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  2. Legal issues in airsoft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_issues_in_airsoft

    Legal issues in airsoft. Airsoft is a sport in which players use airsoft guns to fire plastic projectiles at other players in order to eliminate them. Due to the often-realistic appearance of airsoft guns and their ability to fire projectiles at relatively high speeds, laws have been put in place in many countries to regulate both the sport of ...

  3. Airsoft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airsoft

    Airsoft guns, airsoft pellets, goggles. Airsoft, also known as survival game (Japanese: サバイバルゲーム, romanized: sabaibaru gēmu) in Japan where it was popular, is a team-based shooting game in which participants eliminate opposing players out of play by shooting them with spherical plastic projectiles shot from airsoft guns.

  4. Air gun laws - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_gun_laws

    This is a list of laws concerning air guns by country.. Most countries have laws about air guns, but these vary widely. Often each jurisdiction has its own unique definition of an air gun; and regulations may vary for weapons of different bore, muzzle energy or velocity, or material of ammunition, with guns designed to fire metal pellets often more tightly controlled than airsoft weapons.

  5. Comprehensive Firearms and Ammunition Regulation Act

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comprehensive_Firearms_and...

    The Comprehensive Firearms and Ammunition Regulation Act, officially recorded as Republic Act No. 10591, is a consolidation of Senate Bill No. 3397 and House Bill No. 5484. It was enacted and passed by the Senate of the Philippines and the House of Representatives of the Philippines on February 4, 2013, and February 5, 2013, respectively.

  6. IPSC Action Air - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPSC_Action_Air

    Action Air is an airsoft shooting sport based on practical shooting under the International Practical Shooting Confederation.The sport enjoys popularity in countries and areas such as Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macau, South Korea, and Japan, where civilian ownership of real firearms are either illegal or extremely difficult to obtain, but it is also used by some owners of real firearms as an ...

  7. Academy Plastic Model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academy_Plastic_Model

    This gun used to have no hop-up (until very recently when one with a fixed hop-up was made), and due to Korean laws on airsoft gun power, the gun's velocity is 200 ft/s (61 m/s) with .2 gram BBs. It is upgradable just like the Marui Famas, and is considered a very skirmishable gun once upgraded. Academy also makes many other AEGs.

  8. Airsoft gun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airsoft_gun

    An airsoft gun made by Celcius Technology (Hong Kong). This training weapon model is a replica of the M4A1 and also has a G&G Trijicon ACOG scope replica. Airsoft gun manufacturer Systema Engineering (PTW) developed a line of airsoft guns and accessories intended for military and law enforcement training.

  9. Pellet (air gun) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pellet_(air_gun)

    Pellet (air gun) A range of "diabolo" pellets with various nose profiles. A pellet is a non-spherical projectile designed to be shot from an air gun, and an airgun that shoots such pellets is commonly known as a pellet gun. Air gun pellets differ from bullets and shot used in firearms in terms of the pressures encountered; airguns operate at ...