The 'How Did Your Airsoft Day Go? Thread

Today, I took a rare trip down to deepest Kent for a FilmSim at Gunman's Battle Lakes, a site that I once played at regularly and where I also marshalled for a couple of years with the best marshalling team ever.

Checking in was quick and efficient and it was great to have a chat with Tony/Val, the site manager, who I had not seen for ages.

Chronoing was equally efficient and, after the usual entertaining safety brief and game brief, which was based on the film The Rock, which I have never seen, we set off for the morning's half of the game. This required us to gather items needed to produce VX missiles, transport them to our base and defend them from the other team, who wanted to prevent us doing so. The VX was represented by a number of water bombs, which had to be collected and stored together in a number of long tubular containers for transport. If one of the water bombs burst, everyone within a 5m radius was dead. There were a lot of other nuances, but that was the core of the game.

If you were hit, you could be regened by a colleague, who could also drag you out of the line of fire; you could also try to crawl away. However, doing either of these made you a viable target again. Once you had been hit, the next hit sent you back to your regen, of which there were two, a fixed one and a portable mobile one.

With around 40 or so players on a very large and very wooded site, this was always going to be a game with lots of encounters, firefights, surprises and changes of fortune and so it proved. As the first Duke of Wellington noted, "The history of a battle, is not unlike the history of a ball. Some individuals may recollect all the little events of which the greatest result is the battle won or lost, but no individual can recollect the order in which, or the exact moment at which, they occurred, which makes all the difference to their value or importance."

My memories of the morning are of multiple memorable firefights won and lost, being surprised by the enemy, surprising the enemy, encountering Gary with blood streaming down his face, trying to work out if "those guys over there" were friendly or not, and of the heat; did I mention that it was really, really hot?

Unfortunately, a great morning of airsoft had to come to an end and we all adjourned to the safe zone for luncheon. At Battle Lakes, lunch can be ordered from the nearby cafe in the morning and is then delivered to the site; I took pizza.

The afternoon's game was based on us having secured enough VX for three missiles, which were located around the site. The enemy had to neutralise them; if they did so, we could reactivate them if someone with the appropriate card could get to one. At the start, the other team were all in the kill house with one life; after they were killed there, they left the structure and reverted to the normal regen rules. I did ask if this meant that we could just ignore them and spend the afternoon quietly guarding our missiles, but we had to fight them there. Some of our team went straight for the kill house while the rest of us went to defend the missiles; I headed for the fuel dump because I like it there, and dug into a favourite position under a stunted tree/large bush. After a while of not a lot happening, the enemy began to attack us; we repulsed three attacks but, after the third one, I was the only defender left. Another attack came in, during which I hit three of them, but one of the remaining two took me out with a grenade.

At our regen, I met up with a team mate and we set off to see how much chaos we could create; the answer was quite a lot! We spent the rest of the afternoon ambushing groups of the enemy, getting into great firefights, walking to and from regen and generally enjoying ourselves until the game ended.

I have no idea who won and don't really care.

It was an excellent and fun day of airsoft. With low numbers on a large site, it was very different from the average skirmish day and made a nice change. I think both Gary and Sam would happily go back, even though it is a long journey for them, so I am sure we will return. The day was very well organised, well structured and was played in a very good spirit. Many thanks to Tony/Val for putting it together and for still providing the best briefings in airsoft.

Weapons used
MPiKM
MPiKMS
ASG XP18 Commander (CO2)
 
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I took a trip to Worthing Airsoft this weekend for a... fairly quiet one. Clearly everyone was up late watching the sportsball last night or something, I don't really know. Anyway, today was a low numbers day, which usually makes the airsoft better and today was no exception. It was a very warm one, with temperatures going up to about 29C, however it was also rather windy which kept the temperatures pretty bearable; some people were even complaining they felt a bit chilly in the safety brief! However, that wind made it incredibly difficult to snipe, and with me still using my Tanaka bolt actions that made life rather difficult as they're my most gas efficient and the best guns to burn through my 144a with. However, I'm not one to back away from a challenge! My setup was super lightweight today with only a lightweight belt kit and a repro D3CRM micro rig with no ghillie and only a short sleeved t-shirt. This was because I was running what I plan on using at the Defiant battlesim next weekend at Longmoor, which is urban so my kit choice wasn't the best for camo in the woods, and for guns it was the Tanaka m24 + TM p226 combo.

First two games were a king of the hill style game on the tower base at the top of the site. We've been playing the bottom of the site for the past few game days, but today was kept at the top (mostly) because of the low numbers and high temperatures. First game I simply went to a spot that I liked and held a path, racking up quite a few kills despite Mother Nature doing everything in her power to push my shots way off to the left. Then for the second game we swapped sides and two things happened. Firstly, I found a far less exposed position to thread shots through a spot. It was so good that even me in my black t-shirt had a ghillie walk right past me and only shot me because I thought he was a friendly and took a shot at someone else. Secondly, I found that my weight loss and general fitness came in incredibly useful, as after three of us got taken out by this ghillie who spent the whole game flanking all the way around, me and one of the others sprinted back to our respawn and then sprinted back to take him out. Our respawn wasn't that far away, forcing the ghillie to then have to move off quickly, getting him spotted and taken out just before we would've come up on him again; we were back in our strong positions in less than a minute from the point of getting taken out, totally nullifying the flanking action that took the most of the game to set up. I managed to get a lot of kills this game, despite the incredibly strong winds now trying to push my shots to the right now that we were facing the other way after swapping sides.

Third game took us all the way to lunch and required both teams to find a mad scientist, who was a player dressed in all white. He was let off the leash and told to be really difficult, only able to be somewhat controlled while someone had a hand on him; as soon as that hand was removed, he was carrying loads of grenades that he would just hurl about the place. One of his impact grenades is on a fishing line, so he could literally throw it and immediately run away without fear of losing it. The objective was to find him, capture him, and bring him to one of the bases at the top of the site. Our team's plan was to simply wait at the top of the site for them. I took a spot that watched entrances to two of the paths that led up from the bottom of the site, but there was surprisingly little movement there. I got a few kills on players in the middle, and I caught a ghillie trying to be sneaky (brown ghillies are actively awful camo in heavily green environments...).

I was thinking of going home at lunch. My kit clearly worked well, which is what I set out to test to make sure it was all good for next weekend, but I decided to stay on. Game after lunch was a gold rush where each team had a case that could carry a single gold bar. We had to get our case into one of the buildings, take a gold bar, take it back to respawn, and do that as many times as possible to get as many gold bars as possible. Me and my friend spent most of the game trying to confine the ghillies to a certain part of the site that they seemed fond of. I did think it was a bit strange that they put basically all the ghillies apart from my friend on one team, but I didn't mind. I like the handicap when playing counter-sniper, and frequently will find myself coming out on top due to fieldcraft and patience. Plus it's great practice for said fieldcraft, doing counter sniper gameplay without any proper camo against fully ghillied players, as you really have to be on your game to overcome the equipment gap.

Then the final game I played in was a 3 base domination where I didn't do much. Watched a flank, moved to offer fire support elsewhere, picked off a few players through the game, but nothing really that noteworthy. Then I called it after that. Last games were a timed assault on one of the bases, but for me it was time for a well-earned rest and drive home. On my drive home, there was an absolute bell-end in a VW Golf though. He was with his girlfriend/wife, with a baby in the back, and he was constantly pulling out in front of people, totally ignoring road signs, being in the wrong lane and then almost ploughing into the side of other cars when he realised. In my 6 months on the road so far, he was by far the worst driver I've seen and almost caused an accident with me (he almost drove into the side of my car at a roundabout when he was in the wrong lane), as well as other people when he was swerving between lanes and generally just ignoring all road signs and markings. As soon as I got onto the dual carriageway I absolutely shot past him because I didn't want to be anywhere near him and the inevitable accident he was going to cause with his family in the car.

All in all, good day. Despite it being 29 - 30C for most of the day, the wind made it feel significantly less than that (early to mid 20s at most), though that wind also made sniping incredibly difficult. Looking forward to the battlesim next weekend, but totally ready for it now thanks to this weekend.
 
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