Poor Buffy. Your life resists all things average.

Willow ,'First Date'


Natter 64: Yes, we still need you  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Connie Neil - Jan 06, 2010 9:23:38 am PST #29642 of 30001
brillig

Well, some of them were from Pennsylvania. That doesn't count as midwestern, right?

I count myself as an Easterner, even with most than half my life spent in Utah.


Liese S. - Jan 06, 2010 9:24:46 am PST #29643 of 30001
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Oh, and what I meant to say was, Nintendo now denies they ever made the cards. It's, like, excluded from their corporate history somehow. But they did! It says Nintendo and the logo clear as day on the cards!


§ ita § - Jan 06, 2010 9:25:29 am PST #29644 of 30001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I have this really weird thing where I cannot unscramble letters well.

I have the flip where I can't card count for shit. I had to stop playing partner card games because I was such a dead weight.

I joined the Gamer's Guild in university with a girl from my residence floor. We joined a move-a-week game of Diplomacy without telling anyone that we knew each other, and set up a behind the scenes affiliation. God, we were evil. I totally smoked their asses and remember it with glee 20 years later. I was gracious about it to their faces, though. But the duplicity was fun.

The theatre group would get together and play Illuminati and those were really ugly evenings. I can't remember the game for shit, but it was highly divisive and intensely fun. No one ever wanted to take a pee break.


sumi - Jan 06, 2010 9:25:46 am PST #29645 of 30001
Art Crawl!!!

I have a set of Hanafuda from Nintendo!

I can't remember where I got it.

My mother's family played a card game where you collected cards with partial quotes from Japanese literature that you had to complete. Apparently, my grandmother was excellent at that game.


Liese S. - Jan 06, 2010 9:27:06 am PST #29646 of 30001
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

I have a set of Hanafuda from Nintendo!

Hee! Awesome!

My mother's family played a card game where you collected cards with partial quotes from Japanese literature that you had to complete.

Ooh. That sounds like a great game.


Scrappy - Jan 06, 2010 9:30:28 am PST #29647 of 30001
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

My MiL plays Mah Jongg, which I believe is the official Jewish-Lady-of-a-Certain-Age game.


Fred Pete - Jan 06, 2010 9:30:50 am PST #29648 of 30001
Ann, that's a ferret.

Hubby and I love a game called Chronology, where you have to place events in their proper place on the time line. It's great for history geeks. The game says to go until you have 5 cards in the correct order. Hubby and I agree that this is what wimps do and play to 20 cards. We just need to find more people to play it with.

If I'm ever in the neighborhood, I'd love to play. My friends in law school stopped playing Trivial Pursuit with me when I identified Patty, Maxene, and Laverne before they finished reading the question. Probably a fair result, but they picked the wrong trigger. I mean, I did my undergrad honors thesis on popular music during World War II -- of course I'd know who the Andrews Sisters were.

I've tried to throw a game or two in my time. Mainly to a very cutthroat roommate -- either he didn't realize I was as good at the game as I really was, or we both didn't realize that I didn't understand the rules. I survived gaming with him by shifting my goals from "win" to "do better than expected."


Calli - Jan 06, 2010 9:32:50 am PST #29649 of 30001
I must obey the inscrutable exhortations of my soul—Calvin and Hobbs

My family was all about pinochle. My folks babied the kids until we were up to speed, and then it was every person for his or her self. We generally went with 3-person instead of 4, because we'd rather bid on the pot than team up. When there were only two people around we'd usually play cribbage or backgammon. We weren't competitive to the point of tears, but we generally played to win. Still, when my folks were ill, I'll admit to not focusing as much on winning as usual.

Now I have a whole lot of games, including a lovely mah-jong set a friend brought back from China, that hardly ever get used. My local friends and I keep saying we'll have some board game nights, but it hasn't happened yet. Wiis are also becoming a thing. There are four of us in my apartment complex, two of whom have wiis and one of whom will be buying one this month. We're talking about setting them up so we can play one another from our own apartments. An introvert's heaven!


DavidS - Jan 06, 2010 9:34:05 am PST #29650 of 30001
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

"Nice" and "razor-sharp wit" are not mutually exclusive, my dear.

Well, yes, but niceness mitigates the willingess to draw blood.


tommyrot - Jan 06, 2010 9:38:49 am PST #29651 of 30001
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

If I'm ever in the neighborhood, I'd love to play. My friends in law school stopped playing Trivial Pursuit with me when I identified Patty, Maxene, and Laverne before they finished reading the question. Probably a fair result, but they picked the wrong trigger. I mean, I did my undergrad honors thesis on popular music during World War II -- of course I'd know who the Andrews Sisters were.

When in college playing Trivial Pursuit, people were amazed that I knew that the highest navigable body of water is Lake Titicaka. I was like, "Come on - once you learn that, how can you forget about Lake Titicaka?"