Paintball Magazine August 2018 | Page 22

Photo By Jonah Jamroz Then there was the field layout for the event. While most young players in the game of tournament paintball are now used to a “snake side” and “dorito side” layout with random bunkers strewn throughout the middle of the field, the league broke with this tradition for Atlantic City and shook things up with a large “home” bunker in the back center of the field, “Dorito” bunkers leading the way to a traditional snake and not one single “Dorito” on the “D-side” at all, opting instead for a variety of other shapes and sizes along the opposite side and big bunkers populating mid-field. Though most liked the willingness of the league to try something different, the end-result when the horn sounded, and paint was in the air was long, grinding points with many teams choosing to hit the five closest bunkers to 022 paintball.media magazine the start gate, stack two and often three players at the “home” block, load up with as many as ten to twelve pods each, and shoot it out, controlling lanes. Many games went to time and, especially on the divisional fields, ended in 2-to-1 final game scores, with the winning point often scored in overtime after the two teams ground the clock down and finished regulation tied at one point each. On the pro field, while the empty pods piled up, the cream rose to the top as great teams and great players simply figured the field out and had to find a way to win with gutsy moves up the middle or a sneaky crawl down the snake to shoot two or three players in the side of the head. Vendors at the Atlantic City Open were the usual suspects. G.I. Sportz attended with a