It's only a card game,not " gambling " you smurfing retards !!!
It's only a card game,not " gambling " you smurfing retards !!!
Um... right.
All I can remember being banned when I was in school were pogs (shows my age, eh?) and slap bracelets (not a game, but still...).
I'm right there with ya Abominatrix...Some kid at my middle school got wapped in the face with one of the pog flippers(? the big heavy ones... cannot remember the names) so they banned them at my school too... along w/ slap bracelets...... I remember when Pokemon cards got banned from my sisters elementary school.....
Spin and punch got banned from my school.
Slammers, werent they? Cant believe I remembered that xD.Originally Posted by Parvus Edea
Beyblades were banned from my primary school in case someone managed to spin one in there eye.
Kick-can hockey in the classroom.
Back in grade 9 we'd gather in the classroom during recess and lunchtime, clear all the desks to the sides, and play "kick-can hockey", which was really soccer (football to the rest of the world), with full contact body checks like in hockey, kicking a squashed pop can which resembled a puck, instead of a ball.
Yes, it was banned.
What a game though
Onced banned we'd convene out on the baseball field, where we'd play body contact soccer (football), with a soccer ball. A mixture of hockey and soccer. Or just plain old soccer with the manliness of ice hockey's crunching body-checks.
Good times.
WICKED-AWESOME SIG.
How much you wanna bet that someone asks us what pogs are?.....Originally Posted by TheAbominatrix
Pokemon cards were banned from my Primary school because people started selling them.
Clever bastards....
the little electronic pocket pets. I can't remember what they were called. Tomigotchi?
Nothing.
My school wasn't staffed by anti-fun Nazis like most of yours seem to have been.
xD Seriously. It wouldnt surprise me in the least.Originally Posted by Parvus Edea
I believe pogs had pretty much a nation-wide ban at schools. The reason being that parents would spend hoardes of money buying these pogs for their kids, only to have the kid come home crying because they'd lost all of them to a better player. I think that pretty much happens with all the card games and whatnot.Originally Posted by Lindy
Slap bracelets were an obvious ban though. Those things friggin hurt.
There was this fool at my school who decided he would try and make money by colouring in coins and selling them for less than they were worth.What an idiot.
Pogs weren't banned at my school, but most people played for fun rather than keeps.
Then again, Pogs were out by the time I left Primary school, before then even, so it didn't last for long.
Sounds rather funny though, I thought England was the country that was entirely against kids being competitive, but I guess I was wrong.