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Una réplica descontrolada no es potencia. Es negligencia.
En el campo, un operador disciplinado no deja espacio para el error.
Medir la potencia de tu réplica con un cronógrafo no es opcional — es protocolo.
La potencia sin control no demuestra nivel. Demuestra descuido.
Consulta esta tabla, respeta los límites y asegura que cada misión se juegue con honor y responsabilidad.
Press Release
T1 Intel Drop Room


Our Culture, Our Code: Why Tier One Exists
🗂️ Category: T1 Culture 📅 HQ Intel Drop — Entry 003 🎯 Not Just Another Team. A Real Community. Let’s be clear — Tier One isn’t here to...

T1IntelDrop
Jul 22 min read


Why We Train: The Tier One Mental Code
🗂️ Category: T1 Culture 📅 HQ Intel Drop — Entry 002 🧠 Training Is More Than Movement Sharpening Mindset, Not Just Mechanics At Tier...

T1IntelDrop
Jul 12 min read


Airsoft vs. Realism: Finding the Balance in Training
🗂️ Category: Tactics & Philosophy 📅 HQ Intel Drop — Entry 001 🧠 The Question Every Operator Faces Where’s the line between useful...

T1IntelDrop
Jul 12 min read


10 — Mental Game: Pressure, Focus, and Calm
Pressure tests preparation. The mental game decides who stays focused when everything goes wrong. Calm is a skill — train it. Every recruit breaks focus at first — that’s normal. The goal isn’t to never feel pressure; it’s to manage it. The calm operator is not fearless — he’s trained to think clearly when things get loud. 1. Breathe First, Then Act Controlled breathing resets focus and heart rate. Inhale through the nose, exhale slow — even in chaos. Before reacting, breathe

T1IntelDrop
Oct 271 min read


9 — Team Flow: Moving as One
Team flow is the art of moving as one. When awareness, rhythm, and trust align, the squad becomes a single, silent force. Good teams don’t shout — they move in rhythm. Flow isn’t speed; it’s awareness. Every recruit must learn how to feel the team’s pace, react in sync, and support the line without confusion. 1. Rhythm Over Rush Smooth and fast movements wins over aggresive movements. Rushing ahead or hesitating behind both break tempo. Watch the operator in front — match the

T1IntelDrop
Oct 271 min read


8-Room Domination: Angles, Corners & Coverage
Room domination isn’t about speed or aggression—it’s about control. Angles, corners, and coverage define whether your team clears or collides. Control wins fights; chaos loses them. Once a team commits to the entry, domination means taking control of every space, every corner, every line of sight—without tripping over each other or wasting motion. 1. The Angle Is Your World Every operator owns a slice—what you see, you control. Don’t chase targets outside your slice; trust yo

T1IntelDrop
Oct 272 min read


7 – Stacking Techniques: Building a Strong Entry Team
Stacking isn’t just lining up at a door — it’s coordination, trust, and timing. A good stack moves as one — fast, quiet, and precise. Body A perfect stack doesn’t happen by accident. It ’s the result of training, awareness, and communication. Every operator knows their position, their role, and the person next to them. The entry starts before the breach. 1. Position and Spacing Keep proper distance — close enough to react, far enough not to collide. The point man sets the p

T1IntelDrop
Oct 272 min read


6- Principles of Room Entry
Room entry is a team task. Emphasize timing, shared awareness, and clear roles — principles that keep teams safe and effective without teaching techniques. Room entry is never an individual stunt — it’s a coordinated team action built on a few simple principles. We don’t publish techniques here; we teach the mindset every operator must have before practicing maneuvering. 1. Timing is Discipline: Good teams move with purpose, not panic. Synchronize actions so teammates know wh

T1IntelDrop
Oct 232 min read


5 - Movement Basics: Stay Low, Move Smart
Move with purpose and protection. Posture, cover use, spacing, and noise discipline keep you alive and keep the team whole. How you move matters more than how fast you go. Good movement reduces exposure, keeps teammates protected, and preserves options. Recruits must learn posture and discipline before anything flashy. 1. Posture First Keep a stable, balanced posture that lets you react — not rigid, not collapsed. Not to high, not to low. Lower center of gravity helps contro

T1IntelDrop
Oct 232 min read


4- Uniform & Field Tips: More Than Just a Look
In Tier One, a uniform is not just about appearance — it’s about "survival", performance, and professionalism. The right choices in how you dress and set up your gear can be the difference between efficiency and failure in the field. Follow these guidelines to operate smarter, last longer, and look the part of a true operator. Comfort & Mobility Choose function over fashion. Gear should be comfortable and reliable — not just a certain price tag or flashy brand. Poorly fittin

T1IntelDrop
Sep 301 min read


AAR: The Operator’s Habit
AARs turn experience into improvement. Keep them short, structured, and blame-free — then act on one clear takeaway.

T1IntelDrop
Sep 231 min read


Cross-Cover and Sectors of Fire
Operators succeed by protecting each other’s blind spots. Clear sectors and disciplined cross-cover keep the team secure and effective.

T1IntelDrop
Sep 231 min read


Principles of Room Entry
Room entry is a team task. Emphasize timing, shared awareness, and clear roles — principles that keep teams safe and effective without teaching techniques.

T1IntelDrop
Sep 232 min read


3- Communication Basics: Speak, Listen, Confirm
Clear Comms Save Missions In CQB, seconds matter. Bad communication creates confusion, hesitation, and failure. Recruits must learn the basics before touching radios or advanced call-outs. 1. Speak Clear Use short, direct words. No jokes, no filler. Never One message = one idea. Example: “Left clear.” not “I think it’s fine on my side.” 2. Listen First Don’t talk over others. Pause before answering. If you didn’t hear it, ask once, don’t guess. Example: “Say it again.” 3.

T1IntelDrop
Sep 231 min read


2- Gear Discipline 101: Respect your gear.
Your Kit = Your Responsibility Operators don’t blame gear. If your replica jams, if your mag falls, if your battery dies — it’s on you. Discipline with kit separates recruits from operators. 1. Keep It Clean Wipe your replica after each use. Watch here Keep mags free of dirt. Check optics, batteries, and lenses before stepping on the field. Why it matters: Dirty gear fails when you need it most. 2. Pack Smart Secure loose straps, you do not want to lose anything. Keep mags,

T1IntelDrop
Sep 231 min read


1- The Three Golden Rules of Green Squadron
📅 HQ Intel Drop — GS-R The three rules that define discipline, trust, and respect inside Green Squadron. Every operator starts the same way: by earning trust. In Green Squadron, trust is built by living up to three non-negotiable rules. These aren’t just guidelines — they are the baseline for being part of the unit. 1. Safety Above All If you are unsafe, nothing else matters. Safety is not just about goggles and gear — it’s about discipline. Finger off the trigger until you

T1IntelDrop
Sep 201 min read
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