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 ---> Realmslore from Ed

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T O P I C    R E V I E W
Matt James Posted - 03 Dec 2010 : 02:20:00
I am in the process of drafting an article that may or may not have Realmslore and have been corresponding with Ed. As mentioned in his last e-mail correspondence, I can share with you what remains. You can view his e-mail by clicking HERE

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Children Games in the Realms.

* Drown Witch: this requires a brook, stream, or river (course of moving water, not a bog or pond). Dolls (or bundles of sticks, sheaves of reeds or cattails or sumac, tied together and “dressed” in something distinctive) are cast into the water at a given spot (often a bridge) and then hunted for at another location far downstream, the “winner” being the witch-bundle that floats down the fastest. If a bundle disappears (can’t be found) the “witch wins.” If all bundles get snagged and don’t reach the downstream spot, “the witch that got the farthest was best” but the players win and the witches (or “the magic”) loses.

* Spy Shrike: this requires outdoor areas, and a means of timing (a local bell or other signal, or sundown, or “the lighting of the lamps” or other daily regular occurrence, like livestock being driven from one field to another, or heading home for milking or feeding on their own. It’s simply a competitive game of finding a hidden distinctive object (the “shrike”) like a doll or a painted vase, which is not retrieved or moved. The players reconvene at an agreed-upon spot at or after the “time up” signal, and tell other players where they saw the shrike and what other carrion birds or raptors they saw, and where. The player who saw the most (or can tell the most dramatic stories/whoppers about those sightings) wins.

* Groundsnake or Racing Serpents: Two to four teams (of four or more players each; six is the most popular, and eight or nine usually the limit of practicality) race from one agreed-upon spot to another, in any manner they desire, except that they have to stay grasping each other, in a human chain. Whenever the chain breaks, they have to stop and loudly sing a particular local song (that usually takes at least a minute to sing) before joining up into a chain and moving again. The winning team is the “snake” that arrives at the finish spot first. This race is typically run through a town or down a valley, with one or more obstacles (river crossings, mudpits or pig-wallows, thick woods, hedges or high fences, and the like) to cross.

* Rolling Heads or Goblinhead: A vaguely-soccer-like game played by two teams of any number (so long as they’re about the same size, or an agreed-upon balance, like a few older kids against more numerous younger ones), in which a ball (the “head,” usually a large irregular sphere made of old rags knotted and looped around a lump of wood or old pot or helm, but in olden times, sometimes rags tied around an actual orc or goblin skull) is moved about an agreed-upon playing area, to score goals by passing it through a doorway, farm gate, hedge gap, space between two trees, or other agreed-upon “goal.” After each score, the head must be returned to a central “start of play” spot, hurled straight up into the air, and play begins again (continuing until an agreed-upon finishing time or goal total; if the former, most goals wins, if the latter, first to reach the total wins). The game is played more like volleyball than soccer, in that the head can’t be carried or kicked along the ground, but can only be moved “in the air” (by throwing it, or punching or slapping it when it’s aloft/falling). Players can only be touched when they’re touching the head (i.e. a player can tackle, punch, or grapple another player while they’re catching or throwing or spiking/slapping/punching the head - - or if the other player cheats by moving along the ground while carrying the head).
15   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
althen artren Posted - 06 Dec 2010 : 02:20:27
I've tried to get my wift to play strip twister, with no success.
Markustay Posted - 04 Dec 2010 : 20:22:18
quote:
Originally posted by Erik Scott de Bie

Are you interested in FR children's games not detailed by Ed? 'Cuz there's one that goes on in one of my books, albeit played by adults in this particular case. But it originated as a game for nippers.

So you've invented 'nakey tag' as well, eh?

Or is it 'strip twister' - a popular pastime played at Sunefests.



BARDOBARBAROS Posted - 04 Dec 2010 : 16:56:19
Good...
BARDOBARBAROS Posted - 04 Dec 2010 : 16:54:30
Good...
Brimstone Posted - 04 Dec 2010 : 13:33:12
Pretty cool stuff going on here...
Ayrik Posted - 04 Dec 2010 : 12:05:29
I've recently purchased a maddening "ancient" game called Zen Blocks ($2 at thrift, lol).
quote:
Cryptic instructions from blocks box
A very special Three Dimensional many experiences for the Intuitive, for the Dreamer, and for the Great Thinker. Match all symbols to form a cube where you bring together Lion and Lamb, Heaven and Earth, Rain and Sun, Yin and Yang to form A Single Perfectly Transcendant And Harmonious Whole. A Genuine Game which unfolds differently each time you play. Not a one solutions puzzle. Thus, excellent for Family Play, for in classrooms as Logic Game, for in groups to Assessing Cooperative Skills or just even for to traditional give to that Special Clever Person. Everyone plays together and we realize the common objective and symmetry.

If you are Very Young then to Simple Play you Achieve Harmony by make blocks as pleasing shapes like Great Wall, or City, or River, or Mountains. If you are Very Old then to Hard Play you think about Symmetry in Many Pleasing Shapes and Sounds to make blocks for Special Harmony.

I have meditated upon this impossible wisdom in an attempt to gain Complete Understanding of the Harmonious Objective, yet to no avail.

Surely there must be a Kara-Tur equivalent for this in the Realms?
The Red Walker Posted - 03 Dec 2010 : 16:24:16
quote:
Originally posted by Erik Scott de Bie

Are you interested in FR children's games not detailed by Ed? 'Cuz there's one that goes on in one of my books, albeit played by adults in this particular case. But it originated as a game for nippers.

Cheers



Share friend Erik!
Erik Scott de Bie Posted - 03 Dec 2010 : 14:57:05
Are you interested in FR children's games not detailed by Ed? 'Cuz there's one that goes on in one of my books, albeit played by adults in this particular case. But it originated as a game for nippers.

Cheers
GRYPHON Posted - 03 Dec 2010 : 14:42:24
Interesting...
Matt James Posted - 03 Dec 2010 : 14:22:29
Well, my article still has to get through editing so it's not guaranteed what will make it (if anything). THO, you would be correct. That game jumped out at me and think it will fit well enough :)
Bakra Posted - 03 Dec 2010 : 14:07:23
This is soooo sweet. And I can't wait until Matts' article gets post or not posted.
Quale Posted - 03 Dec 2010 : 11:53:53
is there a Barca of the Goblinhead?
Elfinblade Posted - 03 Dec 2010 : 08:27:08
Ah ye sweet wonderful lore!
The Hooded One Posted - 03 Dec 2010 : 03:26:30
Heh. I think I can tell which game you chose, Matt. Would "FTK" have anything to do with it, perchance? We Knights played that, in game, with a mad and murderous sorceress, with a life at stake.
(If I'm right, don't worry, I'll reveal no more. I don't want to hamper your article any more than Ed does.)
love,
THO
The Sage Posted - 03 Dec 2010 : 03:09:18
Oooh! Neat. Thank you Matt, and to Ed as well. I'm compiling this into the "So Saith Ed" archives.

And, also, I may even be able to use 'Spy Shrike' in my weekend campaign this coming Saturday.

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