The material of a paper airplane matters. If it is too flimsy, the plane will not be able to keep its shape and will become just another piece of paper thrown in the air. If it is too heavy for its size, it will just fall down and not fly.
I would say no.
A paper airplane's shape matters when considering speed, stability, effectiveness and efficiency.
Generally, this is a matter of individual preference. It is unlikely that one paper airplane design is the best at everything (range, speed, glide ratio, etc.). Many airplanes are claimed to be the best, but these claims are unsubstantiated.
Drag effects paper airplane just as it affects anything else that moves. It is either parasitic or induced on paper airplanes. Drag may reduce a paper airplanes speed and/or range.
depends on what type of paper airplane you are trying to make. wide winged are better with hard paper like printing paper and narrow ones doesn't matter. (just my personal experience not so trust worthy)
The effect of a hole on a paper airplane would depend on the type of paper airplane the hole is on, and where it is on the aircraft.
An airplane is material constructed into a flying machine that travels.
The combination of wing area and plane weight affect a paper airplane's glide ratio and range.
i think the construction paper airplane will fly farther
Yes, the design of a paper airplane can effect its performance.
Farther than any other paper airplane that i know of
A paper airplane cannot fly without a wing.