If paintball started making the sort of money it once did in terms of ad revenue from the States, then I think Matt Tudor [Owner of PGi and about 25 other mags] would maybe think about bringing it back but I cannot see that ever happening again.
When we started out in 1990, the UK industry just about kept the PGi ship afloat: Back then, we used to have 15 or so retail outlets and quite a few industry people who all advertised in PGi.
When the domestic market hit rock-bottom in about 96 or so, we had a decision to make.
The only way the magazine could stay alive was to go international and embrace the US in our editorial; that move alone saved PGi from the paintball dead-box.
Mind you, some people were blabbing we had 'sold out' because the focus of the magazine had shifted westward and they weren't able to read their team names in the S****horpe five man anymore.
The fact that we couldn't have survived if we had remained focused on the UK seems to have escaped these critics but that failed to dissuade them.
We covered all the big UK and European events as well as the Yank stuff and so there really wasn't that much to bitch about, but bitch they did.
There has also been a seismic shift in reading media which for a lot of the young people now seems to have taken residence on the net with digital magazines being the order of the day though I agree, there's something missing when you are reading off a screen as against something in your hand.
The question isn't really if PGi is coming back or not, it's much larger than that, it's whether or not this trend toward internet-based media continues and I believe it's inevitable it will.
PGi is dead, long live the ....... er ....... erm ...... monitor? ...