Spyke
feddit.dk

Okay. What is this game and how is it played? I need to know.

172
kinklesreply
sh.itjust.works

Two players draw their battalions on opposite corners of the paper, both with the same number of outward facing tanks. Player 1 places a pen on one of their tanks and then an index finger on top, like you see in the comic. You then flick the pen and try to get it in the other player’s ass. However far it gets, you mark the end and then it’s the other player’s turn.

134

I used to play this all the time in grade school. One day I had like 12 pens sticking out of my ass.

8
xxce2AAbreply
feddit.dk

Cool! Thanks for the explanation. I thought maybe each player got a certain set linear distance per move and the objective was to intercept or evade to engage.

26
lemmy.world

There's a pen-and-paper game called Racetrack, in which people can move the 'cars' a certain amount according to acceleration/braking, turning and inertia. It simulates the physics of actual racing remarkably well, better than many video games. There are both web and mobile implementations of the game.

28
lemmy.world

Remarkably, apparently either the server or the client replace backslashes in Markdown links with forward slashes, which is completely bogus and nonsensical.

The correct link is https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racetrack_(game)

Also interesting that you're the first person to raise this issue after two hours and ten upvotes.

23

This might be true perhaps; but the crux of the matter is that I shouldn't do more than the traditional human-oriented escaping of the addresses, which relies extensively on plain and friendly backslashes, instead of devilish and time-consuming machine-produced percent-codes.

2

It had a link to search for "racetrack (game)" that then went to the actual article. Seemed weird but I got there and assume others did

3
lemmy.ca

Never saw that flick method before. When I was young, you had to hold the pencil/pen with one finger on the top against the paper, then by increasing pressure and tilting the angle it would eventually slip and draw your shot. Sometimes a very long shot. Was a fun game.

30
piefed.zip

Þat is how I remember it. Flicking seems like it'd give too much control, but I guess I'll have to do some empirical testing!

-9

I've seen the thorn guy around on other posts. It bothered me at the beginning, but now I'm like "hey! It's the thorn guy! I know him!"

Next time I find him, I think we are gonna be friends or something.

Also, this the fediverse, we don't yell at each other for these little things :)

1
lemmy.myserv.one

We used to be a lot more complicated than that. We'd draw X's around the paper for mines and sometimes a river in the middle with bridges across it. Your tank didn't explode if you hit the river but you got stalled there until you would back up and cross the bridge. Hitting a mine was the death of the tank. At one point I was thinking about making a book of Tank maps to sell but then video games took over.

15
lemmy.world

Yeah I feel totally left out. Only paper game I can remember that was fun was paper football.

15

Neat, and as a bonus it serves as a nice introduction to reflective symmetry. I can dig it.

2

My dad taught me this game when I was 7; One of the first times I had ever even met him, let-alone got to stay with him a few days by-myself. On my next trip or so, he had forgotten the game entirely, was dis-interested, and I never met anyone else who knew it before I taught them.

54
lemmy.world

Used to play this in primary school. First time I've ever seen it mentioned anywhere outside of that time and place. 😄

34

Don't know its correct name, but we called it Paper Asteroids or Pen Wars? 🤷‍♂️

It works by placing a ballpoint pen (eg. a Bic) vertically on the paper held up by a fingertip, then moving your finger back and away from the direction you're aiming until the pen tip slides/rolls itself and the pen drops onto the paper. You draw a small 'x' where there resulting line ends.

Your opponent then does the same thing. And you repeat from your previous 'x'. You'll each end up with a series of —×—× over the page.

I seem to recall there being two ways to play:

  • Have your line hit the other player's leading/current 'x'. I think this is the normal way, but it's hard.
  • Have your line hit any mark the other player has made. Much easier, but doesn't make much sense.

Either way, it was a fun and cheap way to entertain yourselves during a class break years before everyone had dopamine slabs in their pockets. 😄

24
lemmy.world

We played a pen and paper racing game in school. You could accelerate or decelerate 1 square per turn and turn 1 square per turn. It was good fun.

12

Pretty much a pen-and-paper game of the tank battle portion of the Atari game Combat.

9