Thank you for the question, sir.
I would respectfully suggest that specific knowledge, technical abilities and technical instructions are readily available on the Internet to just about anyone nowadays. With a small amount of practice and very easily accessible tools, people can conduct very complex and specific machining mechanisms on different firearms.
I would suggest that the best way for airsoft to save their sport, as you said, would be to move away from the extremely realistic-looking airsoft guns that we're seeing produced nowadays. As the chief just mentioned, it is virtually impossible to tell the difference between a high-quality airsoft gun and its real counterpart. They are designed to look identical to existing real firearms, right down to the manufacturers' stamps on them. Some have some type of serialized number on them so that they appear to be manufactured firearms.
That is part of the culture of the sport, perhaps, or something that people are looking for. They need to move away from that. It's very easy to tell the difference between a—