The very first paintballs were meant to mark trees for logging companies, so no. They are both non-toxic and biodegradable.
All paintballs can go bad, however no paintballs are allowed to have red, pink or black fill.
No, paintballs are biodegradable.
Monster paintballs are considered the worst paintballs because they not only stain clothes, but they do not break easily, causing the shooter to not get a hit, and the receiver to be in a lot of pain.
They are non-toxic, but taste awful on purpose. so yes.
A Fistful of Paintballs was created on 2011-05-05.
no, there are different paintballs for different types of guns
No. only .50 caliber paintballs.
Yes, they are physically destructive and destroy the environment where they detonate and they also have a radioactive legacy called fallout that becomes widespread (global) and remains in the environment for ever and damages organisms.
There is no antifreeze in any paintballs. Trying to freeze paintballs will ruin their structural integrity, causing them to become brittle shelled, and overly viscus in the center.
Most paintballs are made of a lard/animal fat mixture. Although just recently a company developed water based paintballs.
For a Few Paintballs More was created on 2011-05-12.
That is personal opinion. In theory, DXS gold is, being it is $80-$90 a case. But its more about the barrel to paint relationship.