RPS All Star - The quality is about on par, just the caliber is slightly smaller than this
Diablo Hellfire - EXACT SAME STUFF (figures....someone owns someone)
RPS Marballizers - Well you compare high end with high end and high price with high price........
Just do a little barrel to bore size match and you'll figure it out.
These paintballs are Flatline friendly btw.
Strengths:
High quality paintballs
Consistent quality
Nice thick fill
Minimal seam
Weaknesses:
Expensive
Hard to clean if breaks in bag
Doesn't taste good
Review:
Normally I wouldn't EVER spend $70 on a case of paint, but hey it's Draxxus, i'll give it a shot. When I received the paintballs, there were a few breaks, but after a bit of cleaning up in one bag I was ready to go (Note: cleaning the paint is a bizzznatch!)
The paintballs shot nice and consistent and not one paintball broke in my A-5. Theres nothing really special about these paintballs just personally preference. I personally would rather save about $7 and spend it on All Stars instead. But if Draxxus floats your boat then well, I guess there you go. Quality made sense since it's price is around the high priced paintballs. The expensive price made me ration my paintballs =|
Conclusion:
If you crave really really good paint and have a really really stuffed wallet then sure go ahead.
My two cents.....over and out
-John
Rating:
8 out of 10
Last edited on Tuesday, June 29th, 2004 at 11:03 pm PST
Are paintballs supposed to taste good? And secondly you should no tournament paint is only ment for tournament quality guns. And where ever you buy your paintballs is obviously a bad shop because real professional shops check the paint in the bags to insure to you there are no breaks. And if your local pro shop did do that and u still found breaks they didnt do a good job or ur just clumsy with ur paint
Last edited on Monday, July 24th, 2006 at 8:40 pm PST