Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Action Air”
IDPA Classifier Guide 2026: The 5x5, Scoring & How to Make Your Class

The IDPA classifier in 60 seconds (BLUF)
- What it is: A standardized skills test that sorts you into a class. Most clubs now use the 5x5 classifier — 25 rounds, four strings, one target at 10 yards, no concealment required.
- How it’s scored: Your final number is raw time + points down (1 second each) + penalties. Lower is better. Unlike USPSA’s hit factor, in IDPA your time is your score.
- The classes: Master (MA), Expert (EX), Sharpshooter (SS), Marksman (MM), Novice (NV) — set by hard time brackets that differ by division (SSP, ESP, CDP, CO and the rest).
- You’re classified per division: you must shoot the classifier in a division to hold a class in it.
- The fastest way to move up: drill the draw, the strong-hand string and the slide-lock reload with a free Airsoft Shot Timer app between matches — every tenth you save is a tenth off your classifier.
There’s a particular kind of quiet that falls over a bay when the safety officer says “this is the classifier.” Everybody who was joking around two minutes ago suddenly gets serious, because this is the one stage of the day that follows you home. Your fun-stage hits stay at the club; your classifier time goes into the IDPA database and decides whether you’re a Sharpshooter or an Expert for the next year. This guide walks through exactly what that test is, how a stopwatch number turns into a class, what the current standards are, and — the part most people skip — how to actually train for it without burning a case of ammo.
USPSA Classifier Guide 2026: Hit Factor, Classes & How to Rank Up

USPSA classifiers in 60 seconds (BLUF)
- What it is: A classifier is a short, standardized course of fire you shoot at a local match. Your raw score becomes a hit factor (points ÷ time), and that hit factor is compared against USPSA’s benchmark for that stage to produce a percentage.
- How you get classified: You need four valid scores from four different classifiers in a division. After that, your class is set by the best 6 of your most recent 8 unique classifier percentages.
- The classes: Grand Master (95%+), Master, A, B, C, D — each division is scored separately, so you can be A-class in Production and C-class in Open.
- What changed in 2025: USPSA removed the old B/C/D flags, started averaging same-day attempts, and released the new 25-Series classifier stages. More on that below.
- The fastest way to move up: practice the exact mechanics a classifier measures — draw, splits, reloads — with a free Airsoft Shot Timer app between matches.
If you’ve shot a couple of USPSA matches, you’ve already run into classifiers — those short, oddly specific stages where everyone suddenly gets quiet and serious. And if you’ve ever logged into uspsa.org and stared at a wall of percentages, division codes and three-digit stage numbers, you’ve probably also wondered what any of it actually means for you. This guide unpacks the whole system in plain language: what a classifier is, how a stopwatch number becomes a letter grade, what the 2025 overhaul changed, and how to nudge your percentage upward without gaming it.
Tokyo Marui Hi-CAPA 5.1 Review 2026: Reliability + 4.3 vs 5.1

Why the Hi-CAPA Dominates Airsoft Competition
If you’ve ever watched Airsoft IPSC or Speedsoft competition videos, you’ve probably noticed something: nearly every competitor is running a Hi-CAPA. This isn’t a coincidence. It’s the result of countless players testing every option and arriving at the same conclusion.
IPSC Action Air Guide 2026: World-Class Practical Shooting with Airsoft

🎯 60-Second Action Air Primer
- What it is: IPSC’s official airsoft division — the same practical-shooting sport with the same Hit Factor scoring, played with GBB pistols. It has its own World Shoot, and Asia is the home field.
- Your score is half time: Hit Factor = points ÷ time. The clock literally decides half your result, which is why serious competitors train with a shot timer from day one.
- The timer is free: You don’t need a US$130–$300 hardware timer to start. The free Airsoft Shot Timer app is tuned to detect the quiet report of GBB and AEG guns and records your draw, splits, and reloads — the exact numbers that move your Hit Factor.
- Start where you are: If you already play airsoft and own a GBB handgun, you can begin training tonight at home and shoot your first match with the gear you already have.
World-Class Competition Without Real Firearms
You’ve probably heard of IPSC—the International Practical Shooting Confederation. What you might not know is that IPSC has an airsoft division called IPSC Action Air, complete with its own World Championship.