Read this somewhere, thought it could help newbies.
Every manufacturer produces many types and brands of there balls. Their most expensive brand, that possesses the thinnest, roundest shell and brightest, best marking fill. These paintballs, such as Hellfire, Evil and Inertia, are best suited to low pressure markers (tourny or non tourny) and warm weather. High pressure guns will easily blow this paint apart, and nasty weather will render difficult to use, or even at all.
Mid-level brands, by any manufacturer, are the most consistent. Their shells very round, their fills mark well and they are extremely little from batch to batch. These types of balls include Inferno, Marbalizer, or Ramp and are generally priced in the middle of the pack. Tournament and Rec ballers make good use of them.
Beneath those brands are those best suited for high pressure, entry level markers like Tippmanns and Spyders/Kingmanns, and for a wide spectrum of weather conditions, due to there thicker shells and better withstand hot and cold weather and the higher the impacts of bolts slapping back and forth at higher pressure.
-Will
Every manufacturer produces many types and brands of there balls. Their most expensive brand, that possesses the thinnest, roundest shell and brightest, best marking fill. These paintballs, such as Hellfire, Evil and Inertia, are best suited to low pressure markers (tourny or non tourny) and warm weather. High pressure guns will easily blow this paint apart, and nasty weather will render difficult to use, or even at all.
Mid-level brands, by any manufacturer, are the most consistent. Their shells very round, their fills mark well and they are extremely little from batch to batch. These types of balls include Inferno, Marbalizer, or Ramp and are generally priced in the middle of the pack. Tournament and Rec ballers make good use of them.
Beneath those brands are those best suited for high pressure, entry level markers like Tippmanns and Spyders/Kingmanns, and for a wide spectrum of weather conditions, due to there thicker shells and better withstand hot and cold weather and the higher the impacts of bolts slapping back and forth at higher pressure.
-Will