One Big Happy by Rick Detorie for September 12, 2012

  1. Garfield
    linsonl  about 12 years ago

    Depends on the parents, I guess. As long as it doesn’t become an addiction, I see nothing wrong with a little wagering for fun.

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  2. Spideychuck
    sleeepy2  about 12 years ago

    Teaches valuable life skills. I can’t imagine a parent being against penny-ante poker.

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  3. Doodles
    monkeyhead  about 12 years ago

    Well one of the most important things that penny-ante poker taught me growing up, is to not gamble unless you can afford to completely lose all the money you walked in with.

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  4. Frank frazetta wolfmoon s
    ossiningaling  about 12 years ago

    The grandparents’ son is the kids’ father. And I think they live next door. And they play poker all the time.

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  5. Me as santa
    lcdrlar  about 12 years ago

    As a kid I played card games with friends and family (poker, black-jack, rummy, pinoccle, fan-tan). Taught numbers, addition, strategy, and good sportsmanship. Used chips and toothpicks to keep score. Maybe. if kids used regular cards vs those with pictures and were supervised, they would actually learn something.

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    Stephen Gilberg  about 12 years ago

    Will she ever learn to lie convincingly?

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    hippogriff  about 12 years ago

    Icdrlar: You can learn all those, plus division, probability (which was a college course in my day), history, strategy, anthropology, mythology, physics, creative writing, and a few other things with table-top role-playing games, and not lose any money.

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    elysummers  about 12 years ago

    It’s just penny ante, besides it does help make the brain work, far better than a six year olds video game or too much tv.

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  9. Imgres
    calvinsfriend110  about 12 years ago

    Best idea.

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    hippogriff  about 12 years ago

    Cartoonacy: Everybody in the group doesn’t need all those books, just the GM. You can write your own scenarios (thus creative writing in the list). Mythworld (sort of a cross between RuneQuest 2 and GURPS, although it was published before GURPS) is available complete for $35.00, although shipping outside the US costs as much as a textbook. Some of Lou Zocchi’s “beer and pretzel” games are less that half that, although hardly serious systems (Awful Green Thing from Outer Space, etc.).

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  11. Jabba
    snugharborman-catalog  about 12 years ago

    I taught MY kids how to play Poker and Blackjack – it was only fair for all the games like “Go Fish”, “Old Maid”, “Candyland”, etc. I had to play.

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    iced tea  about 12 years ago

    Grandma’s wisdom at card playing!

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