Spyra: electronic water guns that shoot with millimeter precision

Published on June 17, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

The water war has moved beyond cheap plastic buckets and squirt guns. Spyra has entered the market with a radical concept: high-performance electronic water blasters that fire precise, rapid jets, with automatic reloading and an LED display to monitor ammunition. The price is high, but the gameplay experience becomes more tactical and technological. An advanced leisure option for those seeking something more than just soaking the neighbor.

Spyra electronic water blaster firing a precise high-speed water jet at a target, transparent water tank showing internal pump mechanism, LED display indicating ammunition count, automatic reloading process visible through clear casing, bright outdoor sunlight, water droplets frozen mid-air, tactical player in motion aiming, photorealistic technical illustration, metallic blue and black finish, dynamic action scene, sharp focus on water trajectory, shallow depth of field

Automatic reloading technology and control display 💧

The Spyra system works with an electric pump that pressurizes the water and releases it in individual shots, eliminating the need for manual pumping. The integrated LED display shows the remaining charge, allowing you to plan each attack. The magazine automatically reloads when the blaster is submerged in a bucket or water source, a process that takes a few seconds. Internally, it features sensors that regulate pressure and prevent dry firing, offering reliability that mechanical blasters cannot match.

When your neighbor pulls out a Spyra and you have a bucket 🔫

Picture the scene: you with your classic carnival water gun, pumping like crazy, and your neighbor with their Spyra aiming with the cold precision of a water sniper. While you sweat and miss half your shots, they empty their magazine with surgical accuracy and reload in seconds. The worst part is, at the end of the day, they dry off with an expensive towel while you wonder if it wasn't more fun when everything was chaos and bucket dumps. Technology has its price, and so does dignity.