunker in speedball, and various methods of attacking it.

I've played in a few tournaments (all speedball). I lost interest because of the rampant cheating at that level.

cstreit 11-14-2005 09:47 AM

Okay, I'll bite 'cause I'm ignorant... How would you cheat in the game? (non-playing shooters off to the side?!)

lendaddy 11-14-2005 09:51 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by cstreit
Okay, I'll bite 'cause I'm ignorant... How would you cheat in the game? (non-playing shooters off to the side?!)
It's an honor system when you're hit. Cheaters wipe of the paint and keep playing.

legion 11-14-2005 10:21 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by lendaddy
It's an honor system when you're hit. Cheaters wipe of the paint and keep playing.
That's basically it, though there are several variations. Pro players are taught to slide if hit while running to cover a shot with dirt. Players frequently "play on", continuing to fire when hit, then calling themselves out. The basic thing is there are always more players than refs, so things will slip by.

Also, it used to be that paintball guns in tournaments were limited to one shot per trigger pull, but some ingeneous teams wrote their own software that allowed you to "ramp-up" (allowed more shots than trigger pulls) or go full auto after a specific sequence of trigger pulls had been entered.

AFC-911 11-14-2005 12:45 PM

Playing outdoors and at night requires a LOT more strategy than a "speedball" where you know your opponents locations and could just spray paint.

The lack of lighting also heightens the adreline...I love playing the sniper and have everyone hunting me, but they don't know where I am!!

All this talk makes me want to play!


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