Greetings to you All!
I'm from Hungary (you know - little country somewhere east of Austria) and a big military history fan (also studied history in the University)
My two favorite eras are the romans and, guess what, the second world war.
I have been doing roman re-enactment for 5 years but doing ww2 reenactment always felt somehow "unrealistic" to me (adult men shooting with blank firing replicas at each other from a distance of 15 meters for 20 minutes) until one of my relatives showed me his classic army M4A1 replica.
After the first wave of joy was over my question was:
- do they sell ww2 era guns as well?
and, as they say, the rest is history...
to sum it all up:
I started airsofting 1 and a half years ago with buying an agm mp40 and now my Landser kit is close to completion...
I must say I envy you UK guys (and of course the ladies as well) for having such a great community of ww2 airsofters (I'm secretely reading this forum since more than a year) over the channel because here in Hungary airsoft is just gaining popularity (with the Rising of ACM cheapsoft) and most events are now in the first phase of the process called Airsoft Evolution (eg. Blatfest all the way) and the interest in more specialist games like ww2 airsoft is not that big currently (though a quite impressive 101st para group exists here) but I don't give up hope...
So please just keep up the good work writing and I promise I will keep on reeding... 
hello, we have a saying here, from tiny acorns mighty oak trees grow, maybe in a year we will be reading your ww2 airsoft forum, 
Welcome 






Willkommen









Hi Josephus, welcome to the forum!

















When we were a Kingdom it was run by a King
When we were an Empire it was run by an Empress
Now we're a country we're run by a..........
Hello welcome to the forum 
Welcome ![]()














Hey, thank you for the warm welcome!
Scaleyback:
Does that mean you can read Hungarian? Whoa, I'm really impressed! ![]()
Of course point taken and thank you for the support!
Che:
Thanks for the compliment, but I'm afraid my Hungarian is still way better, so there's always room for some improvement... ![]()





