Shot Show 2026 Bul Armory Fireball Race Gun

SHOT Show 2026 — BUL Armory | The Fireball Race Gun

SHOT Show 2026 in Las Vegas (Jan 20–23 at the Venetian Expo + Caesars Forum), and I made my way back to the @BULArmory booth to check out something that’s clearly built with one goal in mind: go fast and stay flat. This is the BUL Armory Fireball — their race-gun flavored 2011-style platform that’s aimed squarely at shooters who care about split times, transitions, and how quickly the gun settles back onto the dot.

First impression: this thing is unapologetically competition-first. It’s not trying to be a “do-it-all” pistol that kind of carries and kind of competes. The Fireball feels like BUL looked at what competitive shooters actually want — controllability, speed, repeatability — and built a purpose-driven setup around that.

What stood out at the booth was how the Fireball is positioned as a system, not just a gun with a couple “race” parts sprinkled on top. The whole point of a race gun is that the pistol does less work for your hands. Less muzzle rise. Less dot lift. Faster return to target. Cleaner tracking. When that’s done right, it doesn’t just feel softer — it feels more predictable, and predictability is what makes speed sustainable.

The Fireball also ties into the bigger theme BUL is pushing right now: build guns that shoot above their price class without turning maintenance into a second job. Race guns can be amazing, but they can also be finicky when you start living on the edge of performance. If the Fireball holds that balance — fast, flat, and still reliable enough to run hard — it’s going to be a serious option for shooters who want to step into the race-gun lane without immediately jumping into boutique-money territory.

The other thing I’ll say is this: competition guns are where small details get exposed. Grip texture, how the gun indexes, how the trigger interface feels under speed, how the dot tracks during ugly transitions, how forgiving it is when your grip isn’t perfect. SHOT Show is a first look, but it’s enough to tell when a gun is built with real intent versus built for a catalog photo.

As always, everything I cover gets handled safely and evaluated responsibly. This is not an endorsement of any storefront — it’s simply my first look and my perspective on what I’m seeing on the floor and what matters to shooters in the real world.

Full parts lists, links, and additional context will be posted on my website at www.razormp.com.

Thanks for supporting the channel — especially my member subscribers — and as always, I’ll see you on the high ground or in the next video. RazorMP out.