other paintballs

Here you will find a diverse selection of paintballs and accessories: paint grenades, pepperballs, firststrike, powderballs and paintballs in various sizes. Also discover steel balls, rubber-steel rubber balls, plastic bullets, glowing bullets and much more for the ultimate paintball fun.

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Paintballs no longer follow the classic gelatin principle. Rubberballs are made of elastic polymer/rubber – reusable and robust for training. Rubberballs with steel mixture contain metallic inclusions, which increases the mass density: higher penetration energy, flatter trajectory, but also greater wear on the barrel and seals. Ceramic balls are very dimensionally stable and weigh evenly, which improves hit reproducibility but makes them hard and potentially dangerous for protective gear and markers.

Functional special types

Pepper or OC projectiles release an irritant upon impact and are used in some tactical training and security contexts. Legal framework conditions and rules of use must be strictly observed. Chalk rounds are lightweight, powder-based markers for scenario training, ideal for hit tracking without a lot of cleaning work. Steel balls and high-velocity (HV) projectiles are designed for maximum energy transfer and precision; they require customized marker settings and are not permitted on all playing fields.

Caliber-specific notes

Classic field markers dominate the .68 caliber; here, standard paintballs and reballs remain the most common options. .50 offers a compromise between range and recoil — popular for CQB and magfed alternatives. .43 is primarily for pistols and short systems; the smaller projectiles allow for faster reload cycles and specially shaped empty shells, but with reduced marking volume.

Blank shells & DIY fillings

Blank shells allow for custom filling mixtures (ink, powder)—economical and flexible, but only for experienced users. Incorrect viscosity or particle size selection will result in barrel clogging or unreliable breakage.

Fluorescent & night balls

Fluorescent paintballs contain luminous pigments or UV-reactive fillings. Advantage: better visibility during night exercises. Disadvantage: often lower color fastness and special cleaning requirements for masks and textiles.

Risks, compatibility & practice

More mass (steel, ceramic) increases energy and stress on markers—seals, barrels, and hoppers suffer more quickly. Some special projectiles require modified barrels, magazines, or reduced FPS. Safety briefings and appropriate protective equipment are mandatory.

For training rounds and indoor sessions, we recommend rubber balls or empty shells—cost-effective and durable. For tactical MagFed or pistol setups, .43 fluorescent or specific HS projectiles are worthwhile when precision is more important than marking. Ceramic and steel mixes achieve high reproducibility but are harder on equipment and associated with increased risk — only use them if your marker, protective gear, and rules allow it.