We at iPaintball have located what we feel are the UK’s premier locations for paintballing currently on offer. We have used customer feedback from their day at the venues and our own experience from visiting the sites to create the list for you to choose from. You have a large variety to choose from in the Wakefield area. The sites that we have chosen have been selected for the quality of games you play, how good the equipment is and how professional the staff are.
Wakefield is located close to Sheffield and Doncaster, so with this close proximity around the city, you have many of the countries finest centres available to you. The sites have many fantastic games you can play, including speedball, rescue the president, and some other sites offering more unique games like log cabin, the street and fort mound. You can be sure that the paintball venues we have chosen on offer to people around Wakefield will unsure a memorable day out.
Please find located below the contact details for the paintball sites in the Wakefield area. You can use the telephone number to call the centre and get any further information you may need, get any questions you have answered and to check availability.

| Site Information |
Facilites | Timings | Extras | Best Field | ![]() 5 Star Venue |
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|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Start: 09:00am Finish: 16:00pm |
100 Paintballs: |
Castle |
Address:
Blackfen Woods, South Approach, Off the A64 York Road, Leeds LS24 9NN (nearest post code)
Tel:
0845 430 4455
If you want to be a paintball referee, checking Wakefield paintballers for hits is the second most important job, right behind safety. When checking Wakefield paintballers, you need to get up close and personal. That means being an arm’s length away, not standing ten feet away so you don’t get shot. When you’re checking a Wakefield paintballer, pushing the player around isn’t recommended. However you may need to move his jersey around, or push in part of the bunker he’s pressed up against, or even tell him to show you a body part. Keep in mind he’s trying to keep from getting shot when you do this, but also keep in mind that you have to do your job. So you’re checking the Wakefield paintballer and you find a big orange glob on his arm. Is it a hit or just rub from the bunker? This is where you need to be decisive. Staring at a splat for thirty seconds isn’t decisive. Get in, check it and make the call. If you have trouble telling a hit from a rub, the guidelines I use are – Size (is it the size of a 10p?), Solidity (thick and creamy?), Shell (is there shell in or around the paint?) and impact(the little trails that happen when something goes splat). With the amount of paint that gets shot in most games, impact can often be the key determiner so make sure you know what it looks like. Remember to actually make the call – if it’s a hit, call the player out. if it’s not a hit, call him clean and remove the rub. It does not have to be spotless; just swipe it so it does not look like a hit. Use your hand signals so everyone knows what the call is.
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