Showing 1–12 of 79 results
Electric Gel Blaster Rifles
CyberTrigger’s electric gel blaster rifle range — 79 AEG models from $329 to $1,199 across five tiers. Every rifle runs a battery-powered motor and gearbox for consistent, reliable performance — semi-auto and full-auto fire modes, ~330 FPS, 30–40m range on 11.1V battery.
Browse by platform: M4/AR15, HK416, SIG MCX, HK417 or SR25/AR10. Ships QLD & SA, 18+.
BCM MCMR AEG Gel Blaster
$639.00
What Is an AEG Gel Blaster?
AEG stands for Automatic Electric Gun — a battery-powered motor drives a gearbox that compresses air to fire gel balls. Every electric gel blaster rifle at CyberTrigger uses this system. Unlike gas-powered blasters, an AEG gel blaster delivers consistent FPS regardless of temperature — a genuine advantage for Australian outdoor play where conditions vary.
Our electric gel blaster gun range spans five tiers:
- Value Line (from $329) — reinforced nylon receiver, full metal gearbox, no MOSFET. Best entry-level AEG.
- Value Plus (from $479) — adds Eshooter MOSFET for faster trigger response.
- Standard (from ~$600) — full metal receiver + full metal gearbox.
- Ultra Line (from $689) — CNC 7075 air compression parts, metal gears, ETU MOSFET.
- Ultra Plus (from $999) — brushless motor, Bluetooth MOSFET, carbon steel gears.
All tiers fire at ~330 FPS with 30–40m range and 20 rounds per second on an 11.1V battery. The difference between tiers is durability, electronics, and upgrade-readiness — not raw performance.
Electric vs Gas Gel Blasters — Which Should You Choose?
Choosing between a gel blaster electric gun and a gas-powered model? Here's why CyberTrigger stocks an all-electric rifle lineup:
- Consistency — AEG performance doesn't change with temperature. Gas blasters lose pressure in cold weather, dropping FPS.
- Rate of fire — electric rifles deliver 20 RPS on full auto. Gas blowback rifles are generally semi-auto only.
- Running cost — charge a battery vs buying gas canisters. Lower cost per session.
- Magazine capacity — AEG magazines hold more gel balls, less reloading mid-game.
- Reliability — fewer moving parts than a gas cycling system. Less maintenance.
Gas blowback does offer more realistic recoil and cycling action — we stock gas models in our pistol range for players who want that experience. For rifle play — especially competitive field games in Queensland — electric AEG is the better choice.
Electric Gel Blaster Rifles — Common Questions
What battery do electric gel blasters use?
All CyberTrigger electric gel blaster rifles run on 11.1V LiPo batteries (recommended). An 11.1V delivers full trigger response and 20 RPS rate of fire. Models with a MOSFET (Value Plus and above) have electronic protection for the battery. Batteries and chargers are sold separately — not included in the box.
Do I need a MOSFET for my AEG gel blaster?
A MOSFET protects trigger contacts from electrical arcing and improves trigger response. It's recommended but not required — our Value Line runs 11.1V safely without one. If you want faster trigger response, the Value Plus (from $479) adds an Eshooter MOSFET. Upgrading later costs ~$150 (MOSFET + 1hr labour).
Are electric gel blaster rifles legal in Australia?
Yes — electric gel blaster rifles are legal in Queensland and South Australia for adults 18+. No licence required in QLD. Cannot ship to NSW, VIC, WA, TAS, ACT or NT. Age verification at checkout.
What's included in the box?
All CyberTrigger electric rifles ship with the blaster + 1 magazine only. No battery, no charger, no gel balls included. We recommend adding an 11.1V LiPo battery and charger to your order. Gel balls are available in our Ammo & Power section.
Last reviewed May 2026.