The Sport in Paintball
Call it “War Games” or “Sniper Games”, Paintball
stands to be one of the most popular of adrenaline-driven games in
the world. Basically, the whole concept of Paintball is quite
simple. Participants of the sport are tasked to eliminate opponents
from the Paintball play, through the utilization of paintballs,
thus “marking” them out of the game. Paintball games utilize air
guns in propelling the actual paintballs, which are basically
gelatin capsules containing non-toxic colored substances. Most
paintballs primarily contain polyethylene glycol, dye, and water
soluble substances.
As a sport, Paintball could be played either
indoors or outdoors, and a game could take various forms, with
various rules, especially with the “zones” which would define a
player as “eliminated” from the game. In the United States, over 10
million participate in Paintball events, and stands to be one of
the safest sports in existence. Paintball’s “cult following” is
quite strong, even to the point that there are even Paintball
slangs surrounding Paintball. Paintball games, as a sport, require
Paintball equipment, which basically comprises of safety equipment,
as well as Paintball “launching” equipment, in the form of
compressed air powered guns.
Variations of Paintball Games
Among the most popular variations of Paintball
games are Woodsball, Scenario and Speedball. Speedball is also
often referred to as Tourneyball, defined by the circumstances of
play. Basically, the rules of Paintball are geared for Paintball
participants’ enjoyment, and vary from one to another, on a general
scale. The most common of Paintball games involves teams, usually
two, and an objective, like “capturing the flag” of the opposing
team, or eliminating the “general”, thus determining which team had
won the Paintball game.
Both casual Paintball players and seriously
dedicated Paintball players have been drawn to Paintball, with
games lasting between anything from five minutes to half an hour,
some even reaching hours.
Hayes Noel and Bob Gurnsy are known to have
started setting Paintball on the track it is on today. In 1976 both
friends were quite inspired by stories from a common friend who had
been on a trip to Africa, hunting buffalos, and thought of
recreating the adrenalin rush from it. The Nelspot 007 was then
used in the first Paintball game in the 27th of June in 1981. The
Nelspot 007 was an agricultural gun created by the Nelson Paint
Company, which made the first of Paintballs in the 1950s. The
products made by the Nelson Paint Company were used in marking
trees from a distance, as well as ranch owners and cattle owners in
marking their cows.
Today, Paintball stands strong as a fun filled
recreational activity for one and all, young and old.
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