I was going to speak up earlier in the thread and make mention of all the super-realistic practices in the various shooting games that involve things like the pre-run walk-thru of the course of fire, the designated round counts, the see-trough mesh 'barricade" walls and such things that would prepare one for CCW.
Funny none of that happened the last time I had a gun pulled on me.
I was going to speak up earlier on all the experts on gun games that really aren't. Thanks for affording a timely opportunity.
I did however make mention of correlation between walk throughs and mental prep as you walk down the street.
It's not a designated round count, it's a minimum round count. One isn't restricted in most cases to that number of shots fired. Other courses of fire up the stress by limiting the number of shots so that there are no make up shots. Forcing a more even playing field between competitors in things like classifiers and helping establish a more honest test of shooting skill. It forces a shooter to be honest with himself and his shooting skill. It makes it burn a lot more when a self-perceived bad-ass faces the fact that the fat lawyer just kicked his ass with a gun. We don't care what your resume is. It's put or shut up time. Shoot and live with the consequences. We challenge that "false sense of confidence."
Wow, ya got the gamers with the mesh walls. I didn't see any mess walls at the USPSA Nationals. Only about half of the walls are mesh at my club- I guess gamers are just pretenders because they build walls which are easier to move and withstand wind more easily so that the match runs smoothly. Since it's sarcasm and not real points I'll observe that it must be those mesh walls that make my draw sub 1 second, my splits sub 0.2 sec, allowed be to shoot the triple nickel 8 times in a row sub 5 sec., shoot pepper poppers at 50 yards without breaking a sweat... and not the 15k - 20k of rounds I shoot a year, the countless dry fires, the matches every weekend (almost). Weren't no mesh walls the last time a gun was pulled on me neither- weren't no walls at all. Just empty road. I don't think you're points valid.
I do know that I wish I was as good of a shooter when I carried a commission as I am now, without a doubt I'm better prepared for carrying concealed or for carrying openly with a badge.
And every active LEO who is also a USPSA shooter will say the same thing.
At some point during the gunfight all ya got is your shooting skill. At that moment, you want it to be better than the guy trying to kill you as much as possible.
Oddly, that's how guys sell ya on spending hundreds if not thousands of dollars on a three day class with "him." He promises to make ya a better shooter.
Like Tyler Durden observed earlier in this thread. If you get better shooting USPSA or IDPA or Steel Challenge you're not giving "him" the money.
Deep down, most ninjas don't want to force on force with the gamers- it's why they limit the classes to LE/Mil only. It protects egos. He kinda already knows that the gamer is gonna draw faster, while moving and shoot better while moving, and shooter better at moving targets than him- cuz he practices it ALL THE TIME. And the ninja doesn't.
As I already observed. I can always slow down, my shooting only gets better. How come the ninja can't raise to the level of the competition? He ain't got the skills if he ain't got the skills.
Thanks for the opportunity to submit more valid points for consideration.