Review
TOURNAMENT
Sometimes a new invention comes
about that makes a person say “I
had no idea I wanted this, but I want
this!” When the boss put a Spyder
Fenix paintball gun on my desk I
wasn’t quite sure where he was going with it, but I can promise I didn’t
expect to wind up telling him he
couldn’t have it back. But he can’t.
I’m keeping it. The reason I’m holding on to this basic, inexpensive,
stacked-tube electronic semi-automatic paintball gun, as strange as it
may seem, has very little to do with
paintball and a great deal to do with
the other box he handed me along
with the Spyder. The box, a small,
black affair, said “Morph Fire” on it
and I had no idea what it was. But
once I opened it and found out, it
took about five minutes for me to
say “I had no idea I wanted this, but
I’m keeping it!”
100
The Morph Fire adds a completely
new dimension to existing paintball
equipment that I’m not sure paintball
as an industry or most paintball players will have any idea they wanted,
but once they get a taste, I’m certain
many will decide they want it much
as I have. I must admit, it took me
a about five minutes digging through
the Morph Fire box, its contents and
its included paperwork to truly get
my head around what the concept
is- a conversion kit that enables a
paintball gun, in this case a Spyder
and in future cases Tippmann and
Ego models, to shoot 6 millimeter
BB’s. Fast. However your paintball
gun already fires. Then, when the
fruit, vegetable, target or can-slaying
is over-with and it’s time for paintball
again, simply remove the Morph Fire
system and go play. That’s right: the
Morph Fire system quickly and easily
installs onto what creator Ryan Levin
PAINTBAL
paintbal