Grassroots: A Guide to the Paintball Industry

April 24th, 2010

Grassroots Part 1
A Manual To The Industry

By;
Aleksey Kunyavsky Royt

Chapter 1: Introduction
I wanted to write an article on my thoughts as pertains to the paintball industry at it is right now. I would like to start out by stateing the obvious, paintball has fallen quite a ways from where it once was (in the GLORIOUS days of 10man PSP) for those of you who remember such shenanigans. Paintball has become less of a sport, and more of a High School type of environment. Players now-a-days, humble as they may seem, are spoiled down to the root. Hence the name of the article being “Grassroots”. Why that name? Because the root of a stem of grass is the single, and most basic orginisim I can think of. Thats where paintball needs to go right now, back to the basics. Within the chapters of this article you will find some truths about the industry’s faults as they stand right now. If you enjoy the sports persona as it is now, please close this now and never open it back up again, for those of you who are even remotley intrested, enjoy.

To understand my point of you, let me tell you a little bit about myself. I started paintballing in early 1999 when I was just 8 years old. My first time playing was in a small patch of woods in Prepyat, Ukraine. My dad loved paintball, so by the time I was ready to play. I was up to date on all the modern terminology at the time. Paintball has always been a outlet for me to express happiness, anger, and frustration. My father dragged me into the woods on my 8th birthday, it was shortly after I recieved the news we would soon be moveing out of the country to Sweden. We played all day, and I didnt think about moveing once. I was hooked. For 3 years I played with my dad’s old 1998 WGP Sniper 2. When we lived in Sweden, at age 10… I had finally saved enough money from helping at my uncle’s deli to buy my own gun. 3 years of saveing, and there was my beautiful WGP Angel Dark LCD. Its been paintball every weekend ever since. Wether it was Ukraine, Russia, Sweden, Palm Beach, New York, Ohio, or right here in SoCal, I was at the field every other Saturday playing paintball.

Chapter 2: Stimulating My Package
Now paintball has turned from the small backwood passtime, to an internationally recognized extreme sport. In fact, paintball is the largest extreme sport in the United States, as well as the only team oriented one. However, with all the noterity, comes negative aspects. The sport takes on new faces, and with those new faces… Come new ideas. Some are good, some not. With that said, lets get right to the bad.

Do to our wonderful Democratic fathead’s sitting in there ivory towers, our economy has all but evaporated. This has no doughbt affected the sport. With less money to spend, less people are buying new products. Even less people are playing all together. Fields are closeing do to lack of income to pay property taxes, bills, etc. Theres a bigger picture to it then most think. When a field closes, sure it sucks for us players. However, think of the employees. The managers, the referres, the techs, the clerks, everyone. They all loose there jobs. Not only are they away from paintball, they are away from stable income. Small stores suffer as well. With eBay, and PBNation, and other Buy, Sell, Trade outlets. The smaller stores are looseing money. They dont have players buying there newer products. This elimnates there main income source, and again, just like the fields. Jobs are lost.

Less and less players are playing tournament paintball because it is just to expensive to maintain a steady tournament habit. The average professional paintball player makes the average wage of a taxicab driver. They play the sport out of the simple love of it. Tournament players should know, playing pro is all our dreams, but you cant make a living out of it. Had this been a diffrent world, wed be swimming in money. Paintball is labeled as “barbaric”, “immature”, and “unchallenging”. The people who put these statements forward have never set foot on a field, and if they did the met the people mention in the course of the next chapter. I will conclude with this, the economy has no doughbt slammed the industry hard. However, bigger companys such as Giant Paintball, need to suck it up, and look out for the players. For if theres nobody to leech money from, there buiseness will soon be gone as well.

Chapter 3: Paintball On The Runway
We have all heard it, the three letter word that makes me shiver and shovel shank a baby everytime I hear the phrase uttered. What is this magic phrase? I give you… “thats agg”. One word. One single word, has defined an entire paintball sub-culture. HK Nation. A group of people so blaitently obsessed with themselves they are willing to spend more on there sandana’s then some of us do on rent for our apartments. Do not get me wrong, I am all for style in paintball. However, each person should be able to wear what they want. For example, a friend of mine owns a pair of pink JT teams, and a blue PBJunkie sockhat (yes its ancient I know). Everytime we go to the field, he would get laughed at. We would hear the snickers, and ignore it. Simply put, hes comfortable in it.

Five or six years ago paintball gear was bought because it was comfortable. Not because it was cool to wear. Honestly, if I wanted to go to a fashion show, I would hit Sunset Blvd, I would have never expected it at the paintball field. HK Nation has defined a chapter in paintball history on there own. However, few people understand what HK actually is. In its truest form, its a buiseness. All the profits of which go to fund a team. A noble cause at its core, however, this merchandise has taken on a mind of its own. Keep that in mind next time you make fun or insult somebody because there sandana costs
more then their car.

Keep in mind this is not a chapter that is meant to bash HK. HK is a noble idea, just like any team. Or any small buiseness in paintball. However, a couple of idiots misunderstood what HK really is and blew it out preportion. Unfortunatley, tons of people chose to follow those kids, leading us to where we are today.

Chapter 4: Bullshyt Bully’s
We have all seen them. The guys running around, totteing there SL94’s. You know, the kids that think just because there gun costs more then the average car payment, they are the hottest **** at the field. The same people that laugh at rentals, and beginners, when they get bunkered. It is people like this that turn younger, and newer players away from paintball. The same kids who overshoot beginners, the same kids who wipe because its fun to cheat, the same kids who are bringing down our sport.

When I show up in the morning, nowhere on the waiver does it say “Be prepared for dueche bags trying to ruin your day”. I understand, its paintball. **** happens. However, I belive a certain code of ethics should be STRICTLY enforced when at the field. All of which I will outline in the 2nd part of my epic anti-sociological rant.

Do you want this to stop? Do something about it. Step up at the field and tell people it is not okay. Have some self-respect, and respect for others. Stick up for the little guy. Be the hero, help someone out. Who knows, that kid with the Spyder, that just got bonusballed, and never wants to play again. He could have been the next Oliver Lang…. Keep that in mind next time you decide a beginner is a good target for a chrono.

Chapter 5: What Do I Do Now?
If you got this far, you are thinking one of two thing. Either “wow hes full of ****”, in which case toss this in the nearest river, or garbage can, or even the nearest hobo cart right now. Or if you are one of the few who agree with some if not all the points presented above, please read on. You may be asking “what can I do to help steer us back in the right direction?”. Here are a few simple tricks to make, at least your own paintball experience, more pure, and origional.

Step one. Step up! Get petitions going to get a code of ethics enforced at your field. Lets make everyones paintball experience more enjoyable. Always, ALWAYS, hold yourself to a hire standard. So you see a stranger whose snake form isnt as good as it should be. Go over, introduce yourself, ask if hed like some help in learning. Invite him to play with you. I have friends from all diffrent caliburs. Wether it be the friend that shoots a Spyder Sonix, or the friend that plays for the Ironmen. I show them all the same respect, curtosey, and good time when they play with me. You should do the same, even for strangers!

Step two. Kill your ego. I dont mean take your $1300 beauty and throw it into a car compacter. I mean, get over yourself. If somebody shows up wearing a shiny pink jumpsuit, show them the same respect you would the kid in the $1300 sandana. Judge people be personality. Not by skill, not by financial stand point, and definetly not by fashion sense! Wear what makes you COMFORTABLE. Not what makes you look cool to other people. Where what you WANT to wear. Not what society wants you to wear.

Step three. Support the small guy. Play in leagues runs by teams and players. They need the money, and they are the purest, drama free leagues around. They are they because they want YOU to have a good time. The SCPL, the WCPPL, the AFTS series, the NEPL, and the NYPL are all great examples of such leagues.

Step four. Buy from smaller shops once in a while. I understand buying a used Ego9 is much cheaper then a new one. However, dont hit PBN, or ******, or eBay, or even Craigslist for all your purchases. Show some love to your local store. Trust me, even the smallest purchaces from pods, to guns, is all more helpful to them then you think.

Step five. Respect eachother ON the field. If someone is getting out, who cares what happened between games, last game, or if there new. Let them out. Dont let a rope of paint longer then an anaconda fly at them. If you go play with beginners, set ur semi to the lowest RoF possible, or bring out a mech, or even a pump. After games, shake hands, congradulate each other. I mean jesus christ its a game! Everyone will walk away with a smile, regardlessof who won or lost.

Step six. Start a revolution. Do what is in the above 4 steps, eventually others will pick it up. Who knows, we might ignite something here. Maybe a switch will come on in everyones mind, and make them realise what THEY need to do to improve the sport as a whole. Never underestimate yourself.Look at Martin Luther King, one man started a whole cultural revolution. Who knows, maybe this article will inspire someone to be the spoken savior of the paintball industry.

Chapter 6: Conclusion
In conclusion, this is the code of ethics I personally follow. You do not have to do anything listed in the article. Nothing will happen. However, if you do. You will be a better person for it. On and off the field. Show respect for yourself, and all those around you. I dont care if you dislike the article.

I went into this knowing most of you would disagree with me, make fun of me, bash me, whatever. I wrote this article for those few of you who TRULEY want to better the sport and not just talk about it. So go ahead, give me feedback, contact me through the Nation, through Myspace, through AIM. Whatever. Have a good one ladies and gentlamen. Remember, play locally… think globaly.

Like what you read? Have an opinion? Discuss this article here!

Teams Step Aside, Paintball As a Sport Needs Sponsors.

March 7th, 2010

Paintball players don’t make shit for money. We all know this. Some of the best players in the world might bring in 30k/year + maybe another 10 for advertising. We all want this to change yet the ones who can make it happen are honestly doing fuck all to do it.

The way I see it is every sport in the world that has high paid professionals have three things:

A) Sponsors (out of sport)
B) Media Attention
C) Accessibility

Without all 3, a sport won’t go anywhere.

A) Sports need sponsors, especially junk food and fast food sponsors like McDonalds, Coca-Cola, etc, to give them the money. These companies are packed with more money than they know what to do with, and since everyone in the world is greedy as fuck, they’re willing to spend that money to make more. This is why the Olympics are sponsored by McDonalds, and Nascar is sponsored heavily by Coke. These companies believe that if they get some fit, high performance athlete to endorse their products, people won’t be so afraid to buy from them, thinking it’s not as bad for you as they think. Companies like Bawls and Monster know paintball exists, and they provide small sponsorships like drinks or maybe some prizes, but in reality these companies are guppies compared to Coke, Pepsi, McDonalds, and other companies that literally pay billions a year for advertising.

The only people who can get the ball rolling with these companies are the top guys at Millenium, PSP, and NPPL. Without these companies on board you all can forget about paintball ever being a regular showcase on ESPN, SNET, or TSN. So until someone from one of the leagues steps up, paintball is always going to remain a sport with no money.

B) Media is powered by two things, money, and public interest. These two things are what you acquire when you complete A, this is probably the easiest thing to do and usually ends up happening all on its own. When big companies start endorsing sports and events, people get curious.

C) Accessibility means a sport that anyone can see on TV and then just go and do. Paintball is pretty close to achieving this, except for the fact that paintball has popularity peaks and droubts depending on when you are. So-cal, as we all know is paintball central. Anyone there can hop in the car and drive 20 minutes to a paintball field, and have a great day for 40 bucks, whereas if you want to play in say, Northern Saskatchewan, you’re likely going to have to drive upwards of an hour and spend nearly 100 dollars for a day of play. Of coarse, as money and interest rise with A and B, more fields will sprout up everywhere possible, and this issue will likely fade away.

Paintball leagues at this point are putting way too much of their focus into paintball, relying on gear companies to pay the bills and bring the interest, so therefor an event will only ever be contained to the paintball community, instead of opening the public eye.

So basically, if players are to ever get paid, if paintball is to ever grow, and if prices are to ever get cheaper, someone bigger than a single player has to take some initiative.