came across this on the nation (yeah sorry)
thought that it was a great statement
Innovation is dead.
There are no major hurdles left for us to jump.
The days of game-changing, sport-altering technology are behind us.
The beast that we’ve built, fed, and nurtured has slain us.
The industry is stagnant. We might have a shortage of ideas—but more importantly, we have a shortage of innovators. We have run them out of town—both on the internet forums, and on legal chariots in the name of our financial interests.
The inventors and dreamers have been ridiculed, sued, discouraged, and destroyed.
The guns are lighter, better, and faster than ever before. They outrun the loaders that feed them; the loaders race and crush the brittle paint that we demand to break on our opponents. The guns are as light as they’re going to get. The weight of 180 paintballs is heavier than some of the guns on the market. The markers will only become more top heavy; and they are as efficient, and as accurate as we’re ever going to get. A ball can only be so round…and a tube can only be so straight. All we have left is comfort features, milling\color changes, and useless upgrades.
We demand newer, lower priced products, and utmost performance. Yet we accost the new and the different. We hated screw-in tanks—they reminded us of Co2. We booed the Angel because it had a circuit board. We lamented the Halo because it looked different than the Revolution. We loathed the Ego because it wasn’t an Intimidator.
However, the days of those innovations are long gone. Rather than complaining about new, different products, we complain that they aren’t different enough. The Marq, Ego, and DM are the same gun every year—just rehashed and rehyped. But we want it newer, better, different, and less expensive.
Where is there room for new, and different?
We complain when it’s different, we complain when it’s the same. We complain when it’s the same model as last year; we complain when it’s new and costs more.
The technology curve is over.
All we have left is our industry and leagues—both of which are an unfathomable mess. If there’s any hope left in this sport, it will only come in these areas.
The next year will prove to be a crucial year in paintball—it will mark the fatal decline, or fresh start of paintball. Be a part of history. Support your local store—and the products they sell. Support the dreamers; embrace the new and different. Open your ears and eyes—or our ignorance is going to make us irrelevant.
thought that it was a great statement
Innovation is dead.
There are no major hurdles left for us to jump.
The days of game-changing, sport-altering technology are behind us.
The beast that we’ve built, fed, and nurtured has slain us.
The industry is stagnant. We might have a shortage of ideas—but more importantly, we have a shortage of innovators. We have run them out of town—both on the internet forums, and on legal chariots in the name of our financial interests.
The inventors and dreamers have been ridiculed, sued, discouraged, and destroyed.
The guns are lighter, better, and faster than ever before. They outrun the loaders that feed them; the loaders race and crush the brittle paint that we demand to break on our opponents. The guns are as light as they’re going to get. The weight of 180 paintballs is heavier than some of the guns on the market. The markers will only become more top heavy; and they are as efficient, and as accurate as we’re ever going to get. A ball can only be so round…and a tube can only be so straight. All we have left is comfort features, milling\color changes, and useless upgrades.
We demand newer, lower priced products, and utmost performance. Yet we accost the new and the different. We hated screw-in tanks—they reminded us of Co2. We booed the Angel because it had a circuit board. We lamented the Halo because it looked different than the Revolution. We loathed the Ego because it wasn’t an Intimidator.
However, the days of those innovations are long gone. Rather than complaining about new, different products, we complain that they aren’t different enough. The Marq, Ego, and DM are the same gun every year—just rehashed and rehyped. But we want it newer, better, different, and less expensive.
Where is there room for new, and different?
We complain when it’s different, we complain when it’s the same. We complain when it’s the same model as last year; we complain when it’s new and costs more.
The technology curve is over.
All we have left is our industry and leagues—both of which are an unfathomable mess. If there’s any hope left in this sport, it will only come in these areas.
The next year will prove to be a crucial year in paintball—it will mark the fatal decline, or fresh start of paintball. Be a part of history. Support your local store—and the products they sell. Support the dreamers; embrace the new and different. Open your ears and eyes—or our ignorance is going to make us irrelevant.