What is the personality type of Paintball? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Paintball from Athletics and what is the personality traits.
Paintball personality type is ESTP, so I probably fit the description of the majority of people that enjoy playing paintball. However, I do not know if I am an ESTP, but I do know that I have never met anyone just like me before. I was born in Indianapolis, Indiana and moved to Nashville, Tennessee when I was 8 years old. I now live in Madison, Wisconsin just over the Mississippi River. During my time in Nashville, I always enjoyed playing sports. When I was in high school, I played football, baseball and basketball. When I was 18 years old, I began playing paintball.
I started by playing woodsball at a local field called "The Lowery Field" in Fountain City, Tennessee. It is a popular paintball field that is located 9 miles north of Nashville. The field has grown quite popular over the last few years, and now has two separate fields (one for woodsball and one for speedball). The fields are very challenging to play on because of the many obstacles and hills on the field. This is a great field to play on if you have a good amount of experience on a hard paintball field.
Paintball is a competitive team shooting sport in which players eliminate opponents from play by hitting them with spherical dye-filled gelatin capsules called paintballs that break upon impact. Paintballs are usually shot using low-energy air weapons called paintball markers that are powered by compressed air or carbon dioxide and were originally designed for remotely marking trees and cattle. The game was invented in May 1981 in New Hampshire by Hayes Noel, a Wall Street stock trader, and Charles Gaines, an outdoorsman and writer. A debate arose between them about whether a city-dweller had the instinct to survive in the woods against a man who had spent his youth hunting, fishing, and building cabins. The two men chanced upon an advertisement for a paint gun in a farm catalogue and were inspired to use it to settle their argument with 10 other men all in individual competition, eventually creating the sport of paintball.